somehow. Maybe she felt she was spinning front to back, and she tried to find the door on the floor. A medical reason is definitely a strong possibility to explain why Mulrenin went over. There is no rational reason to jump from the fifth floor under any circumstances. Robbers want money, not murder. No reason except maybe a jealous boyfriend who wants to harm, not coerce. There’s a more basic reason Mulrenin could have had labyrinthitis. That is what happens when little girls come over to your house and do cocaine and fuck you and give you what you want, as long as you want all night, four nights just that week. Mulrenin overate sin at his own buffet. I know from experience and so does Scott Love: Guys with jobs cannot keep up with little girls. Only drug dealers, pro athletes in the off-season, people on food stamps, and students can. Because they also have no place to be. And that is why Mulrenin had testosterone and needles to inject himself. And that is why he wrote "BOTOX" on his daytime to-do list on the back of an envelope in his car. Mandi probably said to Mulrenin the same thing she said to me "The reason you have so many wrinkles is because you’re always angry." Which he was. So Mulrenin very well could have fallen, after a week of hedonistically killing himself with cocaine and Viagra. But Sprague needed a murder, not an accident. And he needed Mandi to be a co-conspirator, not a victim. So sometime after the medical examiner said Mulrenin's "deep laceration" was a bullet wound several days after his death, Sprague invented his shot-while-fleeing robbery narrative. And he told it to all the witnesses, the co-workers, and the family members of the deceased. Russell Songer said he and Denise Smith did not initially provide a statement supposedly because Songer didn't have his glasses. On December 16th or 17th, the autopsy found a bullet wound. By the time Songer and Smith made a statement on December 21, 2016, Russell Songer's story now included a "pop", and Mulrenin shouting "oh no" as he came out the door. None of this was in the initial 911 suicide calls. None of this was in the report from Lieutenant Van Cleave who first responded, and interviewed the witnesses who told Mulrenin "Don’t jump, don't jump." In Neisha Cintron’s video interview on December 28th, 2016, you can hear Sprague told her his new "shot while fleeing" narrative. Neisha wasn’t there, but she talks in her witness interview about how Mulrenin was fleeing and trying to climb down. That’s a great witness, who knows what happened in another county. I am sure Sprague also told his new theory to Songer and Smith when he called them on the phone, before they made their new statements On December 27. 2016, Sprague edited the police reports from the first police on scene, Uzzi, Cleave, and Cremeans. It is not obvious how a person who was not present at the scene, could improve the report of someone who was present at the scene. Sprague also edited "then a hear gunshot" into his police report when nobody initially reported hearing a gunshot. It was probably originally "then a man walks out onto the balcony". Sprague then hid the written statements of the three Lofts witnesses who did not fit his "shot while fleeing" narrative, Jerome Ashcroft, James Buddendorf, and Denise Smith. Ashcroft even heard the metal railing sound, and neighbor Jorge Forero heard someone say the name "Denise" from five floors up, but nobody heard a gunshot. The defense only learned these other witness written statements existed during depositions. Sprague and the prosecution hid these statements until the defense found out about them and demanded them. The defense got the written statements from those who witnessed Mulrenin's death, a year and a half later on June 20, 2018. The defense never got the 911 calls. At Love's trial, under the direction of State Attorney Lori Sacco, Denise Smith’s story now included a gunshot 5 minutes before Mulrenin came out. She said the gunshot so frightened her from her experience in the Navy, that she ducked for cover. In the transcript it says "there was a pop -- a loud pop. Paused for a minute, looked around, and then we kept walking... more of a gunfire pop." When she said "Paused for a minute" she made like a ducking motion on the witness stand, to demonstrate how she was frightened by the gunshot that she recognized from using weapons in the Navy. At J ackson’s trial, Denise Smith’s gunshot was now immediately before Mulrenin came running out. Denise Smith III- 51