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Delphi Snapchat murders voice recordings reveal chilling similarities between ‘killer’ and man linked to killings
A HAUNTING voice recording caught on Snapchat of a figure believed to be the Delphi "killer" linked a man to the murder case.
Inside Edition interviewed Ron Logan after receiving several tips to compare his voice with the recording thought to have taken place before the slaying, according to investigators.
"You just cannot believe this terrible thing that happened to the community and the families actually happened here on my property, in my backyard," Logan told Inside Edition.
Libby German, 14, and Abigail Williams, 13, were found dead after being reported missing in Delphi, Indiana in February 2017.
A Snapchat recording taken by the girls captured the image and voice of a stranger.
The teens went on a hike along the Monon High Bridge Trail on February 13 and their bodies were found in the woods the following day.
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Days after the two were killed, investigators found images and a recording of a man who they believed to be the suspect.
In the recording, the man is saying "down the hill."
Cops believe that the eerie clip was taken before the girls were killed.
Cops received around 15 tips that claimed that the man in the footage was Ron Logan, who died in 2020, according to an FBI affidavit.
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FBI investigators said that the voice in the clip was described as being “not inconsistent” with that of Logan.
Inside Edition interviewed Logan and asked him to repeat the phrase "on the hill," despite the man saying that he was out of the house at the time of the recording.
Logan claimed that he was buying tropical fish in another town about 20 miles over when the murders took place.
He also told Inside Edition that he believed the Snapchat image was far too grainy to determine the figure's identity.
Logan died in 2020 apparently due to Covid-19.
He was arrested during the investigation of this case but was never identified as a formal suspect or charged.
'DESIGNED TO DECEIVE'
This comes as court documents released by the Murder Sheet podcast detail a search warrant was made on March 17, 2017, where investigators claim the crime scene was tampered with and it appeared the girls' bodies "were moved and staged."
In the docs, FBI agents noted that pieces of clothing from one of the victims were missing.
Federal investigators said there were no visible signs of a struggle or a fight.
Officials suspected the killer had taken a souvenir and believed photographs or videos were likely shot of the monstrous set-up to "memorialize" the crime scene.
Investigators recovered fibers and unidentified hairs at the scene, per the doc.
FBI agents also said the killer would have been covered in the victims' blood, according to the search warrant.
One said: "Because of the nature of the victim’s wounds, it is nearly certain the perpetrator of the crime would have gotten blood on his person/clothing."
The girls' killer was never formally identified and remains a mystery five years on.
Libby’s older sister Kelsi, 21, said she hopes the culprit is “scared”.
She told The Sun: “I hope he is listening to all of these and he's trying to figure out a way to keep hidden, but he should know he can't stay hidden anymore.
"Law enforcement is going to continue looking for him. And he should be scared.”
And, head of Indiana state police Doug Carter issued a similar warning.
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He told ABC in January: “We know a lot about you. Today could be the day. Sleep well.”
But, Eric Erskin, Abigail's granddad, said he fears the murder mystery will not be solved in his lifetime.
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