Late Tuesday evening Gary Posner posted a late 4/19/2011 "Update" at
www.gpposner.com/Williston-forum-reply.html
which clearly contradicts Slaughter's timeline.
Yes, but Posner's timeline relies only on a newspaper article that was published the day after Norman Lewis's body was found. Frequently, such "breaking news" articles don't have all of the facts straight. Moreover, if the article is right, the question arises: "Why was the Whitehurst pit, and
only the Whitehurst pit, searched?" Posner's timeline does not answer that question. In his case study, he states:
"Following Renier's reading, did the police zero-in on one quarry to which Noreen's directions pointed? Hewitt says on
Sightings that he 'walked around probably 30 quarries' before deciding that the Whitehurst pit most closely matched the totality of Renier's clues. Perhaps that was his reason for having the Navy divers scour that one pit, which did result in Lewis' body and truck being recovered. But his initial rationale for concentrating on the Whitehurst pit was described this way in his report filed six days after Renier's reading: '. . . the Whitehurst pits are an obvious first impression . . . being the closest and the most accessible from the Lewis residence.' (Although the 'eastern' pit was fenced off by this time, it had been easily accessible when Lewis disappeared, and it is half as far from Lewis' home as is Whitehurst.)
"As for this 'eastern' pit, a person with some inside knowledge of the police investigation (who allowed me to tape our conversation but requests anonymity) told me that this had been the 'prime target for the investigation' immediately following Renier's reading. 'They didn't think there was a [railroad] track [at Whitehurst].'"
So what caused the police to change their prime target from the eastern pit to the Whitehurst pit? Slaughter's timeline makes sense of this:
"Several months passed, and Hewitt was still on the hunt for Norman Lewis. By now, though, Hewitt had zeroed in on an old phosphate pit with cliffs, a couple of miles from Lewis's home. He found a steel rail in a heavily wooded area near the pit, but no railroad bed. The pit was located in the general direction from Lewis's house that Renier's hand-drawn map had shown.
"'One day, Brian's roaming around up there in the woods,' said Slaughter, 'and he finds a pile of red bricks. He went back to the rail he discovered earlier, started digging and found an old railroad bed underneath it. I called Levy County Sheriff's Department divers to come over and work the pit. But they came up empty. The pit had water in it 30 to 40 feet deep and was covered in vegetation.
"'So I'm up there at the pit with Brian after this, wondering where we go next, and I happen to look just right through the woods and see an old Fairbanks Morris Scale. It was a wooden truck scale that could be confused for a bridge.'
"Slaughter's confidence grew, and he got some Navy demolition divers to dive the pit on their off time. On their second day, they got a hit while using a magnetometer."