I made the error of thinking 35% battery was enough left over for an entire night of sleep tracking, and I was greeted with a dead watch in the morning. There is absolutely zero way to make it through an entire 24 hours of usage without the watch dying. It’s the same mistake that Google made with the Pixel Watch: a feature-rich smartwatch is only as useful as the battery powering it. “My hope is that the DA’s office will ensure that those resources and personnel are allocated to the agencies that will dedicate themselves to it.The battery life of the Fossil Gen 6 Wellness Edition isn’t very good. “I hope they do what they can to the best of their ability so they can get answers for the family, answers for the community and answers for their own unsolved case which has loomed over that department for over two decades,” she said. She pointed to DNA evidence and the original crime scene, which still exists, as possible avenues for that. “I would like to see them potentially retesting evidence.There are so many things that are available now that weren’t available in the late '90s that you can look at.” “I would expect and hope that law enforcement in that area would do the job that it takes to follow the leads like the podcast has, talking to people, vetting people, looking at transcripts done back then, and interviewing people again,” she said. Now, she hopes the leads will be investigated further. She said that she has gotten the result she intended by researching the case: it’s now being looked at again with fresh and more modern eyes. That way, she said, anyone with relevant information may be able to dredge up something vital to the case. ‘The podcast brought it to their attention and now they have acted in 2020.”ĭ’ambria said that cold cases are often forgotten by people until they are reminded in a consistent way, explaining podcasts are the perfect medium to refresh the memory of a community. “The district attorney prior to speaking with ‘CounterClock’ actually had no idea about the Denise Johnson case,” she told. “There have been some in the last 18 months we are trying to chase down.” “W e're chasing all the leads that we can,” he said. Womble confirmed to that the case is now considered active. In the last episode of the 13-episode podcast, released this week, D’ambra revealed that Dare County District Attorney Andrew Womble said that the case is no longer considered cold. She did it all while working her full-time job. As the host and lead investigator of " CounterClock," she dedicated 2018, 2019 and the first half of 2020 to Johnson's case, researching documents and interviews, and conducting her own. She told that she was burdened by questions like “What’s going on with this case?” and “How are we in modern times and none of this is being looked at and re-examined and why aren’t people being interviewed again?”ĭ’ambra, who now works full time as a producer for the audiochuck podcast network, decided to try to find answers. She has spent the last few years devoting herself to investigating the unsolved murder, which marred her hometown. Investigative journalist Delia D’ambra, who grew up in the same town, was just 4 when Johnson died. As the years went on, leads dried up and the case turned cold. No suspects were ever identified a blonde woman was the last person to be seen with Johnson. The body of Denise Johnson, 33, was discovered with fatal stab wounds inside a burned-down Kill Devil Hills home in 1997. New leads are being investigated in a North Carolina arson murder after a podcast breathed new life into the once-cold case.
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