Abdul sighed again, and told the the detective a name of an account which belonged to a friend of his. She didn't describe herself much, and there was nothing which would point out that she couldn't be Jennifer. Her account was a year old.
"If I may sir, and I'm just curious, what kind of weapon do you think is being used?" he asked politely. The detective looked at him for a moment, and he shrugged sheepishly. "I, I mean, we're pretty much all mystery-loving people, and if we figure out something we'll tell you immediately. We just want to be of help."
"How can you help?" The detective asked curiously. Abdul looked away, rubbing the back of his neck. He took a deep breath.
"Not that anything you guys might not have known or figured out, but..." and he explained theory about a sniper, making it precise as possible. "Jennifer was shot in the temple, and to raise a gun to strike there in a crowd or from a visible to distance would be suspicious. Prior to the murder Jennifer was feeding pigeons in the park, which were in front of a bench on which an old man was residing, just let me know if I'm saying something useless." Abdul said, vary of the details he was putting in.
"Carry on," said the detective. "The weather was rainy, just like all the other killings, not the ideal environment to snipe a person -no gunshot was heard- as the blowing wind or if Jennifer had an umbrella could have decreased the chance of the bullet hitting it's target. In all killings, chronologically first a woman was killed then a man and then a woman again and so on. So the next victim might be a male. Assuming there is one, I want the police to stop this person before that happens," Abdul said. "Also, anything that might link the victims, we haven't made much progress, except that three of them have a 5 year age gap like 23, 27 and 32. The information was on your website." He quipped. "Sorry for taking so much of your time."