The Death of Erin Valenti

in DBuzz3 years ago (edited)

Well, this video on the death of a tech CEO named Erin Valenti is as disconcerting as it is weird. I am not sure what to make of it. It makes me wonder if maybe she saw something she wasn't supposed to...



Posted via D.Buzz

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Hmm towards the end, it implies that she likely died herself, without any foul play.

I think it is odd how she died though.

Posted via D.Buzz

The people in the neighborhood commented about not noticing that car parked there for several days and the car had no tracking system. Believing the car was there the whole time since her death may be just an assumption. There's no way to know for sure.

"Believing the car was there the whole time since her death may be just an assumption."

  • Can you explain this part of your Buzz?

I don't understand it.


Posted via D.Buzz

If I had to come up with an alternate scenario to the official story that would best fit the facts in the video my guess would be that Erin Valenti had been drugged. The motivation would be attempted industrial espionage. Somebody drugged her in order to try to get possible Tinker Venture trade secrets that Erin Valenti would be privy to. The dosage of the drug was miscalculated leaving Erin Valenti both unaware that she had been surreptitiously drugged and confused in the altered mental state. To hide what had happened both her car and her body inside it would have to be hidden for a few days and then after it would have been too much time for a toxicology test to have detected the drug in the dead body the car would be parked so it could later be "discovered".

Ahh sad but reasonable explanation.

Was her Tinker company that high tech?

Posted via D.Buzz

The video mentions a partnership with brain-machine interface research.

There is a page on tinkerventures.co about Erin Valenti that states,

ROLE AT TINKER
At Tinker, Erin had a global team consisting of 120+ employees across Salt Lake City and in Lahore, Pakistan. Tinker built more than 700 products including mobile apps, SaaS apps, tech-enabled marketplaces and consumer websites while working for renowned startups and Fortune 500 companies.

So there's not just trade secrets to steal but also details for web-based security protocols.

Interesting and yes, this makes your theory even more plausable.

  • Btw, you are a great thinker! 😀👏

    Posted via D.Buzz

It's technically a hypothesis but thank you.

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