Does the family actually suspect specific police or police agencies of murder?
No, but some of the family, still reeling from Tommy’s loss, have gone from disappointed and confused, to angry and suspicious. And the cloud of suspicion surrounding Willard and Osinski, extends to other area authorities, including McKeesport’s, Lt. Lane and Sgt. Rydzak, who were also apparently at the scene of a crime they presumably had no idea was about to happen. Two reports place the responding officers at 600 Madison by 8:09. Even allowing for a few minutes one way or the other, Officer Osinski’s 8:05 telephone call to Tommy must have happened several minutes before his request for assistance, since he had to travel from the station to Madison Avenue — some 4 or 5 minutes away. Impossibly, it is only four minutes after Osinski’s coversation with Tommy, when Lane and Rydzak arrive on the scene to find Tommy dead. Something’s very wrong here. The timing doesn’t make sense. Police reports are either mistaken or false because the timeline defies all reason and logic. Also, certain