Why would Logan be considered any more dangerous than other potential suspects?
I haven't seen the arguments of physical danger. My own feeling is that she was surpremely pissed off that she'd been so close to trusting him and then found out he'd lied about his whereabouts on the day of the murder. Confronting him in person would also mean confronting her own emotional vulnerability with him. Maybe she didn't trust herself to handle it correctly, or to be able to know if he was finally telling her the truth.
Also, Logan knew Veronica was looking into the murder, he had the opportunity to tell her the truth about that day and clear his name ahead of time, at least with her--and he chose to continue to lie. I think at that point she stopped owing him special consideration.
no subject
Date: 2005-05-13 10:06 am (UTC)I haven't seen the arguments of physical danger. My own feeling is that she was surpremely pissed off that she'd been so close to trusting him and then found out he'd lied about his whereabouts on the day of the murder. Confronting him in person would also mean confronting her own emotional vulnerability with him. Maybe she didn't trust herself to handle it correctly, or to be able to know if he was finally telling her the truth.
Also, Logan knew Veronica was looking into the murder, he had the opportunity to tell her the truth about that day and clear his name ahead of time, at least with her--and he chose to continue to lie. I think at that point she stopped owing him special consideration.