More Than 11 Years, FBI Not Able to Solve Password This

Do you have a good brain and thin crack the password? If so, then maybe you can help the Federal Investigative Agency (FBI), the United States to solve a murder password.
According to MSNBC page, has more than 11 years the FBI trying to solve a murder mystery that holds the password of a man in the town of St. Louis, the state of Missouri, the United States.
The mystery began on June 30, 1999, when Ricky McCormick, 41, was found murdered in her home. In the pants McCormick found two sheets of paper with random letters that allegedly is a password.
Team FBI code-breakers have been trying desperately to crack the password, but they have not received an answer. Until now, none of the arrested suspects related to this murder.
"We are very good at breaking passwords. However, in this case we need help," said Dan Olson, head of the FBI Code Solution.
"Resolution of this code will be able to reveal the presence of the victim before he died and to reveal the whole mystery of this murder," said Olson again.
Olson says that the password is discovered by the FBI on McCormick's body was made in the format they've never seen before.
According to FBI records, McCormick did not graduate from high school but he was known as a self-taught genius. Members of his family said McCormick's writings often use a password since childhood, but no one knows whether one understood the purpose of these codes.
The FBI believes the record contains a password more than 30 lines McCormick said it made three days before his death. This is the code that makes the FBI dizzy:



 FBI hoping if anyone can crack the password is, can contact them at this address:

FBI Laboratory
Cryptanalysis and Racketeering Records Unit
2501 Investigation Parkway
Quantico, VA 22135
Attn: Rick McCormick Case