..and ensure she's not talking to anyone, spilling the beans about what a big bungholio he was!
Hi BJ
I've heard people buy a phone, load the app then bury it in their partner's car to keep tabs on them.
.
rsbm: thanks for the tip, i might need that when the kids start to drive.
Hi BJ
I'm not sure tracking devices (such as 'Find My iPhone' bought and downloaded via iTunes) can actually track your calls.
Aren't these tracking devices to show you on your phone - the exact (real time) location of the other person/person's linked phone?
I've heard people buy a phone, load the app then bury it in their partner's car to keep tabs on them.
My point is : the location of the phone is tracked : not necessarily where the partner/cheater/GBC is at.
But for GBC purposes :
1) He gets to leave his tracked phone somewhere 'saintly' as he goes off, does his 'business' and has his calls transferred automatically to another phone he ACTUALLY he keeps on him during his 'trysts', and
2) Allison's whereabouts is known to him so he knows he's 'safe' now to do as he pleases knowing she's at hairdressers, feeding the three gorgeous girls dinner, etc.
Or he just didn't need worry on checking where Allison was because her actions were beyond reproach and only his actions needed all this techno BS to cover up his 'other life'.
He must have thought he was so clever.
But it's actually 101 in affairs and has been for over a decade.
Just wanted to say thanks for the commentary on 60 minutes program tonight. I didn't watch it. I watched the Sunday night program on channel 7. I did record 60 minutes, but was really feeling uneasy about watching due to the payment of TMcH for the interview- hard to get past my distaste for that and felt a bit 'wrong' to watch. Reading the comments here tonight has made me feel like I do want to see it now. Not really for TMcH(could really care less about what she has to say), but inspector Ainsworth(Love him!) and the rest of it. Might have to just grin and bear it through TMcH talking.
Watching channel 7, Allison looked so beautiful in her wedding photos. On that day, who would have believed how it would have ended. Couldn't get over the hour and a half wedding speach GBC gave!:facepalm:- much of it about Mummy and Daddy! Lovely to see Allisons family setting things straight about how things were really.
Did we ever find out why Allison took the taxi from Chapell Hill? Spring Hill is where the counsellor was, could it be related to that?
New Year letter to GBC 2012.
Hi BatWoman
Just remember it only shows where the phone (car) is : not the kids!
Agree, Allison's letter was scathing and forceful it was as though she was finally in control.
This is a very interesting read.
Apologies Marly if this isn't the correct place for this, I didn't know where else to put it.
"A very bright, active girl": Jenny Lee Cook horse riding before her back injury.
It's a quiet Monday night in Townsville and an ambulance radio crackles to life in the car park of the far north Queensland city's main hospital.
It's a Code 1A: a woman in her early 30s has suffered an apparent cardiac arrest. Lights flashing, siren on, the two paramedics on board, Robert Haydon and Chris O'Connor, accelerate through the thinning evening traffic, hoping to find the woman still alive.
The destination is a residential property in Douglas - a suburb popular with young families that sprawls along the southern banks of the Ross River, about eight kilometres from the CBD. Pulling up in front of a new residence in Sheerwater Parade, they note the outside of the property is in darkness, and unlike some triple-0 calls, nobody is waiting outside. Within moments the two men are knocking on the front door, yelling "Queensland Ambulance Service".
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/national/knife-edge-20140714-3bvp7.html#ixzz3831Vo9kd
http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/knife-edge-20140714-3bvp7.html
This is a very interesting read.
Apologies Marly if this isn't the correct place for this, I didn't know where else to put it.
"A very bright, active girl": Jenny Lee Cook horse riding before her back injury.
It's a quiet Monday night in Townsville and an ambulance radio crackles to life in the car park of the far north Queensland city's main hospital.
It's a Code 1A: a woman in her early 30s has suffered an apparent cardiac arrest. Lights flashing, siren on, the two paramedics on board, Robert Haydon and Chris O'Connor, accelerate through the thinning evening traffic, hoping to find the woman still alive.
The destination is a residential property in Douglas - a suburb popular with young families that sprawls along the southern banks of the Ross River, about eight kilometres from the CBD. Pulling up in front of a new residence in Sheerwater Parade, they note the outside of the property is in darkness, and unlike some triple-0 calls, nobody is waiting outside. Within moments the two men are knocking on the front door, yelling "Queensland Ambulance Service".
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/national/knife-edge-20140714-3bvp7.html#ixzz3831Vo9kd
http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/knife-edge-20140714-3bvp7.html