brownbread
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2011
- Messages
- 129
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Hello, am new here but have been following the thread as it's such a tragic and confusing case. Firstly: my thoughts are with Jo's family and friends and I hope for a swift resolution for their sakes.
A few things I have been thinking about.
On the Friday night timeline and contact with friends:
It seems Jo had left the pub but was still keen to continue socialising. The reason she didn't just keep drinking in the pub could easily be because other colleagues were heading home themselves, she wasn't that close to the people who were there or the atmosphere wasn't great. Alternatively there could have been someone she wanted to get away from (a colleague she didn't get on with or a stranger trying to chat her up?)
We know she called her best friend and arranged to meet up on Christmas eve, but the original purpose of the call could have been to check if she was out or wanted to go for drink. As she wasn't, perhaps Jo started to go through her contacts looking for someone else who was.
It interests me that we weren't informed of the text to CAG at the outset when the LE presented other aspects of Friday night's timeline which included the call to her best friend. The CAG text has only become public indirectly via the media and the police haven't commented on it. This makes me wonder if there are other texts/phone conversations which haven't been made public either? Could there have been someone else she made contact with later on?
Moving the body:
Looking at the house, am I correct in thinking that the door to their flat was on the right hand side of the property, accessed via a narrow path? And that the main entrance and driveway was on the left hand side? And that there was no way to get a vehicle closer than perhaps 25m from their door (either out on the street or the other side of the house). This would make moving a body both strenuous and risky. Would a stranger/intruder have attempted this if they didn't need to? Or would the determination to conceal the body have been great regardless of the circumstances of the death?
A few things I have been thinking about.
On the Friday night timeline and contact with friends:
It seems Jo had left the pub but was still keen to continue socialising. The reason she didn't just keep drinking in the pub could easily be because other colleagues were heading home themselves, she wasn't that close to the people who were there or the atmosphere wasn't great. Alternatively there could have been someone she wanted to get away from (a colleague she didn't get on with or a stranger trying to chat her up?)
We know she called her best friend and arranged to meet up on Christmas eve, but the original purpose of the call could have been to check if she was out or wanted to go for drink. As she wasn't, perhaps Jo started to go through her contacts looking for someone else who was.
It interests me that we weren't informed of the text to CAG at the outset when the LE presented other aspects of Friday night's timeline which included the call to her best friend. The CAG text has only become public indirectly via the media and the police haven't commented on it. This makes me wonder if there are other texts/phone conversations which haven't been made public either? Could there have been someone else she made contact with later on?
Moving the body:
Looking at the house, am I correct in thinking that the door to their flat was on the right hand side of the property, accessed via a narrow path? And that the main entrance and driveway was on the left hand side? And that there was no way to get a vehicle closer than perhaps 25m from their door (either out on the street or the other side of the house). This would make moving a body both strenuous and risky. Would a stranger/intruder have attempted this if they didn't need to? Or would the determination to conceal the body have been great regardless of the circumstances of the death?