supersleuth1974
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Pushed not fell, now that makes much more sense in terms of falling into a river that NB knew very very well indeed
Please tell me how they will know that at 9:20 the phone was placed on the bench. They cannot know that. They can know the area it is, but not that it was on the bench. They can assume that as it was in the area of the bench at that time, and later said to be found on the bench, that it was ON the bench at that time. They can presume but without eyes on, they cannot know.
Imo the police will have looked into all aspects of her life including work and recent events so I doubt it is significant.This Thursday evening meeting with her boss bugs me.F2f & he had to HAVE
80 miles round trip?? What was reason?
Not sure what was said between her and her daughter in law but could it have been a phone call a little like " you know when we go walking, who is it that has thay lovely brown little spanel?' 'Oh its erm nicola, why?' Then the penny drops who she is after a brief description from the daughter in law.Has it been established she did that first? Her quote was she had an important appt and "then" she spoke to her daughter on law. An important point I haven't seen clarified either way. I'm sure police have though.
It is a bit odd but if you have ever come across a lost phone, it is not easy to return it- often pass coded and not obvious whose it is. and if you move it, it may be tracking and seem as if you are stealing it. You can possibly return it to the nearest service company if you know what service it is connected to... and then whomever lost it may be retracing their steps looking for it. Also people have found lost dogs in my neighborhood and asked me whose they are- sometimes I know the dog name or about where the house is but not the exact owner.So to clear up a point with regard to the business owner.
1. She spots the dog and the phone while out for a walk.
2. She is supposedly in a rush so ties the dog up and leaves the phone.
3. But she has time to locate and speak to her daughter-in-law about the dog and phone.
4. Daughter-in-law who knows who the dog belonged to then phoned the police.
Meanwhile, another person has come along and taken the dog to try and find the owner? Or is that no longer the case?
Business owner:
"I saw the dog and I recognised it, but I suddenly couldn't think whose dog it was."
"There was a mobile phone on the bench and there was also something between the bench and the river so I went and looked, and it was a dog harness. The dog looked worried so I tied her up and rushed home as I had to go to an appointment.
"I then went and spoke to my daughter-in-law and she immediately knew who the dog was, alerted the woman's partner and that was it - the police were on it."
Passerby raised alarm after finding Nicola's 'worried' dog wandering alone
The business owner spotted Nicola's brown springer spaniel Willow running free on the river bank on Friday morningwww.lancs.live
Even post-COVID, lots of meetings cannot be carried out on Zoom — at least in the opinion of many bosses. Could have been a slightly unreasonable request, “this meeting could have been a email” territory, but nothing too weird about it IMO.Imo the police will have looked into all aspects of her life including work and recent events so I doubt it is significant.
No
"Paul is understood to have searched a different abandoned house in between the village hall and the Ivy Dene Alpacas site prior to the meeting."
Missing mum of two seen 'laughing and joking' moments before she disappeared
Nicola Bulley, 45, disappeared while out on a dog walk last Friday morning after dropping her children at school in St Michael's-on-Wyre, Lancashire, before police launched a major search operationwww.mirror.co.uk
Included source links to verify information posted as 'fact'. Sincerely thought this was common knowledge.
All true. Some people might leave a phone where it is depending on the local area, on the basis it’s more likely the person who lost it will come back for it, than someone else will steal it. Wouldn’t apply to me in central London, might apply if in my home rural village.It is a bit odd but if you have ever come across a lost phone, it is not easy to return it- often pass coded and not obvious whose it is. and if you move it, it may be tracking and seem as if you are stealing it. You can possibly return it to the nearest service company if you know what service it is connected to... and then whomever lost it may be retracing their steps looking for it. Also people have found lost dogs in my neighborhood and asked me whose they are- sometimes I know the dog name or about where the house is but not the exact owner.
But a dog and a phone would indicate something more. Items were also on the ground with the harness on the river bank.All true. Some people might leave a phone where it is depending on the local area, on the basis it’s more likely the person who lost it will come back for it, than someone else will steal it. Wouldn’t apply to me in central London, might apply if in my home rural village.
I don’t think my immediate thought would be: something terrible has happened, though, unless I saw something else to indicate that. I might think someone had wandered off, and would probably be back for both the phone and the dog. I am not sure I would immediately call the police or emergency services, for example. Sounds like the witness made a call to talk it through and get a second opinion if it needed reporting, while getting on with what they needed to do that day. Hard for me to see I would have acted differently.But a dog and a phone wold indicate something more.
Wow what a way to earn a living! (except they are doing it for free). It seems they are using side scan sonar - I believe a link was posted earlier to an article about the technology.Ralstons - the couple who find drowned victims in USA
The link to a Guardian newspaper article above is at times a difficult read but of interest. Perhaps they should be asked to help?
Yes I did question if that was a possibility earlier in the threadOne idea surrounding the fit but , could be to put the phone in the boat and go up and down the rider and see if it connects , easy way to find the Fitbit and perhaps NB
I presumed this was the Tuesday before her disappearance, not after! As we have discussed on here, the phone has to be in at least a 20ft radius to sync...?
I'd like to say yes, a smallish area, her / her husband walk it everyday around the same time I'd guess you see the same faces. I knownyoubdo where we live. You can time a lot of them like clock work daily. I could be wrong thoAre the witness accounts even reliable? I walk my dog every day and chat to other dog walkers, sometimes a conversation, other times a wave or quick hello. Yet, if asked afterwards, I could very easily mix up which morning it was that I saw one of them. Half the time I'm not even sure what day it is. Or maybe that's just me. Is there actually any proof that Nicola was there that morning?