It would be difficult to get away with putting a body (or two) out with the rubbish but smaller body parts probably wouldn't be detected or affect the weight of the bin. I speculate he could have removed their hands and heads to prevent identification.Plus left other body parts behind to be found/traced so really what was the point?
I wonder if he meant the suitcase to be carried "out to sea" but got the location wrong?? It's such a strange destination considering the crime didn't happen nearby.Why Bristol?
Is the choice of the city for dumping the suitcases significant?
Or totally random?
Like,
Oh there is a train to Bristol soon, so I'll take it.
If they can find his phone or computer, they might find searches on there that give an idea of his thinking.Why Bristol?
Is the choice of the city for dumping the suitcases significant?
Or totally random?
Like,
Oh there is a train to Bristol soon, so I'll take it.
If the suspect acted alone it would seem likely that he took the train to Bristol and then a taxi from the station.
If the suspect acted alone it would seem likely that he took the train to Bristol and then a taxi from the station.
certainly strange and to a busy tourist destination with security guardsWhy Bristol?
Is the choice of the city for dumping the suitcases significant?
Or totally random?
Like,
Oh there is a train to Bristol soon, so I'll take it.
Spectacularly unsuccessfully then, considering the suitcases were left on the bridge just before midnight on Wednesday, and the police arrived at Scotts Road in Shepherd's Bush in the small hours of Friday morning. Something in those cases made their contents extremely easy to identify, despite the change of venue.It would be difficult to get away with putting a body (or two) out with the rubbish but smaller body parts probably wouldn't be detected or affect the weight of the bin. I speculate he could have removed their hands and heads to prevent identification.
Since some of the remains were found in London, there didn't have to be entire bodies in the suitcases. The suitcases likely had wheels (an article mentioned wheels being broken).would be impossible to carry two dead folk by himself
I'm guessing the taxi driver was able to provide means of identifying him by his phone booking or payment method, and police were able to trace him to that address, perhaps from an address registration somewhere, maybe even as a student, and then upon forcing entry they discovered something had happened to the householders. JMOSpectacularly unsuccessfully then, considering the suitcases were left on the bridge just before midnight on Wednesday, and the police arrived at Scotts Road in Shepherd's Bush in the small hours of Friday morning. Something in those cases made their contents extremely easy to identify, despite the change of venue.
jmoo
Possibly. IMO Joe Bloke who goes for an annual 10-day holiday in Spain, would not be able to distinguish between the two, and even someone who is good with languages might have to hear a couple of sentences.Could Portuguese be mistaken for Spanish?
I'd say Spain, Portugal, DR, or Brazil if we can include Portuguese.
Allegedly it was the blood seeping out of one suitcase that caught the attention of other people on the bridge.Spectacularly unsuccessfully then, considering the suitcases were left on the bridge just before midnight on Wednesday, and the police arrived at Scotts Road in Shepherd's Bush in the small hours of Friday morning. Something in those cases made their contents extremely easy to identify, despite the change of venue.
jmoo
If the wheels were intact when he set off and broke on the journey, it could explain how he was able to get on and off the train by himself, despite the cases being too heavy to be carried any distance.Since some of the remains were found in London, there didn't have to be entire bodies in the suitcases. The suitcases likely had wheels (an article mentioned wheels being broken).
From the link above:Moment man runs from Bristol bridge before human remains found
SHOCKING new footage shows the man at the centre of the suitcase riddle running away moments before human remains were found. In a video exclusively obtained by The Sun, the man, who police named a…www.thesun.co.uk
We know what he said now- the video and a translation are shared here
I'm also wondering if he was their care provider since he seemed to have referred to at least one of them as his boss. So, maybe he had a train ticket in advance as well as a specific destination in mind, where he would put the bodies as if they were murdered by someone there. (speculation)From the link above:
Sources said two men – one a wheelchair user - living at the crime scene had planned to travel to Bristol before they went missing.
They were said to know the suspect in the murder probe.
ETA: So his story would have been that they left for Bristol and could have been murdered there.
Wonder where the man arrested in Greenwich and then released fits into it all ?I'm guessing the taxi driver was able to provide means of identifying him by his phone booking or payment method, and police were able to trace him to that address, perhaps from an address registration somewhere, maybe even as a student, and then upon forcing entry they discovered something had happened to the householders. JMO