You said it not me ?
obiously you agree?
You said it not me ?
I actually believe they are maybe involved but I don't agree with your statement.
And you believe that *******. What he's saying is half true. Sure that was the last time but not the only time.
obiously you agree?
actually it's pretty grey. He went missing under their care - is that a mistake or, not? I'm not saying they had anything to do with it but realistically their care is where it all began. is that true?
as i was implying.. i don;t know. do you?
And you believe that *******. What he's saying is half true. Sure that was the last time but not the only time.
What part of ‘[t]he foster care parents that had custody of William at the time of his disappearance were bringing up William in a loving family and the situation between foster care and the biological family played no part in William's disappearance.’ and ‘I have ruled out the foster carer parents and I have ruled out the biological parents as being involved in this investigation.’, do people not understand?
Not my mistake . I asked whT the foster parents mistake was and you said "he was in their care". Pretty black and white .
What part of ‘[t]he foster care parents that had custody of William at the time of his disappearance were bringing up William in a loving family and the situation between foster care and the biological family played no part in William's disappearance.’ and ‘I have ruled out the foster carer parents and I have ruled out the biological parents as being involved in this investigation.’, do people not understand?
This is such an awesome post.Well, I know my daughter has been alone for periods of a few minutes when she was little. Thank goodness Bill Spedding was not around.
Howver, she did manage to take the poop out of her nappy one day when she was a toddler, and I was quickly grabbing a few bits, and smear it all over the walls. (Boy, do I remember that!)
I would venture to say that there is not one parent out there, who has not left their child alone for a couple of minutes. Not in the bathtub, not near the pool, not in a dangerous place. But alone, nevertheless, while they quickly went to grab something.
William was not even left alone. Grandma was there. She just couldn't follow him because she was recovering from illness, and expected him to run back in a minute. He knew his boundaries.
Sorry I'm totally confused. You said that their mistake was that he went missing in their care . I don't agree at all !
yer he was, & it's balck & white, there goes... thank for your agreement![]()
I understand it; I even agree with it most of the time. But it's possible to have a different opinion. Gary isn't absolutely infallible.
Sorry I'm totally confused. You said that their mistake was that he went missing in their care . I don't agree at all !
what? you don't agree he went missing in their care? u never knew this...???
The whole point is its very very odd to rule out all family members so early. They usally don't rule out all family members till they are 120% sure who did it. LE aren't always right.
Perhaps you are not aware of this ....
William Tyrrell: Forensic profiler reveals details about three-year-old's suspected kidnapper
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-09-...t-suspected-william-tyrrell-kidnapper/6771350
Dr Yule is the Police Forces Senior Forensic Psychologist and manager of its Behavioural Science Team, attached to the Forensic Services Group.
Dr Yule has almost 20 years experience working on major crime cases in New South Wales and has studied with FBI-trained experts and behavioural specialists from the United Kingdom and Europe.
https://www.facebook.com/nswpoliceforce/posts/10153291551076185
However, when someone's consistently wrong about facts in the public domain, one tends to have doubts when they're claiming inside knowledge.
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