sosocurious
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You may be right. Why? If he rang, he had to take the risk that he'd be speaking to someone. I wonder what time he intended to make available--before or after the Dunbogan job, or was Dunbogan flexible?
Edit: OK, if it was a message, perhaps he was willing to offer the afternoon knowing he wouldn't have to follow through, and he would have said something different in a conversation.
A close friend, Colin, said Mr Spedding did not return to the grandmother's house with a spare part for the washing machine on the day William went missing because he could not get in contact with her.
https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw...xually-abusing-two-girls-20150422-1mr56g.html
He says his father was due to go to William’s grandmother’s house on the day William disappeared, to fix her washing machine, but “he went to an award ceremony at the school, where one of the boys was getting an award, so he ended up going there rather than going out on that day to William’s grandmother’s”. He says his father told him that he phoned the grandmother to say he would not be coming to fix the washing machine.
NoCookies | The Australian
How could toddler William Tyrrell simply vanish into thin air?
Well if there was a message left by BS saying he could come and fix the washer that day. His friends and relatives were certainly confused by what he told them.
I guess his legal rep is focusing on the possible confusion of the elderly fgm for a reason..imo