I remember seeing something in local Kentish online press last month. Will try and find the article.Has this info been reported anywhere?
Has this info been reported anywhere?
Snipped by me for focus.I'm surprised if he was in a farmer's field that he hasn't yet been discovered. September/October is harvest season, and a body would've been seen by a farmer....or at least detected by the tractor/combine/farm equipment if his remains were run over.
Kent Police did say in an article a while back there were details surrounding the case they were not releasing to the public. Which makes me think there are hidden depths somewhere. It's not a simple crash, walk off, etc. that it appears on paper.
I think sadly this is the most likely however <modsnip> theres certainly a lot that doesn't quite add up but I think we won't know until he is found. Seems police are keeping a lot close to their chests. Must be heartbreaking for his loved ones I just hope they find him soon. <modsnip>Snipped by me for focus.
I think the likelihood, sadly, is that Liam has ended up in a ditch, watercourse or wooded area, where (as we have seen time and time again) a body may remain undetected for quite some length of time.
It was really quite strange that there was no mention of a crash until several days after it had happened. I'm not even sure if the police have ever publicly mentioned the crash, to be honest, but I think we can accept that it DID happen.
Quickest and most direct way I can think of is Eurostar from London to Amsterdam, where his body was found. Of course he'd have to get to London St. Pancras International first, and the Eurostar is hardly cheap.The Netherlands?! How did he get there? I wonder if there is more to this story...
Or:London to Amsterdam trains | Eurostar
Travel by train from London to Amsterdam with Eurostar. Book cheap train tickets and travel in just 3 hrs 52 mins.www.eurostar.com
Quickest and most direct way I can think of is Eurostar from London to Amsterdam, where his body was found. Of course he'd have to get to London St. Pancras International first, and the Eurostar is hardly cheap.
Or:
These are, IMHO, the most convenient. There are other, longer and more convoluted means (such as those including ferries) I've decided not to go into.
- a combination of lesser trains from the UK to Amsterdam Centraal from a more convenient station
- a flight from Heathrow or Gatwick to Schiphol, though he'd have to get to LHR or LGW and from AMS as well.
Regardless of what transport he used to get there, he will have been on multiple cameras.
He didn’t have his wallet (it was later found in a field,) and I’m fairly certain it was confirmed that he didn’t have a passport either. Also, travel would’ve flagged the authorities. The Channel current would’ve taken him that way if he went in the water.Quickest and most direct way I can think of is Eurostar from London to Amsterdam, where his body was found. Of course he'd have to get to London St. Pancras International first, and the Eurostar is hardly cheap.
Or:
These are, IMHO, the most convenient. There are other, longer and more convoluted means (such as those including ferries) I've decided not to go into.
- a combination of lesser trains from the UK to Amsterdam Centraal from a more convenient station
- a flight from Heathrow or Gatwick to Schiphol, though he'd have to get to LHR or LGW and from AMS as well.
Regardless of what transport he used to get there, he will have been on multiple cameras.
BBMHe didn’t have his wallet (it was later found in a field,) and I’m fairly certain it was confirmed that he didn’t have a passport either. Also, travel would’ve flagged the authorities. The Channel current would’ve taken him that way if he went in the water.
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File:North Sea Currents.svg - Wikimedia Commons
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IJ (Amsterdam) - Wikipedia
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