They're accusing him of a crime, not calling him a coward, a narcissist or wishing him audits in his home country.
His time being sectioned, diagnosed with PTSD and being witnessed crying and distraught has been well-documented. You just choose not to believe it real.
It could. Or it could be the most probable outcome: a man just found out he lost his wife, and an attempted robbery/ransom plot ended up with a murder and Tongo realised how deep he's in for it now and needs to think up something quck.
Yes there's evidence he logged onto the site. Can you show me your evidence to prove he was 'hooking up' and 'hitting the scene'?
And you're ignoring all the evidence of them being in a long relationship but using a few texts and his bi-sexuality as proof for that?
What evidence do you have that his trauma came immediately after, and more importantly, because he was called back to South Africa.
How do you know this?
Slums that are driven through by several taxis on the way back and forward from places in South Africa.
If your wife was killed, and you knew the killers had been identified already, and you heard they were accusing you of orchestrating it and it not true, would you focus your energy on disproving that or would you have better things to be doing, like grieving the loss of a loved one. Especially when the killers became identified already. I personally wouldn't be able to leave the house, let alone humour a half-baked concoction that it was my doing in the same country the tramau happened.
These are the attacks I'm talkign about based on a few unhappy texts and a bit of information.
They're the same to me. And they were identified anyway. He probably thought justice would be done, not his name being dropped in it.
He obviously got told by Tongo to give him the money secretely that night and trusted him. Hence why Tongo needed the hijacking to happen that night.
The money for the helicopter would be the last thing on his mind, especially if he didn't suspect Tongo at that point.
Because he must have thought that this was a robbery and if the police got the car back, he'd get the ring back. It's pretty simple. The question should be if he thought this was part of the plan of a hit, then why hide a ring in the car it was going to happen in?!
Who knows why he phoned him?! Could have been another thank you, reminder to do something, tell him he forgot something or to tell someone something. I doubt it was a 'good job, thanks again buddy'. And yes, sometimes grief-stricken people have moments during their life where they don't look grief-stricken.