True, but what would bring someone with a home in London up to Doncaster, to give him access to Andrew? Work? Maybe - but I’d have thought it’d be the other way around really. Perhaps it was someone he came into contact with when visiting his grandparents in London? Again, maybe. But how would that connection be maintained once Andrew was back in Yorkshire, without internet and/or phone access? I can’t help but feel that if he’d been groomed then lured to London, then technology must’ve been involved somehow.
I think, though, that I probably lean towards believing that Andrew went there off his own bat, for no other reason than he was 14, and teenagers like to push boundaries. It was early September, possibly he was finding it hard to get used to being back at school after the long summer break. He wasn’t considered rebellious or street-wise, but the kids I knew at 14 who were rarely strayed far from home. They certainly wouldn’t have been capable of getting themselves down to London on a train on a school day, but evidently Andrew was. I don’t think he was going to a gig or a show or a shop - it was just meant to be an adventure.
Then something went wrong. I don’t know what, and I don’t think we ever will, sadly.
I agree with your leaning I think. It's tricky, because the grooming scenario is tempting - but I think if it's the case then there must be significant police incompetence (and yes there does seem to be some evidence of that) or Andrew had been given a secret mobile phone by the groomer which he had kept hidden.
Andrew travelled to London alone and it's weird to imagine a scenario in which a Doncaster-based groomer decides to lure him to London, unless we're talking highly-organised paedophile ring and major conspiracy. I'm not wholly against conspiracy theories btw, I just feel a random occurence is just as likely.
His parents have stated he was allowed to travel to London alone, so he wouldn't have needed to lie MUCH in order to make a weekend plan to pop down to London for the day. Missing school is two sets of lying, instead of one. And it involves lying to the authorities, which is much harder to predict/control. Even if Andrew thought that was a good idea, I don't know why a perpetrator would encourage him to do that. It's much too high risk. The fact that the school phoned the wrong parents - no perp could account for that happening?!
If you wanted to lure a teenage boy to London, you would do it at a time when people were least likely to be alerted for as long as possible. Missing school? The opposite of that.
Didn't they used to send the police round looking for kids who were bunking off?
I feel persuaded by your suggestion that Andrew did it solo, as an adventure, to see if he could get away with it. Or because there was something happening in London on that particular day that made him
determined: an experience he wanted to have, the sale of something he felt he needed, an opportunity too good to miss.
One thing I thought of was a computer fair. Were those still happening in 2007? They used to have cheap games for sale and opportunities for networking other geeks. I used to go to them in the nineties. From memory, only at the weekends. But I wonder if they ever started on Fridays, providing early sales opportunities for people 'in the business'?