UK UK - Corrie McKeague, 23, Bury St Edmunds, 24 September 2016 #20

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  • #501
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so the digger is grabbing bucketfuls of rubbish from the dump and placing it on the ground to be searched, must be a better way of doing it then this to preserve DNA , this needs to be done by hand, I will not say what might happen if that digger picks up a body but it will not be intact after six months, the chances of determine course of death will be almost zero, they need to find the body intact as much as possible , IMO
 
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Why can't they get the amount right? Only 60 tonnes in two weeks would mean the search would take 3 years.

Thanks for the post GT. Going over now.
 
  • #505
so the digger is grabbing bucketfuls of rubbish from the dump and placing it on the ground to be searched, must be a better way of doing it then this to preserve DNA , this needs to be done by hand, I will not say what might happen if that digger picks up a body but it will not be intact after six months, the chances of determine course of death will be almost zero, they need to find the body intact as much as possible , IMO
My experience with diggers is that they can be very precise. Eg. The point of the bucket gets put in at the top of the pile and can nudge the material forward or back then the material will come away. Also this digger may have been cleaned beforehand so no chance of decontamination. Could be why they could not just use a different one. This is a potential crime scene after all.
 
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The whole 'wrong bin, wrong weight' etc is frustrating but the fact remains that he was most likely in one bin or the other. How did he get there is the question?

Was he incapable of calling for help? Was he injured before going into the bin lorry?

The general waste bin goes some way to explain how he got through the process unnoticed.
 
  • #510
Actually if it was general waste, that for me throws doubt on his being in the bin. General assorted waste is likely to be considerably heavier than paper and cardboard.
 
  • #511
Actually if it was general waste, that for me throws doubt on his being in the bin. General assorted waste is likely to be considerably heavier than paper and cardboard.

Hmm yep a lot heavier, lot more of it, especially from high street stores/food outlets etc
 
  • #512
The whole 'wrong bin, wrong weight' etc is frustrating but the fact remains that he was most likely in one bin or the other. How did he get there is the question?

Was he incapable of calling for help? Was he injured before going into the bin lorry?

The general waste bin goes some way to explain how he got through the process unnoticed.

But I still don't get why he chose to climb in a smelly dirty bin to go to sleep, when his car was not far away the only explanation to me now is Corrie must of been put in the bin unconscious, In my mind if he willingly climbed in to a bin to sleep it would have had to have been a clean recycling bin.
He's was a good looking lad not a vagrant.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
  • #513
But I still don't get why he chose to climb in a smelly dirty bin to go to sleep, when his car was not far away the only explanation to me now is Corrie must of been put in the bin unconscious, In my mind if he willingly climbed in to a bin to sleep it would have had to been a clean recycling bin.
He's was a good looking lad not a vagrant.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk


I know, its one hell of a mystery overall. But with drink, its anyone's guess.

We need to wait and see what comes of this new 'bin revelation', if indeed it is true.

IMO I'm just not sure how one police officer criticizing another police force can help at this stage. We really need to wait for the final outcome.
 
  • #514
The bin man and bin company have a lot to answer for. How was it possible to have so many wrong answers initially? Wrong bin, Wrong bin lorry, Wrong weight, Wrong waste type, Wrong destination for rubbish. It doesn't make sense, none of it. All of the above should have been easy to confirm by the Police within a few days I thought we had ANPR cameras everywhere for a reason, as well as tachographs, vehicle trackers, mobile phone pings etc etc.
 
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Corrie’s uncle, Tony Wringe, also hit out at Suffolk police, writing: “We begged the police to search the tip. They said no and never.
“Nicola pleaded with them to at least secure the area. Again, no, they wanted to hand it back to the operator and that they did not feel there was any future value in holding the site.
“Through luck or judgement the waste site operator did not dump much/any more waste on that area of the tip - this was nothing to do with the police."

https://www.thescottishsun.co.uk/news/754247/nicola-mckeague-corrie-mckeague-missing-wrong-bin/amp/

How much of this is correct?
 
  • #517
Corrie’s uncle, Tony Wringe, also hit out at Suffolk police, writing: “We begged the police to search the tip. They said no and never.
“Nicola pleaded with them to at least secure the area. Again, no, they wanted to hand it back to the operator and that they did not feel there was any future value in holding the site.
“Through luck or judgement the waste site operator did not dump much/any more waste on that area of the tip - this was nothing to do with the police."

https://www.thescottishsun.co.uk/news/754247/nicola-mckeague-corrie-mckeague-missing-wrong-bin/amp/

How much of this is correct?

On current form - not very much of it!
 
  • #518
The bin man and bin company have a lot to answer for. How was it possible to have so many wrong answers initially? Wrong bin, Wrong bin lorry, Wrong weight, Wrong waste type, Wrong destination for rubbish. It doesn't make sense, none of it. All of the above should have been easy to confirm by the Police within a few days I thought we had ANPR cameras everywhere for a reason, as well as tachographs, vehicle trackers, mobile phone pings etc etc.
Taking statements as fact without verifying them is not a investigation though is it. You follow leads based on incorrect information. Ultimately SP are responsible for the 'errors' no matter what they were told.
 
  • #519
I assume that the bin lorry reg was visible on CCTV?

If so then the police must have double checked that it was the right one that they searched, got details of etc.

They cant have got the bin lorry wrong.
 
  • #520
But I still don't get why he chose to climb in a smelly dirty bin to go to sleep, when his car was not far away the only explanation to me now is Corrie must of been put in the bin unconscious, In my mind if he willingly climbed in to a bin to sleep it would have had to have been a clean recycling bin.
He's was a good looking lad not a vagrant.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Then why did he sleep on a cold, hard, exposed doorway instead of going to his car? I think he was just so drunk he didn't know what he was doing.
 
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