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Bodies don’t decompose naturally that quickly in cold weather.I suspect decomposition played a big part in this.
Bodies don’t decompose naturally that quickly in cold weather.I suspect decomposition played a big part in this.
Yes, magistrates court but the summary was provided by the prosecutor.I would go from what was said today as it likely came from the magistrates
I linked a historic Kent media story about the garage a few threads back - trying to find it. I am sure it said that he left the garage in 2015 and can't remember what year it finally closed.
Wasn't there a period between Dungeness and Bromleywhen he was in Kent Police(Traffic?)
End of road as garage doors close for last timeI linked a historic Kent media story about the garage a few threads back - trying to find it. I am sure it said that he left the garage in 2015 and can't remember what year it finally closed.
No, you're getting mixed up.
He finished the 7pm to 7am shift the day he did the kidnapping.
He finished the 2pm to 8pm shift the day he was arrested.
There was a week between them!
True, but we did have a warm spell around that time. If the body was buried in the bag in the ground, you'll get decomp and the temps were nowhere near freezing. If the body was in the open, you may get animal interference also.Bodies don’t decompose naturally that quickly in cold weather.
No, we are not getting mixed up, it was been widely reported in MSM that WC worked a 2pm to 8pm relief shift at the US embassy the day Sarah went missing. It's only today that the confusion has arisen.No, you're getting mixed up.
He finished the 7pm to 7am shift the day he did the kidnapping.
He finished the 2pm to 8pm shift the day he was arrested.
There was a week between them!
No, we are not getting mixed up, it was been widely reported in MSM that WC worked a 2pm to 8pm relief shift at the US embassy the day Sarah went missing. It's only today that the confusion has arisen.
I suspect decomposition played a big part in this.
It may be as simple as severe injuries to her face/head where she couldn’t be recognized conclusively by sight. Based on the Met’s statement when they found her they seem to have known it was her (maybe clothes, size, hair) but were waiting on an official ID.
I just want to make it clear that I'm far from an expert, but I have some lab (particularly molecular/cell bio) and forensics (academic, not practical) experience. IMO, a DNA match could potentially take longer than an odontology identification purely because they have to have a reference sample (which one would assume they would obtain as soon as they realise they are looking for a body), and then a sample from the body, plus the processing itself. If they have antemortem dental records, then an x-ray of the deceased's oral cavity is all that's needed for comparison.
Particularly during covid restrictions, I could imagine this being used as the only people involved would be the dentist providing the antemortem records, the pathologist/individual carrying out the x-ray, and the forensic odontologist. DNA is, ofc, a great way to identify a body, but forensic odontology is considered a quick, reliable method of identification when there are existing dental records. This is ofc JMO.
Also, I've lurked here for a few years but this is my first post. I don't *think* I'm breaking tos, but if I am I'd be happy to delete.
Are you sure? That's not what was reported, this work timeline sure is confusing
Thats not what it says here:No, we are not getting mixed up, it was been widely reported in MSM that WC worked a 2pm to 8pm relief shift at the US embassy the day Sarah went missing. It's only today that the confusion has arisen.
Seems like he was off work from the 5th March going by the article.
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