Hi all
I believe there may be a chance that SL never left Fulham.
It's a working hypothesis I have based around the idea that the white Fiesta that was spotted parked in Stevenage Road just before 2pm by the local taxi cab driver, and then seen again by WJ circa 3.30pm when she got back home to 123 Stevenage Road.
There would only be a relatively short time frame in which to abduct SL, silence her, deposit her body, and then get the car back to Stevenage Road by 3.30pm.
I am basing the idea that the Fiesta was moved between 2pm and 3.30pm, based on the evidence given by BW, who was adamant that she saw SL driving her Fiesta northbound up Fulham Palace Road.
I think there's a good chance that SL was taken to an empty property, but considering that she wasn't murdered in 37SR when Mr Kipper had ample chance to, I think that we may be looking at a different kind of deposition site.
So, where else could the killer have taken SL and hidden her body within just a short time frame?
Well, based on BW, SL was still alive at 2.45pm.
And so if the the car is parked back in Stevenage Road by 3.30pm in the SAME spot, then the killer only had between 2.45pm - 3.30pm to do all that he needed to do.
But if not an empty property, then where?
Well, I've looked at some of the building constructions, renovations and building sites that were active at the time, and within close proximity of Stevenage Road and Fulham Palace Road, and I believe there may be one site in particular that could be the deposition site of SL's body.
Thames Reach, Rainville Road, was a new building project located just a 10 minute walk OR a 5 minute drive from 123 Stevenage Road. The drive itself would require SL to have driven along Langthorne Street, then turned left into Fulham Palace Road. SL could have then turn left on a choice of several side roads that then led to the new housing development; Thames Reach.
Or she could have walked along the river path route (if it was indeed fully open and accessible back in 1986?)
But why this particular development?
Well, interestingly enough, circa May 1987, Mark Gurdon was approached to make a comment on the state of the current housing market at the time. Mark's comments were printed in a monthly publication.
What's odd about the new development at Thames Reach, is that if you look online, it will tell you that the site was built circa 1991.
However, this is not accurate, because there's a picture of the new development at Thames Reach in Fulham actually printed in the June 1987 publication to which I refer to.
This proves that the site was built earlier than 1991; but rather, it was built by 1987. Further research online has provided a more accurate build date for the site; ergo, it began construction in 1986.
Based on this data, could SL have been deposited in the grounds of the new construction of the Thames Reach building project?
And when JC quips about SL having been put into concrete, was that closer to the truth than we realise?
And if JC was indeed a copycat, is there a way in which he had learned of the fate of SL having been deposited concrete; or building site?
Could the remains of SL be buried under the foundations of the Thames Reach building?
Here's the article from the London Illustrated News printed on 1st June 1987...
(Mark Gurdon's comments are on page 2)