Robert Boutflour makes inquiries about who would inherit, depending upon order of death of the five victims
Robert Boutflour was taking no chances, about who might be in line to inherit from the Bamber parents estate, seeking advice which informed him that the order of deaths would be treated in the same way as if the five victims had all died in a road traffic accident, the first to die being the eldest, and the last to die, being the youngest. Boutflour discovered that if this approach was adopted the father of the twins, Colin Caffell, would be a beneficiary - but also found out that the twins were too young to be beneficiaries of the estate(s) and so, it would pass, to Boutflours wife, Pamela, and perhaps, Anthony Pargeter, and his sister, nephew, and niece, of Ralph Bamber...
If the twin boys were considered to be too young, surely the next in line to be a beneficiary of the parents estate(s) should have been Sheila, and any of her surviving relatives - despite the fact that Sheila was adopted...
To be pondered was why Boutflour was taking such an interest in who might benefit financially because of the deaths?
Was this what motivated him to help frame Jeremy Bamber for these five murders - murders that he did not, and could not have committed?
Documents to prove this to be the case will be published here for general viewing in due course...