So it seems that PV not only missed/concealed victims wounds but also cannot tell the difference between the front of the head and the base of the skull!
What are we to make of Peter Vanezis?
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The Police are among the most sensitive of organisations when it comes to close inspection of their behaviour in the discharge of their duties. They do not take criticism very well and are always reluctant to admit they are or were wrong. They have millions of stock in trade responses to explain themselves. I do not want to set out a discourse on British Policing in the last 40 years but would draw particular emphasis on how they behave when they “accidently” kill.
I believe they deliberately engaged Mr Patel in the ‘Ian Tomlinson Case’, either because he was incompetent or because they knew he would produce an outcome which was in their favour. My guess is that it was the latter.
Was Peter Vanezis selected on a random basis and if not who requested his attendance at WHF?
Did he get sucked into a cover-up along with some Essex Police officers or was he a willing participant?What was the purpose of his note of 12/11/86? Who asked him to write it and why?
Is it an attempt to remove suspicion from him for the part he played in the case?Is it a vehicle to allow him to exonerate himself in any future enquiries in that the early decision of murder suicide was a police error not his? He wanted to protect his reputation.In view of the above how might various interpretations be placed upon this statement? I intend to go through some of this on a paragraph by paragraph basis.
Paragraph 1 interpretation.I knew nothing until I phoned Essex. I only spoke to a junior officer who told me what he knew and why I was needed. A more senior officer may have been able to give me information which would have led me to take a different course of action because I was not told anything about an accident.
Paragraph 2 interpretationI thought it was strange that I was not wanted at the scene. I did not think there was anything malevolent underscoring this and I could have helped significantly if I had gone to the scene. Because of their actions I assumed incorrectly that their diagnosis was correct. Why was I only allowed to get my information second hand from an officer who did not appreciate my status or skills set?
Paragraph 3 interpretationI was surprised that a ballistics expert was not attending the autopsy and made this known. I am a pathologist and a good one but I am not competent to pass judgement on ballistics removed from the deceased. They led me to believe it was an uncomplicated case and as such ballistics would not contribute to the outcome. There were lots of bullets and because of fragmentation and distortion I could easily failed to detect a larger round.
Paragraph 4 interpretationI trusted that they had not altered the clothing the victims were wearing and that all procedures had been adhered to as required. It was difficult for me to work on the autopsies without photographs of the bodies’ in-situ.
Paragraph 5 interpretationHow could I know what Jeremy said was correct, since they seemed to have taken his word along with other information they had gleaned to come to their preliminary conclusion. I did not have photographs to examine whether their description of how Sheila was found were correct.
Paragraph 6 interpretationI was confident at that time that it was four murders and a suicide because the police thought it was such and I could not find anything to contradict them.
Paragraphs 7 & 8 interpretationI could not pronounce either way but was influenced by others and their description of the weapon used to come to the decision that it was probably suicide. I have seen two shot suicides before. I was told that the rifle used was semi-automatic and therefore more likely to produce additional shots. Please remember ballistics is not my area of expertise. I was not told of the other weapons on the premises. I can’t remember whether any of the two shot suicides involved a rifle.
Paragraphs 9, 10, & 11 interpretationI only counted 24 shots not 25. I did not say that Sheila had a good knowledge of how the rifle operated. I said the perpetrator must have had this knowledge. How could I know if more than one person had fired some of the shots?
The Meeting at WHFI would now like to comment on that part of the note which covers the meeting and the notes that follow which relate to Neville.
This record of the meeting is male cow excrement. They showed him the house, where the bodies were located, the security, (was there something besides door and window locks?) and the telephone. Did they think he was a GPO engineer or a handset connoisseur, surely they would have shown him any potential blood trail. He was a pathologist.
He name checks Stan Jones twice as the person who suspects Jeremy. He makes it clear that Stan did not like Jeremy or his behaviour. If Stan was the architect of the framing he is pointing out that it was the silencer and JM’s testimony that sank Jeremy not his silence with regard to any cover-up.
He then goes onto his diagnosis which he limits to only two possibilities. He does not consider that Sheila could have let in a third party to do most of the killing, before letting the same out before killing herself. Remote as it may be, neither he nor they could limit the possibilities at that stage, unless they knew different.
The “Jeremy would have to be a nutter” passage is dependent upon the context of the preceding conversation. It could be said following
We cannot frame him because… or any number of other scenarios. I think he is trying to appear on Jeremy’s side because he wanted to distance himself from the outcome.
What I find most strange is his comment about where Neville was shot. Throughout he makes reference to things which are in the province of ballistics experts. In fact just before this he makes reference to this very point, in relation to Sheila’s nails. Yet now he is saying that he did not see the shell casings.
Surely he can’t have it both ways. He is introducing an element of doubt on the 4x4 scenario but does not make comment about other victims and their shell casings, why? The dispersal of casings is also driven by ballistics science but in this case he does not mention it nor why seeing these would have helped with determining Neville’s death but not June’s.
He says his visit was for a cursory search. I don’t think this was the reason. I believe this was a strategy meeting, in a place where just a few key players met, to discuss how to handle the mess in complete privacy.
DiscussionIs the document a cynical ploy or is it the document of an angry man who has fallen foul of a combination of circumstances and like some police officers, has seen his attempts to help Essex police turn into a nightmare?
If it is the former it must rank as one of the most hideous pieces of artifice ever constructed.
The answer to this might lay in the circumstances of his assignment to the case and who asked him to produce this report. If it was a random allocation it is more likely it is the latter.
Either way it looks like an attempt to distance himself from the police and what they may have done.
The report seems to be saying I took no part in the framing of Jeremy Bamber.
I find it strange that he talks of 24 shots, only two weeks after the trial where the total was 25. Could it be that the lower neck shot with the fragmented bullet only existed on celluloid, created to give the impression that Sheila was the last to die and could have been alive in the final period of the siege? Was it just a simple mistake? There are many references to Sheila only having one wound, (inquest). They presented a whole round at trial.
I do not know what he means by security. Was this the police cordon around the property to preserve the crime scene? Was it some form of intruder alarm or panic button?
It may be the case where he ‘lost his virginity’ or it may be another ‘job done’, issue slapped wrist note to the police.
They appear to have decided to let things run but to keep in touch. There is no doubt that he could have produced and issued his autopsy report without the blood tests for drugs. Those tests could have been reported later. My guess is they wanted to wait to see which way the wind was blowing and to obtain some results on forensics, before putting pen to paper. I have no doubt that he was asked to produce reports which fitted their needs. However he missed the fact that originally they wanted it to be Sheila and he used the word ‘stunned’ which along with other issues led him to produce a subsequent report clarifying his position on what activity she was capable of following the supposed first shot.
It is possible that they had to provide him with reassurance since he states several times that as far as he was concerned and from what he was told, the case was resolving to the four murders and suicide position.
Did they tell him they would doctor his report if his professionalism meant he could not do it?
Who safeguards the public from rogue Forensic Pathologists?