Regarding telephone logs, the police may have been interested in the use of Jeremy's home telephone at one time as part of a drugs investigation, but there is no proof that any such special call logging was in progress on the night of the killings.
It has been demonstrated that police had the means and opportunity to be able to obtain metered call logs showing the number of telephone calls made from whf at different times of the day, including the length of such calls. In particular, calls made from the scene from as early as 19th March 1985? It must follow that the police, therefore, would have obtained the relevant metered call logs for the relevant period, 6pm, on Tuesday, 6th August 1985, to 8am, Wednesday, 7th August 1985, so that they could test and evaluate the claim made by Jeremy that he had received a call from his father during the early hours of the morning, on 7th August 1985? To suggest or imply that although police had the means to carry out this action they did not employ the use of it (under the circumstances) would be ludicrous. Of course the police did use the metered call log information to test if there was any truth in the claim made by Jeremy that his farther had called him. Why wouldn't they use something of this / that nature? It should also be pointed out, that police were also able to check out and confirm to whom certain calls had been made which are / were listed in these metered call logs. Anyone who claims that the police were only able to trace international calls made from the telephone at whf, should reconsider that line of thinking, since I have already produced information that calls made to the hospital at Northampton where Sheila was being treated, from whf, were identified by the police...