The 'two bodies' in the kitchen narrative, cannot easily be dismissed, because the recorded sequence of events does not support the claim that there was simply something of a mix up between cops outside the kitchen window peering into the kitchen prior to the firearms team entering the farmhouse, and them actually managing to get themselves into that kitchen, only to realise that the body they thought was a woman, had infact been the body of Ralph Neville Bamber..
The documentary evidence introduced by Essex police regarding this matter quite simply does not stack up!
First of all we have an observation by a police officer from outside the main kitchen window peering into the kitchen - he says he can see the body of a woman. But this is not reflected in any official operational log that supposedly records all communication between members of the raid team en route, and eventually after entry into the farmhouse, and senior officers who are stationed inside an outbuilding nearby, or for that matter, officers and civilian employees back in the control room at Chelmsford police station..
In particular, and for the moment disregard that sighting of Sheila Caffell as viewed by officers from the vantage point outside the kitchen window looking in, and the angle at which such a positive identification had been made of her..
Let's move to the nitty gritty, concerning when 'at last' the firearms officers managed to force entry into 'that' kitchen...
So, we are expected to believe that when firearms officers got into the kitchen (at about 7.35am) that they only discovered the body of Ralph Neville Bamber..
OK..
What we have at 'this' or 'that' stage, is a six man raid team, most of whom have physically entered the farmhouse kitchen. They all have personal radios through which they can instantly communicate with each other, and to senior officers elsewhere, in this instance in a nearby outbuilding, surrounding area, and the control room back at police headquarters in Chelmsford..
Cops enter kitchen..
Messages are passed, between interested parties...
Then how come, there is mention of the body of one dead male, before any mention is made concerning the presence of the body of one dead female, found upon entry?
Not only this, but the two bodies are described as 'A MURDER' and 'A SUICIDE'...
So, just to recap, we only have 'one body' found to be present downstairs in the kitchen upon entry. One dead male body!
Now this becomes somewhat intriguing, since bearing in mind that Ralph Neville Bamber had been shot at, and killed off by a total of eight bullets fired at him, four such bullets fired into the top part of his skull - how could it be possible for anyone, let alone firearm officers, to conclude that Ralph Neville Bamber had committed 'SUICIDE' downstairs in the kitchen at such an early stage in the police operation?
The only person whose death might possibly be described as a suicide, in the overall circumstances of this matter, involved the death of Sheila Caffell..
There is no way that by 7.42am, that police could have already made their way upstairs to the doorway of the main bedroom, and within, only to discover a second body, which they described as being dead by suicide. Since, according to police, the second body that would have been found in sequence was the body of June Bamber, apparently her body close to the open main bedroom door, her feet closest to the doorway. She had been shot a total of seven times. This being the case, how is it possible for anyone of sound mind or otherwise, to describe June Bambers death as a suicide?
Ralph Neville Bamber and his wife were both murdered!
Yet, according to the police logs, the second body which the firearms officers came upon was a body with cause of death being 'SUICIDE'...
It is not possible, for any firearm officer to have entered into the main bedroom via its doorways, to find the body of Sheila Caffell second in sequence of any body find! Cops would have come upon June Bambers body secondly, if beforehand they had only found the body of one dead male (Ralph Neville Bamber) downstairs in the kitchen. For the sake of being exact, if entry to the main bedroom had not been affected by the main bedroom door, but rather by the internal box room door, cops would have discovered the two bodies of the six year old boys, before they had come upon Sheila's body...