One thing that I pride myself in, is that I consider 'all the facts'. Take the body count, 'downstairs' and 'upstairs'. I rely upon the information contained in the police radio message logs (two bodies downstairs, a further three bodies upstairs, between 7.37am and 8.10am), and the witness statement versions bearing ' untimed' references to the body count (one body downstairs, four bodies upstairs) to explain how this transition of 'one female from downstairs in the kitchen' to 'upstairs in the bedroom' occurred. Whereas, those in the 'Bamber is guilty camp', only rely on the latter. The true position is as follows, the contents of the police radio message logs, and information passed between cops at the scene and elsewhere between 7.37am and 8.10am is 100% accurate and reliable. The female downstairs in the kitchen was S, and later when the body count ' altered' and 'changed' from three bodies upstairs until 8.10am, into four bodies upstairs with the inclusion of S's body, from 8.30am (with absolute certainty) onward. Cop witness statements were not entirely accurate or honest, because at the debrief held at Witham police station that evening, senior officers who had knowledge about the migration of S's body from the kitchen to the bedroom, and from the bed in the bedroom, to the bedroom floor, where S eventually ended up and her body photographed there with the anshuzt rifle from the bedroom window now upon her body, instructed all those present to make their notes up, as though the bodies had been found upon entry in the positions they ended up in, as per PC Birds crime scene photographs. This is why in the witness statement versions they claim they found S's body upstairs on the bedroom floor with the rifle on her body, and they deliberately do not include her body ever being present downstairs in the kitchen at all, or how for about a period of 15 minutes (between 8.15am and 8.30am), cops didn't know the 'whereabouts' inside the farmhouse S was, because once senior officers, Harris, Gibbons and Montgomery entered the kitchen at 8.15am after the 'all clear' message had been relayed to the forward control point by the search team inside the farmhouse, 'five dead in total', the named officers, went to survey the reported carnage, only to be met with dads body in the kitchen, not dads and daughters bodies. This was very serious, because now they had three 'unarmed' senior cops, trapped in the kitchen with dads body, and nobody had a clue of the 'whereabouts' of S or if she had armed herself with a loaded weapon in the meantime. I can tell you all now, that these senior officers were terrified, to find themselves trapped there in the kitchen, believing that the daughter might come back into the kitchen at any moment and shoot them all, and none of them had a weapon with which to defend themselves. It was possible for S to come back into the kitchen through three separate doors (1) - the door leading into the back hallway, on the 'den' side of the main kitchen (this was the door the raid team had entered, and later the three senior officers), this door opened inward on the kitchen side. (2) - the door to the set of spiral stairs (this door opened inward of the main kitchen) that provided access to the upstairs landing, and (3) - the door that led to the front hallway (through which the team of firearm officers had gone through to search other parts of the house, earlier)...
Now, I have already told you all that once the senior officers got into the kitchen (through door 1) and discovered the daughter 'missing', that DCI Harris used the cream coloured telephone in the kitchen to call ACC 'Peter' Simpson directly and give him a 'one to one', regarding how the operation had 'just gone pershaped'. Well, all of that is true, and I have reported these 'facts' accurately. I can also tell you, that upon sudden realisation that these three senior cops had got themselves caught up in what surely must have been a 'terrifying' experience, with Harris on the phone to Simpson, the other two (Montgomery and Gibbons) set about trying to 'block off access to the kitchen at two of the three aforementioned doors, (1) and (2), by jamming a large wooden chair against door (1), and shoving the kitchen table against door (2). In addition, it was they who placed clothing, a towel and seat cushions on the kitchen floor to contain the spread of blood on the kitchen floor that had spilled from dads head wounds, down the side of the coal hod...