The absolute truth is that this officers report about the shooting incident in the kitchen at whf, is linked to (7.37am) '... the body of one dead female in kitchen', or to put it another way, Sheila was in the kitchen when the shooting incident occurred...
So, we have Sheila in the kitchen at 7.37am, at least until 8.10am, we have the family owned rifle resting against or near to a first floor window (Jeapes/Brown) from 7.15am, onward, we have an officers report about a shooting incident in the kitchen (1156) at whf, we only have three bodies upstairs at 8.10am (other two bodies already reported as found in kitchen previously), we have an inserted page typed out by a different typewriter added into PS Woodcocks witness statement at the point where he is coming around the edge of the internal kitchen door (true events removed because it originally contained details of t he shooting incident involving himself and Sheila), we have Dr Craig pronouncing Sheila dead upstairs at 8.44am, we have senior officers performing 'informatives' around Sheila's body on the bedroom floor, we have the rifle standing at the main bedroom window (23) prior to the same rifle being photographed on Sheila's body (25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, and 33), we have the original badly fragmented bullet (PV\20) visible inside Sheila's neck as shown in X-ray, we have a pathologist (Peter Venezis) who removes a badly fragmented piece of a bullet from Sheila's body during autopsy performed on 7th August, 1985, we have the prosecutions ballistic expert (Malcolm Fletcher) conducting unofficial test firing of the family rifle with two pieces of control ammunition ('DRH/42' - 29 x .22 bullets recovered from kitchen worktop) prior to, or on the 12th September, 1985, we have 'Fletcher' then conducting official test firing of the family owned rifle using the remaining 27 bullets ('DRH/42') on 20th and 25th September, 1985, and the 2nd October, 1985 (which he claims to use for all purposes of comparison tests' carried out against all the batch of crime scene ammunition, despite some comparisons of the same occurring prior to the 20th September, 1985), we have 'Fletcher' thereafter referring to bullet PV/20 as a whole bullet, which he identifies as having been loaded and fired via the family rifle (the fragmented bullet, 'PV/20' had been substituted with a test fired round by this stage, to cover up the use of a police bullet in the shooting incident in the kitchen), we have a photograph of the original piece of bullet (PV/20) as photographed by the defence ballistic expert (Major Mead) which weighed 26.56 grains, a loss of over 33.5% of its original mass in accordance with the manufacturers production weight if it be an Eley round...
The more we look, the more we find...