Like I said I am always asking questions . But there are definitely things in that room that don't make sense
Let's just take the initial call IF jeremy is innocent he could have assumed that his father meant Sheila because of her illness and yet there is June with all that blood on her nightdress and we don't really know the whole sequence of what happened to this day ? Who fought who? Why was Sheila's bed not slept in? Why were nevilles slippers in her room ? Was she bible reading in the bed with June? Was June's nightdress tested ? Why was Anne allowed to take things away from the crime scene ? Who's blood was on the bedroom floor? Why did one of the forensic tests say they could be a mixture of animal blood and human blood on the silencer ?
All this time and because of the way the crime scene was treated still no answers .
I am not making any conclusions . Just sayin that EP were still entering a crime scene and even if they assumed murder suicide it was still murder and should have been treated as such . No excuses . None .
The only answer I can give is that Jeremy controlled their thought processes -and as a result, their actions- from the word go. I'm not suggesting that there was anything 'supernatural' about what he did, but in the way that children listen to and believe what parents tell them, in the way children listen to what their teachers tell them, in the way juniors, in whatever trade or profession -generally- listen to what their seniors tell them, we ALL listen to the person who has more knowledge, than do we, of a given situation. Jeremy, during the time he was A) on the phone B) standing outside WHF with them, had complete control of the conversation. They saw, when they eventually went in, the picture he had painted for them to see. Yes, they saw murder, but they also saw that the person who'd committed those murders had taken her own life. Why WOULD they look down drains for signs of blood? Why WOULD they test night clothes for blood? They KNEW what had happened because Jeremy, the only member of the family who wasn't dead, told them. Rightly or wrongly, I will never believe, despite police training, that Jeremy's information wasn't uppermost and paramount in their thoughts when they went into the farmhouse. Those words may have blinded them to the point where they missed things. It would probably have taken some time before any thoughts of their own overrode what he'd said.