Jeremy Bamber Forum
JEREMY BAMBER CASE => Jeremy Bamber Case Discussion => Topic started by: mike tesko on January 08, 2011, 01:02:PM
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Doctored batch of Crime Scene Ammunition
To anyone, who is remotely interested in the truth, this is where you can find out for yourself, or at least to your own satisfaction, that Essex police doctored the batch of crime scene ammunition, and this is the very reason, why in October 1996, they destroyed the batch of crime scene ammunition without consulting anyone else...
They got the logistics, all wrong...
Exit wounds
June Bamber - had four exits wounds
Nicholas Caffell - had one Exit wound
Total number of exits wounds, found upon any of the five victims by the Pathologist, Peter Venezis, was five in total
Bullets, not recovered from body of Victim
One bullet, was not recovered by the Pathologist, Peter Venezis, at the time he peformed the autopsy, on Daniel Caffell, on 8th August 1985...
The significance of the failure to retrieve this bullet cannot be underestimated, since, if you add this to the twenty five (25) crime scene bullets, found inside the bodies (20), and those found at the scene (5), it means that 26 bullets, and not twenty five bullets, were fired during the incident at whf. The fact that twenty six bullets were fired, means that there is a missing bullet case, which Essex police have failed to locate or identify, since, they only recovered twenty five bullet cases from the scene...
How could a twenty sixth Bullet have been fired, without a corresponding bullet case, having been deposited at the scene?
According to the police, the Bamber rifle was empty when it was discovered at the scene - this means no more bullets, or bullet cases, inside it...
Whichever way you look at this serious anomaly, if twenty six bullets were fired during this incident, and the same gun fired all the shots, there would have had to be, twenty six corresponding bullet cases, but as we know, there were only twenty five bullet cases found, or retrieved at the scene...
What happened to the twenty sixth Bullet case?
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There was no twenty Sixth Bullet Case
There was no twenty sixth bullet Case, and there was no twenty sixth bullet fired during the incident - it only appears as though there was, because the police introduced a whole control bullet, into the batch of crime scene ammunition, in the form of bullet PV/20...
If you add a solitary control bullet, to the batch of 24 crime scene bullets, which were recovered, or found, in bodies during autopsies, or at the scene, it produces a total of 25 bullets, which the police called the Crime Scene bullets, which appear to correspond with the twenty five bullet cases found at the scene - but this does not take into account, the solitary bullet which Pathologist, Peter Venezis, did not retrieve from the body of Daniel Caffell, during autopsy...
If you add the bullet which Pathologist, Peter Venezis, did not recover from Daniel Caffell, it produces a total of twenty six bullets, with only twenty five corresponding bullet cases...
Fragmented Bullet, PV/20, substituted, with a whole control Bullet, which was fired during an unofficial test firing of the Bamber Rifle, on or about, 11th September 1985
The fragmented bullet (PV/20) which was recovered from body of Sheila Caffell, by Pathologist, Peter venezis, during autopsy, performed on 7th August 1985, was retained as part of the batch of crime scene ammunition, alongside the other twenty three bullets, and the substituted control bullet (PV/20) - which produced a total of twenty five crime scene bullets...
The introduction of the added whole control bullet (PV/20), served two purposes, (a) it helped the ballistic expert to link the two bullets (PV/19 and PV/20) as having been fired via the Bamber Rifle, and (b), to make the number of bullets which formed part and parcel of the batch of crime scene ammunition (25), correspond with the number of bullet cases found at the scene (25), and which corresponds with the total number of wounds (25), which had been inflicted upon the five victims...
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It Doesn't Add Up...
If you recover 20 bullets from the bodies of the five victims during autopsy, on 7th and 8th August 1985, and you do not recover one bullet from one of the child victims, and you find five loose bullets at the scene, it adds up to a total of 26 bullets - Yet, there are only 25 bullet cases, found at the scene:-
Either, a bullet case is missing, or at least one bullet has been added to the batch of crime scene ammunition - the substitution of the fragmented bullet, (PV/20), for a whole one, between 7th August 1985 and 20th September 1985, is a good example, of how an additional bullet could have been added to the batch of crime scene ammunition, which produces the aforementioned anomaly...
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Adding a Whole control bullet to the batch of crime scene ammunition
Let no-one be in any sort of doubt, that someone added a Whole control bullet to the batch of crime scene ammunition, at some stage after 7th August 1985, which enabled a previously fragmented bullet (PV/20) to become transformed into a whole bullet, that the ballistic expert, was then able to link as having been fired via the Bamber rifle...
If the solitary bullet which was not recovered from the body of Daniel Caffell had in fact been recovered, there would have been 26 bullets (including the substituted whole bullet) - what this means, is that at least one of the batch of crime scene bullets, was in truth a substituted one, not one that was fired at the time of the shootings, and not one which was recovered from the body of a victim, and not one which was found at the scene...
Would this be a good enough reason, for Essex police, to want to destroy the batch of crime scene ammunition in 1996, without consulting any of the other interested parties?