Kind of dusting off what I wrote earlier on naother forum about the potential phone calls:
I was looking at Wiki and they have a call sheet from a potential call which is thought by some to be Neville. If there are two police call logs, that does seem pretty weird. If there is only one, it means some pretty sloppy way of wording things. In another case I am looking at, the police appear to have created some of their paperwork after the fact. That might be the case here as well where the police created reports after the fact, forgetting they created the already existing paperwork.
I am quite sure Nevill did not call Malcolm Bonnet, whose note you are referring to. That idea faces insuperable difficulties not excluding Bonnets own denial, of course.
Assuming that there is only one call to the police, I actually can believe that it might take around 26 minutes to call the police. It takes a few minutes really to wake up from a full sleep. In addition, you hope that Neville will call you back and tell you that it has been resolved. You try to call him back a few times. You worry a lot. You also really do not want the police involved. You finally and reluctantly decide that you need to call the police all the while castigating yourself for taking so long to call them. [Yes, I might be talking from personal experience.] Calling a local police number is strange but not enough to be considered suspicious even when tied to time frame. I have some speculation why he might do it but I don't know if they are relevant.
Your explanation isn't the one he gave Ann Eaton, He told her he didn't think it was that important. Wasting time looking up the number for Chelmsford police when the 999 service was available is inexplicable IMO.
With regard to his call to Julie, this was recorded at least a month afterwards, correct? Anything that removed from the events is very suspicious because it can easily be suggested into somebody's memory or could be a different day. For example, there is another case I am looking at where witnesses said that the victim had a basketball game the day the victim disappeared where she was suppose to score. There is pretty solid evidence that the basketball game did not happen that day and that the people were confused about the day.
True. The evidence of the timing of his call to Julie is sketchy.
Did not Mugford in her first police interview states that Jeremy hired an assassin who killed his family? After the assassin was proved to have an ironclad alibi, her story changed?
No. I don't think this is correct. She said he told her he would use a hitman who he named (and the police arrested) but she gradually came to realise he did it himself.