That is simply an argument from incredulity.
It's no such thing. We simply don't accept the same evidence as relevant. I think that you accept the rather desperate, scattershot claims of the defense as true because that's the narrative you support. I'm not pretending to be certain, as you are, because I'm not interested in proving anything, which you are.
The evidence suggests she shot herself when surrounded
I don't think it does. I think we can agree that there was some bad police work, and I think that there were inconsistent reports that confused the issue. For example, the idea that Sheila was alive in the kitchen when the police arrived is ludicrous.
which is not dissimilar to the Bain case.
Please don't muddy the thread with comparisons to other cases. They are not relevant.
For some odd reason people seem more comfortable shooting others than themselves, and in these two similar cases the evidence shows it was at the last minute. The discomfort of shooting oneself becomes outweighed by the anticipation of the opprobrium imminent in explaining to the world killing ones own children.
Also please don't muddy the thread with maundering, purely speculative generalities such as these. They add nothing to the discussion.
Robin Bain killed his family then some hours later himself, and Sheila Caffel did the same thing (a few years earlier).
There is no doubt in either case.
Clearly there's enough doubt in this case that Bamber is in prison, and is likely to remain there. I'd love to hear some theory of why the police would conspire to put him there when they already had a closed case for murder/suicide that required zero additional effort and definitely pleased the public. The path of least resistance was obviously to consider Sheila the murderer. The only problem was the facts in evidence.
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