Caustic Logic
Illuminator
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2007
- Messages
- 4,494
I think Gareth Pierce is simply compiling from the same sources we are using, so I wouldn't give her article any special credibility. Remember, she's an English solicitor who only came into the frame very recently, and this case was Scottish. And I wouldn't trust Bollier to tell me the time of day. However, the proximity of the airlines does seem to have reasonably wide currency among fairly credible commentators, and not to have been contradicted.
Rolfe.
Mmm, not sure I agree it's well-illustrated, but I don't think it's a point to get hung up on. It's not closeness doesn't matter as much as access and will. Iranian agents acting via the airline could have put those cases in container 4041. Or Abu Elias, depending just where he got to after Frankfurt.
Or it could be some slightly different person, or just Mr. Kamboj, either off the conveyor or from the cash-laden stranger. But innocent hands, of baggage workers or of a duped mule, seem unlikely to have done this placement, because it shows such probable intent to rupture the plane.
I'll have to confess a weakness of the London intro theory is the lack of gathered and shared evidence on just who could have and might have operated in London/at Heathrow at the time. But when clues line up like this, it seems that SOMEONE must have slipped the bomb on in London. Can't be Megrahi. Can't be Jaafar.
Can we have a new investigation yet?