LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
My, that was easy enough. Why let so many posts go by wasted on conjecture when you could have simply said so to begin with? I, for one, am willing to take you at your word, but others may not be as generous. Perhaps you could share some of these photos?
I am led to wonder why Guede, if he was in possession of the keys and required them to exit the apartment, didn't go ahead and lock the door behind him. Why would he take the time to lock Kercher's bedroom door, allegedly to delay suspicion and discovery, and then leave the apartment entrance ajar?
Possibly because to lock the front door to the apartment from the outside would require him to spend a few seconds standing in full view from the road. He might (correctly) have realised that every unnecessary second spent outside the door would increase his risk of being seen by a passer-by on the main road.
I also suspect that he might have expected that the door would at the very least stay shut behind him if he merely pulled it shut. I also suspect that he might have expected - like many here - that the very act of pulling the door shut would lock it in some way*.
So, with both those things in mind, it's perfectly logical that Guede might have decided to carefully choose a moment when he could see (from a window) that nobody was passing by, then to let let himself out of the house, quickly pull the door shut behind him, and disappear from the scene as fast as possible.
* It's feasible that he might have assumed the key-locked door to be a "double-locking" for additional security, and that the door would lock itself to a lower security level if it was simply pulled shut.