So we're agreeing that the suitcase and possibly two appeared at interline. Bedford wound up recalling this as two cases in addition to what had been there, but as suggested, it could have been only one new case, plus one he didn't notice had just been re-positioned. I'd take it further, and propose for logical fullness, that if that's possible, why not no new cases, and only two of the others re-positioned.
We know the left-hand case wasn't a legitimate passenger case for all the reasons I've described. Henderson, Crawford and Marquise have all stated or implied that none of the "first fifteen" had a maroon or brown hardshell suitcase. So where did it come from, if it was one of the cases Bedford loaded in the normal way after they had been x-rayed?
There is the issue of Bedford's claim of Kamboj's claim that he had x-rayed them. I wonder if they really spoke of this at all, and did they use plural or singular form if so? That would be a good clue if only we could be sure. Bedford used plural for both of them, is all we have.
As I commented on your blog, I have a more-than-sneaking suspicion that they never spoke of it at all.
Rolfe said:
If we're considering whether anyone at Heathrow might have told a little porkie in order to cover his backside, my vote unhesitatingly goes to Bedford himself.
"I returned about 4.40 p.m. Camjob told me two further suitcases had arrived for PA 103 which he had put in the tin."
Kamboj had no recollection of doing or saying any such thing, even when interviewed very soon after the disaster. It wasn't his job to put cases into the container anyway - he usually just sat them on the floor for Bedfod to load.
If anyone was going to be in the line of fire for letting the bomb through at Heathrow, it was Bedford. He'd seen two cases in the container he hadn't put there. He knew someone else had interfered with his container while he was off drinking tea with Walker. But he didn't say anything, he just let the container go.
He wants to be a good citizen and help catch the terrorists, so he tells everything he saw in case it turns out to be helpful. (And boy, was it helpful!) But he realises he's open to criticism. If one of these cases turns out to be the bomb, he's the guy who could have stopped the Lockerbie disaster but didn't.
So he tells it all, just as he remembers it, but then he invents that one little extra detail. He wasn't suspicious, because Kamboj told him he'd screened the cases and put them there.
But anyway, Okay, I can go with that, depending on where else it takes us. The big question is this:
Who do you suspect was doing the placement and/or re-positioning? I don't have enough detail on this shed, how it was accessed, who could or couldn't walk in and place bags, etc. Do you think Kamboj was circumvented? Did he handle them off-the-belt as normal, or just helped the other Pan Am man who came in? Or was he bribed? Were they x-rayed, do you think? Etc. I can see different ways it could make sense, and I'm open to hearing others.
I actually think the terrorist had a uniform of some sort that made him look normal in the area, and simply put the suitcase in the container while it was unattended. Bedford didn't see him and Kamboj didn't see him.
However, the fact that the IED was disguised as a radio suggests the terrorists were guarding against the case either being x-rayed or hand-searched. If they planned simply to shove it in the container after the x-ray stage, they could have had 20kg of Semtex in there. So that's an oddity.
It may be as simple as the terrorist not having confidence that he could get to the container while it was unaccompanied. The best bet in that situation might then be to wait till Bedford wasn't there, and approach Kamboj with the case. Kamboj would want to x-ray it, but he'd probably let another baggage handler position it in the container because that's what he usually did - his job was to screen the luggage, not to stack the container.
However, either this happened and Kamboj forgot all about it, or the terrorist managed to get to the container when it was completely unattended. The terrorist would prefer the latter, obviously, because there was always a risk a security man might want to investigate an electronic item more closely even if he hadn't had the Autumn Leaves warning as Maier had had.
Obviously I'm speculating, but I think it's important to show that it was something that
could have been achieved, and could have been predicted could be achieved, by someone who already had familiarity with the workings of the Heathrow baggage handling system.
Remember, Bedford said there were teams all over the interline shed, one for each airline, and they would each pull their own airline's luggage from the conveyor that brought items into the shed. And there was quite a high staff turnover. What could be simpler than someone in the uniform of a different airline coming over with a case he'd found for PA103 in with his own luggage, give it to Kamboj to x-ray, and then place it in the container himself in Bedford's absence?
Better still if the terrorist managed to find the container completely unattended for a few minutes though, and I think he'd have been hoping for that and watching for it, and I think he found it.
But the answer will help figure out what makes most sense as far as re-visiting the container at Build-up. To re-visit, one first has to have visited, and that's got un-addressed complications I'm curious about.
I wondered if the terrorist had been disturbed while loading the cases, hadn't got them exactly as he wanted them, and had had another go while the container was outside the build-up shed. To explain the bomb being on the second layer. However, I think the bomb bag was on the left when Bedford saw the container, which would surely count as "close enough". Why risk complicating the issue?
(BTW: The Bedford's-story-was-made-up-to-cover-Walker-theory was simpler here, but I accept that there's no evidence to suggest the premise of it was reasonable to suspect)
This is clearly some new definition of "simpler" I was previously unaware of....
If it's in the evidence, I try to account for it. Dancing with it is a good word. I enjoy dancing with the evidence. It's not always the simplest way, and can challenge one's pre-conceptions, but ... well, you get the idea, and I'll ride off on my verbal high horse into the sunset.
Indeed, that's why I said I was going to let you carry on dancing with it. It doesn't feel right to me, it never did. It's possible there is a version of this that gels, but I'm still not really seeing it.
The fact is that we're never going to know for sure exactly how the terrorist got the bomb into the container, and how it got into the position Claiden calculated. It's likely he was improvising, maybe choosing his actions from a set of pre-planned possibilities depending on exactly what circumstances met him on the ground.
The important thing is that there isn't just one but several possible ways it might have happened. Identifying the exact sequence of events isn't really necessary, and I suspect it's impossible anyway. So, you have your favoured theory, I have mine, and there's no real need to slug it out.
Rolfe.