Why were they so quick to tell us it was a diesel car? Scared of rioting in the streets or summat?
Let's suppose that this was in fact a hybrid fire and the fire department is trying to mislead the public about that fact. So, it's a diesel hybrid, but for now they claim that it's a diesel powered car, so as not to alarm the public or something. They do so by couching their findings with caveats in the press conference, although they omit the caveats on their web pages because, you know, simplified English or something.
These smart lawyers who told the chief to do this must have a plan. What could it be? Seems to me there are only two obvious options.
The
first option is to admit that it was a hybrid at a later date. After all, if the final report is similar to that of the
Liverpool report, it begins with a statement of truth and compliance, so there's legal pressure that the final report is accurate.
But if they have to admit publicly that it was a hybrid within months, what has been gained? The public will know the truth and will be greatly offended about the lie. Oh, you could say that the public will forgive them, because maybe the facts were only discovered later, but there's two problems with that prediction. First, a number of people have said from the start that it was a hybrid or EV, so the fact that laymen know the truth suggests the fire experts were lying from the start. Second, according to your posts, average folks are too stupid to understand caveats like "pending final investigation", so they will conclude that the fire brigade was just lying from the start.
So I see no benefit at all from the first option.
The
second option is to continue the lie in the final report. Never admit the truth, just keep saying that this vehicle was a bog standard diesel car. But if that's the plan, then what purpose do the chief's caveats serve? He might as well have claimed certainty from the start. For that matter, if we're willing to consider that the officials are likely to baldly lie to us about the origin of the fire, why should we put any stock in their press releases at all? Everything they say should be regarded as suspect, so we're better off, I guess, looking at grainy photos and ignoring what they say.
Thus, the second option puts us in the miserable position of having no authority we can trust. That doesn't make the second option false, but it means that we might as well just ignore whatever the fire experts say. No need to parse the press release for caveats, since if the car really was a hybrid, they'll have to continue the lie straight into the final report or else the initial misleading statement would be for naught.
So we can see that there's no real reason to claim it was a diesel pending verification unless they really believed it was a bog standard diesel but felt compelled to admit that they just might be mistaken. Since, if they had evidence that it really was a hybrid, either they would have to admit this some time later for no gain, or they intend to just flat out lie about it in the final report so why not flat out lie now?
These lawyers don't seem so smart. They seem to be unable to recognize that there's a final report coming at some point.
(Note: The Liverpool fire occurred on Dec. 31, 2017 and the investigation team report was released on May 22, 2018. So we're looking at less than half a year in that case. Of course, different fires are different, but surely this final report will be released within, oh, say two years at the very most. It can't be kicked down the line forever. The very people who make statements now will still be around at that time, at least for the most part.)