Originally posted by Trevor Marriott
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I'm not going to bother with the rest, but on a general note, it is futile to try and cast aspersions on the sources we have, claiming that "they should have asked" or "it should have been questioned" etc. Or in the quote above, "strangely he was never asked".
Or saying we should expect Collard to list the apron piece first, and if he didn't, there's something fishy about it.
The sources are what they are. There's nothing strange about witnesses being asked or not being asked about certain things.
Trying to infer from a lack of questions is an invalid argument. Trying to infer from a lack of conformity to one's own preconceived and subjective notions is an invalid argument.
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