Colin,
Long knew what he wrote in his book so whether he had it present or not wouldn't had mattered. Even when he fetched his notebook, what did it prove? That there was still a dispute as to the spelling of 'Jews' and the placement of "not". Did Long know before the inquest that there was a dispute to the wording of the graffito?
You believe that makes him one of the most unreliable on the ground? You're saying if he was a great policeman but forgot his notebook he becomes one of the most unreliable on the ground? How do they even relate to each other? They don't. So yes, in my opinion there is nothing to substantiate that comment.
Cheers
DRoy
Long knew what he wrote in his book so whether he had it present or not wouldn't had mattered. Even when he fetched his notebook, what did it prove? That there was still a dispute as to the spelling of 'Jews' and the placement of "not". Did Long know before the inquest that there was a dispute to the wording of the graffito?
You believe that makes him one of the most unreliable on the ground? You're saying if he was a great policeman but forgot his notebook he becomes one of the most unreliable on the ground? How do they even relate to each other? They don't. So yes, in my opinion there is nothing to substantiate that comment.
Cheers
DRoy
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