Originally posted by Graham
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Still wading my way through past posts - up to about page 150 I think - and came across this from Graham.
I've never lifted the back seat of a double-decker bus to check what's there, but it occurs to me that I'd wrap a gun in something if I was putting it under a seat so as to stop it making a noise if the movement of the bus was likely to make it slide around, or if I was wanting to wedge it somewhere and not have it make a clunking sound everytime the bus went round a corner or over a bump.
Everybody seems agreed that something hidden there would soon be discovered, but would that necessarily be the case? I know the cleaner who found the gun made a habit of checking under the back seat, but do we know if that was general practice or just a foible of this particular bloke?
And anyway, isn't the crucial issue whether Hanratty believed this was a place where the gun would be safely hidden? His conversation with France would suggest he did.
I don't know why he didn't dump it before returning to London, but having kept it till then, some posters have suggested that he could have more securely disposed of it by dropping it into the Thames. But unless he wanted to risk keeping it till after dark he would have had to do this in broad daylight in a busy city, difficult to do without somebody witnessing it.
Regards
Alan
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