Time-line Of Events According To The Metropolitan Police …

As with everything we state on this blog, all the statements can be backed up with further evidence in the way of emails, audio or visual recordings. In most cases this involves a combination of the aforementioned.

According to the evidence given at the inquest by the Landlord of the Fox, the  police seized all the CCTV footage,except the ones marked loss.  This  leaves us one obvious question,why did The Metropolitan Police refuse us permission to see the other cameras, while stating they never  had them?

The coroner insisted all the way through, even during the inquest, that we could see all the CCTV footage which related to incidences that were being referred to and yet, no matter how many times we said The Metropolitan Police were not allowing us to view them, these requests were left unfulfilled. 

Andrew Walker failed Ambrose and us as family members, by not ensuring that The Metropolitan Police followed his orders through.  He failed to let us view the evidence that The Metropolitan Police were using at the inquest and which were apparently, amongst Ambroses’ last  known movements. He allowed The Metropolitan Police to produce ‘facts’ without showing us any evidence to back these ‘facts’ up.  A very small selection of these are unseen footage of:

1)an earlier incident in The Fox which involved Ambrose and JB;

2)what happened to Ambrose once he disappeared behind the bar;

3)what happened to Ambrose in the corridor;

4)Ambrose coming back down Greens Lane, after we saw him running up towards the Police;

5)the fights Ambrose is said to have been involved in inside The Fox;

6)the number  of assaults that were supposed to have taken place that night;

7)Ambrose fighting with VG;

8)Ambrose on the fire escape;

9)Ambrose getting into his car in the environment described by witnesses and not an empty street;

10)Ambrose’s car parked in the place described by witnesses;

11)Ambrose driving into the car park as described by a witness and Victor O’lisa;

12)Ambrose leaning into his car through an open window after loosing his car keys, as described by 2 witnesses;

Most of the CCTV footage we have seen which shows Ambrose leaving and driving off in the BMW, show a very quiet street. There are no people about, apart from the odd passerby.  However according to witnesses the place was swarming with police, inside and out…

The Fox Public House was a place Ambrose visited frequently as he was seeing one of the barmaids there.  We believe the footage which shows Ambrose getting into the BMW was done on one of his many previous visits, as the jacket, trainers and jeans were Ambrose’s staple outfit, the only thing that really changed was his tee-shirt.

So to this day, we  have  still not seen what really happened to Ambrose inside the Fox and after he ran up Greens Lane. 

We have NEVER seen Ambrose come back down from where he ran towards the police (wearing just his jeans and trainers). Andrew Walker has believed everything the Metropolitan Police have said, without allowing us to see any of this evidence to back up the  claims of the Metropolitan Police. Andrew  Walker was made fully aware of all our concerns from May 2015 via numerous emails and Pre Inquest Hearings.

All Andrew Walker allowed to be shown during the inquest were the bits that confirmed what the Metropolitan Police said, and disproved what we were saying. Only twice did he allows us to see any of the points of the CCTV we wanted to see. We were unable to see/confirm the points we wanted confirming about what the Metropolitan Police were saying or, whether it was to confirm what we were saying. 

I thought a coroner/judge in a legal setting such as a court, were supposed to ensure that LIP’s were on, as near as possible, a level playing field to the ‘professionals’ in these situations. This obviously doesn’t apply inside Andrew Walkers court and, as for ‘cherry picking’ from the evidence, this is discussed here…

Below is the timeline of events that was given  to us by Sharon Freeman Woods at the viewing of the Compilation disc on the 16th April 2015, 6 days before Ambroses’ body was apparently  discovered …

Footage from Dadyals –
CAMERAS VIEWED 1, 5, 10
02:00:15 (real time 02:03:20 hrs) A man enters Dadyals.

02:01:08 (real time 02:04:13 hrs) A man is seen buying drinks.

02:02:20 (real time 02:05:25 hrs) Bald man is seen at the counter – He is wearing a white t-shirt and black trousers.

02:02:53 (real time 02:05:58 hrs) – A big bloke is buying something at counter and then leaves the shop.

02:05 – 02:07 (real time 02:08 – 02:10 hrs) Another person enters and leaves the shop. He is wearing a high viz jacket.

02:11:24 (real time 02:14:29 hrs) someone enters the shop with a dog – wearing a black hat and coat with fur around the hood.

02:16- 02:18 (real time 02:019 – 02:21 hrs) A man wearing a light coloured jacket enters and leaves the shop.

02:19 – 02:21 (real time 02:22 – 02:24 hrs) A man enters and leaves the shop. He is wearing dark clothing, with white writing on the top. He is wearing dark trainers with white sole.

02:28 (real time 02:31:18 hrs) – 2 men enter the shop. One is big and is wearing a grey tracksuit. The other man is thinner and has a white plaster on his nose. They appear to be buying a couple of bottles of beer.

02:28 – 02:29 (real time 02:31 – 02:32 hrs) – A man enters and leaves the shop after purchasing something.

02:31:58 – 02:32:58 (real time 02:35:03 – 02:36:03 hrs) Someone wearing a dark coloured top enters and leaves Dadyals.

02:33 :20 (real time 02:36:25 hrs) Barry re-enters the shop. IN GREY

02:35 (real time 02:38 hrs) – Someone else enters the shop.

02:34 (real time 02:37 hrs) – Someone enters Dadyals wearing a hi-vis jacket and carrying a JD sports bag.

02:38:40 (real time 02:41:45 hrs) – Man in dark top leaves after purchasing a number of items.

02:39 – 02:41:24 (real time 02:41 – 02:44:29 hrs) Someone enters and leaves Dadyals. He is wearing a number 72 rugby top/hoodie and black and white trainers.

02:48 (real time 02:51 hrs) Thaine enters Dadyals alone wearing a rucksack. The ruck sack is dark coloured with a stripe on either side (possibly hi-vis), on the back.

02:48:47 (real time 02:51:52 hrs) – Man enters Dadyals, dressed in dark clothing and holding an Adidas holdall.

02:54::06 – 02:54: 20 (real time 02:57:11 – 02:57:25 hrs) – Thaine re-enters the shop wearing a royal blue top with a white t-shirt underneath, a black jacket, trousers with either rips/design on the upper thigh of each leg and a pair of trainers with white soles.

02:54:55 (real time 02:58:00 hrs) – Ambrose enters Dadyals.

02:56:00 (real time 02:59:05 hrs) Ambrose leaves Dadyals.

02:56 (real time 02:59 hrs) – Ambrose is seen wiith a bunch of keys as he chats with Michael and Barry.

02:56:30 (real time 02:59:35 hrs) – Ambrose is seen wearing a white t-shirt.

02:58:04 (real time 03:01:09 hrs) – Ambrose leaves Dadyals with Thaine, Barry and Michael – they all seem to be in good spirits – chatting and laughing.

02:58 (real time 03:01 hrs) Barry re-enters the shop to buy something.

02: 59:04 (real time 03:02:09 hrs) – Ambrose leaves the screen. He turns right and then disappears from view.

The images below  were provided to us by Daniel Rosello, one of the detectives who sat in and controlled the CCTV viewing. According to Daniel  Rosello the cameras marked green were the only ones obtained by the Metropolitan Police, making  the rest of the  cameras unavailable for viewing.  

s1

cama

s2

cama1 Below are some areas which we photographed on a visit to the Fox public house, Palmers Green.  As you can see by the photographs we took, there are a number of cameras which are in the beer garden, however we didn’t get to see footage from any of them.

The Fox Public House – CCTV Footage of the movements in the car park:
System 1 – Camera 09 – 22:19 (real time 22:17:22 hrs) A red car pulls into the car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 22:58 (real time 22:56:22 hrs) JD walks across the car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 23:01 (real time 22:59:22 hrs) – PB walks across car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 23:02 (real time 23:00:22 hrs) JD walks back past camera 9 the car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 23:03 (real time 23:01:22 hrs) PB walks back past camera 9 the car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 23:13:19 (real time 23:11:41 hrs) – Car looks as though it could have been involved in an accident.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 23:14 (real time 23:12:22 hrs) A man in a hi-viz/light coloured jacket/gillet walks through the car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 23:23:34 – 23:28:08 (real time 23:21:56 – 23:26:30 hrs) A car is seen to park outside the car park for approx 5 minutes before driving off again.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 1:25:52 (real time 01:24:14 hrs) – A car enters the car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 23:07 – 23:09 (real time 23:05:22 – 23:07:22 hrs) A car is seen to stop outside the car park, before driving off a couple of minutes later.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 23:09 (real time 23:07:22 hrs) A group of people are seen to walk through the car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 1:02:04 (real time 01:00:26 hrs) – Alpesh’s car parks at the bottom of the alleyway, where the function room is.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 1:03:01 (real time 01:01:23 hrs) – Someone walks past the car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 1:11:09 (real time 01:09:31 hrs) – A car comes up Green Lane and enters the car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 –  1:13:13 (real time 01:11:35 hrs) – 2 people are seen walking across the car park, down Greens Lane towards the High Road.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 1:25:44 (real time 01:24:06 hrs) – A man drives into the car park. 1:26:18 – Gets out of his car. At 1:26:31 (real time 01:24:53 hrs) the man leaves the car park and disappears down Greens Lane.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 1:29:23 (real time 01:27:45 hrs) – 2 men walks up Green Lane. 1 walks into car park, while the other one continues to walk straight up Greens Lane.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 1:30:02 (real time 01:28:24 hrs) – A white car leaves the car park and turns right, heading towards high road.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 1:30:30 (real time 01:28:52 hrs) A car comes up Greens Lane, enters the car park. It turns around and then goes back into the main road, heading towards the High Road.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 1:31:31 (real time 01:29:53 hrs) – A man with white body warmer walks across car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 1:31:18 (real time 01:29:50 hrs) – Another male with a light coloured t-shirt runs into car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 1:31 (real time 01:29:22 hrs) – A group of men are seen in the car park. It’s not clear enough to see what’s going on.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 1:33:06 (real time 01:31:28 hrs) A car is going back and forward in the car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 01:34: (real time 01:32:22 hrs) – A large group of people are seen fighting in the car park .

System 1 – Camera 09 – 01:35:11 (real time 01:33:33 hrs) – A man with a red jumper on is seen in the car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 01:36:45 (real time 01:35:07 hrs) A man wearing a white body warmer (white dark top underneath) is seen in car park.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 01:39:04 (real time 01:37:26 hrs) A man appears to be agitated in the car park. He goes to a car and opens the door. He appears to be wiping something from/off his face. He continues to wandering around his car.

System 1 – Camera 09 – 01:43:36 (real time 01:41:58 hrs) Lights go on a car from the road side according to garden camera and drives off at 01:44:05 (real time 01:42: 27 hrs) .

Could I please, encourage you, to share my Youtube videos and blog via FB, Twitter and any other social media network you have an account with.  

We have been struggling to get justice for 3 years and to bring this case to the attention of the wider media and general public, but, we have been blocked at every avenue, by the BBC and the Metropolitan Police to name just a couple of organisations. Re-tweeting and sharing this via social media, in the hope that it goes viral, is our last hope.

It only takes a few seconds to do, but it would mean the World to us and, it could make all the difference regarding Ambroses’ case receiving the exposure it deserves. Please don’t do nothing, God forbid, you could find yourself in the same situation, which is something I wouldn’t wish on my worse enemy.

My Youtube channel is https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEJbObftneWPDbG2bg2VLcA/videos?view_as=subscriber

Thank you.

Alexandria xxx

The Discovery Of AmbroseBalls’ Body In The Old River Lea, Opposite Lower Maynard reseviour, On the 22nd April 2015 …

As with everything we state on this blog, all the statements can be backed up with further evidence in the way of emails, audio or visual recordings. In most cases this involves a combination of the aforementioned.

This is the transcript which was taken from the recording at the morgue. The people involved in this conversation are DSI Stewart Hill, Barry McCarthy, Ruth aka Toni, Chris and Alexandria aka Gina…Transcript starts at 1 hours and 13 minutes …

 

 
Chris: Here we go…
Hill: Ruth, Alex?
Toni: Hello.
Hill: Okay? We are just going to bring you through now okay. 
Chris: Thank you very much.
Hill: Do you want to come through this way please? 
Chris: (inaudible)
Hill: Do you’s want to take a seat?
Toni: What here?
Hill: Yes, wherever you feel comfortable yourself. Okay, erm, sorry for the delay to begin with, but as you can understand I’ve been quite busy today.  So when I took the call from Suresh my officers arranged to come down here straight down okay. Erm it’s your legal entitlement as I said to Suresh to view the body okay, That’s okay Chris, it’s either before the post mortem or after the post mortem, It’s your decision okay. I will say too you okay, I will be open and candid with you okay, I would advise against it at this stage! Okay, but it is your right, it is your right and I respect that.
Toni: Why? What would be different at any other stage?
Hill: Because, what will? What will happen is they will prepare, the body that we have they will prepare that body for the post mortem. The body is not prepared. The body has literally been lifted from a river, and it’s been in a river for a significant amount of time. There’s a significant amount of debris, decomposition as well, that it’s obviously that would take place as a result of a body been in a river for a certain amount of time. The body has literally been lifted, it’s been wrapped and it’s brought to the mortuary, and that is the condition the body is in! And I can tell you now, I can tell you now because I haven’t seen the body, literally I’ve seen photographs of the crime scene you will not be able to make identification, a visual identification. Clothing, there is still clothing on the body, but nothing has been removed from the body, the body has not been touched at all and that would not happen until tomorrow. So that is when obviously the process of the post mortem starts, so I’ve got to tell you that Alex, I’ve got to tell you that Ruth okay. Because it would be remiss of me if I didn’t, so, but it’s your decision and that’s why I am here. I’m sure that we’ve got a member of staff here now to be able to facilitate it for you but, but I warn you now that there hasn’t been any cleansing of the body at all okay which would be the case if it was after the post mortem
Toni: We were just told that you’ve had it since the 19th , you’ve had Ambrose.
Gina: Yes that’s what we just been told.
Chris: Yesterday.
Hill: Who told you that?
Toni: Somebody’s just informed ******** who was in, who was court.

Hill: Who’s *******?
Toni: ******** in *******.
Hill: No no no.
Toni: He’s just called me, he just called me.
Gina: He heard it from police officers on Tuesday.
Hill: No, No the first, the first call that I made was to you Alex so that’s, that’s the first port of call.
Gina: Okay.
Hill: Then obviously I rang you back an hour later.
Gina: Yes.
Hill: You told me to speak to Suresh. Other members of the family okay, were not contacted okay, until after I had spoken to you.
Toni: ***** was contacted the night before.
Gina: What about *****?
Hill: After.
Chris: No yesterday.
Hill: No after l …
Toni: They just told us it was the day before.
Hill: No after, after because I specifically, because you gave instructions didn’t you? Yeah?
Toni: Yeah.
Hill: We followed those instructions, nobody was contacted until after we had spoken to you, okay?
Chris: (inaudible)
Chris: Did you go yourself?
Hill: No no I dispatch the police from my office.
Chris: Right.
Hill: After I’d spoken to you. Because that was, that was the agreement and I wanted to make sure that you were the first person, first people that were told.
Gina: So why did ***** get to see the photographs before Ruth?
Hill: No ones seen the photographs.
Male: no ones seen photographs.
Gina: but she told us she has.
Toni: No she said the clothes were described to her.
Hill: The clothes (inaudible) he’s wearing clothes, we haven’t touched the body, that will happen tomorrow.
Toni: Was he wearing a jacket?
Hill: Erm he’s not wearing a jacket is he?
Barry: Yes he is.
Barry: The same that’s in the CCTV at Dadyals.
Gina: The River Island jacket?
Toni: So he’s got the clothes, the River Island jacket on?
Barry: No, no the jacket, the coat that is on the Dadyals CCTV that is what the body is wrapped in.
Toni: So he’s got the jacket on then?
Barry: The jacket, the one he was wearing in Dadyals yes.
Toni: So he’s got it on?
Barry: The jeans and the trainers.
Gina: Okay.
Hill: What you’ve got to appreciate, what you’ve got to appreciate the clothing has been in water, dirty stagnant water for a long period of time okay. So we are not really going to know for sure exactly what it is until. There are certain elements of clothing that are distinctive, that have kept their identity. For instance, the trainers okay, they are very distinctive, the belt is very distinctive but the I’m sorry having to describe this to you but it’s very difficult to describe unless you’ve actually.
Chris: Well was he wearing his watch was his watch on?
Barry: You cant tell.
Hill: You cant tell, you can’t tell. So its, so its, I’ve got to go outside in a minute to speak to a couple of people outside okay, so have a discussion amongst yourself. You can or you don’t have to it’s up to you but I would advise you Ruth no, but I understand what your needs are as well so it’s a matter for yourself. So if I can leave you for a couple of minutes just to make, have that discussion is that okay Alex?
Gina: Yes.
Hill: Yeah I’ll go outside, I’ll come back if you say yes we wanna do it we will do it it will only take 5 minutes just to prepare. Obviously we’ve got to remove the body, get it in a position where it can be viewed, if not we can come back again tomorrow after the post mortem where the body will be in a better condition because it would have been cleaned so it’s a complete.
Chris: Will you be able to see the whole body then? After the post mortem, without the clothes?
Hill: There is, there is not a whole body, so it, it’s difficult to describe. I haven’t seen the body itself but the bodies been in water for 3, well for some time. 
Chris: You’re going to do, going to DNA, not DNA your going to do…
Toni: Fingerprints?
Chris: Fingerprint test aren’t you?
Gina: That’s what the coroners told us. 
Toni: Becky said.
Gina: They’ve told us that your going to identify him by fingerprints and we don’t understand that because if he that badly decomposed.
Hill: With all due respect, with all due respect to Becky okay. Becky isn’t an investigator okay, she’s a corners’ officer and she hasn’t seen.
Toni: Yeah she said that.
Hill: I’m telling you now there will be no fingerprints.
Toni: But you haven’t seen him either.
Hill: I’ve seen…
Toni: No you haven’t seen Ambrose’s body.
Hill: Ambrose’s?
Toni: Body.
Hill: No. I’ve seen photographs. I’ve seen crime scene photographs, I’ve seen. The fact that I’ve seen, but I haven’t actually seen the body in person but I’ll tell you now the identification is more than likely to come from DNA. So DNA will have to be extracted tomorrow. The DNA will have to be then compared to the DNA that we have got and that takes 48 hours.
Chris: So then, what day is it tomorrow? So will we know Saturday then?
Gina: No Monday, Monday
Hill: It will be confirmed on Sunday, It may well be, it may well be. It may well be that when they remove the clothing, okay which is going to be difficult within its self. There may be a mark on the body that may be visible for instance, a tattoo?
Toni: The leg.
Hill: Or a leg that we might be able to you know so we are almost 100% sure now that this is Ambrose but it might not be the case I don’t know. 
Chris: Because he…
Hill: The body is covered in debris.
Chris: The autopsy that your going to be doing is that going to include all like if he been hit and things like that, is I going to be a full?
Hill: There’s 2 types we do. We do what we call a standard post mortem ok which is where there are no other surrounding circumstances but we give rise to any foul play or any third party involvement. Where we are unsure whether there’s been any third party involvement or foul play we have a special post mortem. We have a specially qualified pathologist. That is why we haven’t been able to get it done straight away. OK. He will come here. Will it be done here?
Barry: Yes.
Hill: Yes it will be done here and that special post mortem is a thorough post mortem, where you know they will seek to identify the cause of death er and …
Toni: If he’s body is so decomposed can they do that?
Hill: They can, they can …
Toni: So can they tell me if he’s drowned or not?
Hill: They can, they can in certain circumstances, Now i’m not a pathologist but in my 21 years I’ve been to a few post mortems and I know within a certain degree what they can do and what they cant do. So in certain circumstances they can and sometimes they can’t but it really depends. I don’t know how long that particular body has been in the river, I don’t know how long its been er, the type of river whether the waters moving or its stagnant obviously does play its part in it as well. There are certain factors that have got to be taken into consideration, you know. If there’s obvious signs of third party involvement i.e foul play i.e. there’s a, a …
Toni: Injury
Hill: Yeah, there is …
Chris: Crushed skull or
Hill: Fractured skull or there’s broken bones they will be able to identify that so then we know that there’s other issues that we need to investigate. But sometimes because of the length of time its been, its taken, obviously for the body to be found, that they may inhibit certain lines of enquiry that the pathologist may follow but I think that’s something that, this is ifs or buts we don’t know yet because we have to wait for the pathologist to start and have a look at what he or she has got, well it’s a he in this case tomorrow okay?
Chris: What Chapman?
Hill: No it was Chapman
Toni: Chapman or, its Ian somebody?
Hill: No no its Paul, it was Chapman but that was today but he has got others and It was going to take to long and would have gone into the evening and it just would not have been appropriate for that. So we’ve got another one, he’s going to do it.
Toni: so there’s only about 5 of them in this country?
Hill: I’m not sure how many there is, I think there is about 14 but not really that many of them.
Gina: So the reason Chapman didn’t do it is because he couldn’t do it today?
Barry: Because he had others to do.
Toni: Yeah and we.
Gina: So it’s actually getting done tomorrow, so why couldn’t Chapman still do it then?
Hill: Well because there’s, he’s obviously, I don’t know what whether its, whether its, he’s day in court or not, I don’t know, but we’ve got a pathologist. He couldn’t do it today, but he was the pathologist on call today, couldn’t do it today because he had others but we’ve got one tomorrow and its been booked in at 12 o’ clock. 
Chris: How long does it normally take?
Hill: Quite a long time, a number of hours.
Chris: So there should be a good view tomorrow of what were looking at, late afternoon?
Hill: Yeah. Early evening. Yeah, yeah but you’ll be contacted. You will be contacted as soon as we.
Toni: So obviously I don’t want to see him if its all debris goes without saying I want to see him cleaned up. I can’t; I won’t have that out my head.
Chris: That’s the thing.
Hill: And that’s the thing, that’s the concern, that is the concern because you know.
Toni: If it’s going to improve me looking at him then I’ll wait until he’s cleaned up.
Gina: It’s worth the 24 hours wait to be honest.
Toni: Yeah.
Gina: Can we just look at the clothes just by the photos?
Toni: He hasn’t got them.
Gina: We are, because we were supposed to look at them tonight.
Toni: Are we still having a meeting tonight?
Hill: Well that’s up to you.
Chris: Yeah yeah the clothes the clothes and all that.
Barry: No no no I suggest not to look at the photos because it’s exactly the same. The photos  will be the same as looking at the body, just it’s the same coming out of the river.
Toni: Okay.
Hill: So, It’s the body is face down.
Toni: Have you seen them?
Barry: Pardon?
Toni: Have you seen them?
Barry: Yes.
Hill: The bodies face down, okay we can’t move the body, we can’t move the body okay, so if you was to view the body tonight it will be face down, face down. We can’t move the body. Mikes not in the position to be able do that tonight, it will take a specialist to be able to do that. So.
Gina: It’s better to clean him do you know what I mean?
Toni: I’m sorry we’ve dragged you out.
Hill: That’s alright, not a problem.
Chris: See the thing is if we could have had someone come around and explain everything exactly to come around, the same as you are rather than over the phone because, you don’t get a lot over the phone you know?
Hill: Yep, yep.
Chris: Where as if you came around and explained it could have probably saved a bit of a journey.
Hill: Yesterday I made myself available to come around, I would have come around this morning but what obviously happened this morning, the reason I didn’t I do it this morning is because I was under the impression the PM was going to be this afternoon. So we’ve got to do certain things in place to facilitate the post mortem but I didn’t find out until this afternoon that it was, its not going to be, cant fit it in its going to be tomorrow. So effectively we’ve done what we need to do and we are now free now because we expected to be working now so, you know. We can, if you want to meet earlier at Sureshs’. I’ve spoken to him today he said we can do that.
Toni: Okay.
Gina: Well hold on, how do I put it, we’ve just been advised the photos are not being any good, is there any point doing that meeting? 
Toni: Because that’s what its about.
Gina: Its about the photos and that isn’t it?
Toni: And if you’re saying it’s like looking at the body now then.
Hill: Is there anyway, any photographs that we can show?
Toni: Edible, not edible, not eaten.
Barry: There’s one photo of the trainers.
Toni: And I can see and.
Hill: That you can see.
Toni: Nah, but I wouldn’t be able to recognise the trainers.
Gina: They could be anyone’s couldn’t they?
Toni: Yeah, yeah.
Barry: Yeah I just think its just not, I don’t think it’s appropriate to show those photos at this stage.
Hill: You see visually, visually you will not be able to identify that body, you will not be able to. 
Toni: Okay.
Chris: So he was face down in the river? When they found him?
Hill: When they found him? When they found him yes.
Chris: So you just picked it up (inaudible) So he’s how he was basically.
Hill: Yes.

Barry: So everything that’s around the body is also taken out of the water as well, so all debris and twigs.
Toni: How far was it?
Gina: How far was it from the helicopter search and fingertip search and POLSA search and all that? How far was because the helicopters were out within 40 minutes of that car accident?
Hill: Yeah, yeah.
Gina: They would have, sorry this is our view. They would have found him if he was at that river you would have found him. Number 2 the fact that, you know he did have a jacket on. We knew that wasn’t his jacket.
Hill: I think if we can answer if I showed you the map, you would see and you would probably draw your own conclusions as to potentially why, if it is him why he is where he was found.
Gina: Well I’m not being horrible the only reason the focus was on that river was because of Darrens’ jacket. 
Hill: Exactly.
Gina: The fact is as you told us at the last weeks meeting that jacket was put in the back of that boot by Darren. Now everyone’s trying to make us believe that Ambrose left his phone in the car but went to the trouble to go to the back of that car, got his jacket out, after a crash we are talking, get out open that boot take his jacket out, close the boot, run down an alley, drop a jacket he didn’t even need, sorry we’re not buying it
Hill: Yeah, yeah.
Toni: And then be so happy at Dadyals.
Gina: We’ve seen it.
Toni: How can he be all that happy after all them fights?
Gina: On Monday at the meeting you said at five to three Inspector Wise upped that to a medium Yep? 
Hill: Yep.
Gina: But you didn’t receive the call until 15.48 from Alpesh stating he found the jacket so how is that possible?
Hill: Yeah, yeah.
Toni: There’s a lot that don’t make sense.
Hill: I hear what your saying but when, when we show you the map, when we show you the map of where the jacket was found okay. 
Gina: But why (inaudible) why the jacket?
Hill: You know the river, you know the river that we looked at that we looked at, remember when we went down there we looked at the river.
Chris: Yeah by the bypass.
Hill: It wasn’t that river.
Chris: Your on about the one near the canal then you’ve got the river afterwards. Your on about the river afterwards?
Toni: Yes the one I was worried about.
Chris: If you walk along the edge of the canal you’ve got the river one side and the canal the other side?
Hill: Is that right.
Barry: Its actually Pymmes Brook and then the next one is the River Lea and then River Lea navigation, that’s what is says on the map its River Lea Navigation that the body was found in.
Hill: Its gone further from where that jacket was and that further across.
Toni: That’s the one I said.
Barry: Every third stretch of water.
Hill: And the route of that river.
Toni: Expands and opens.
Toni: That’s what I was worried about.
Hill: It doesn’t meet the one where the jacket was, until a hell of a long way down so it’s a completely separate.
Chris: We always thought the jacket was planted anyway.
Hill: Yeah.
Chris: When we got there er the jacket was…
Toni: Was dry.
Chris: Apparently it had supposedly been there 3 days it was bone dry it had been frosty all night the jacket had been bone dry…
Toni: Its pouring, it’s horrible.
Chris: There was no slug trails which we’d expect being raining 3 days.
Hill: Here’s a possible explanation here as to where he is now okay but lets wait and see what happens at the post mortem we haven’t got all information and this is, to us, for us this is the most important part for us because this gives us the indication of whether there was any over foul play, yeah.
Stewart Hill takes a phone-call.
Toni: He looks a bit like Bruce Forsythe from the side don’t he?
Barry: (inaudible)
Gina: Nah he’s not that bad.
Chris: When the accident was reported we insisted that they searched the River Lea and they turned around and said…
Toni: Wouldn’t have gone that far.
Chris: Nah he wouldn’t have, something like he wouldn’t have gone that far and we can’t do it unless we got more…
Toni: More evidence…
Chris: Evidence to prove he’s gone that far.
Barry: They go on certain pointers see because they would say well if, how far do you expect us, that’s what the search team would say.
Chris: The thing is you got to think when you say you’ve got a car, even if it was Ambrose’ car I don’t believe that was Ambrose in that car.
Hill: Yeah.
Chris: But even if it was Ambrose in that car you’ve then got to think well then okay add that to the(inaudible) drunk or whatever How far can he get in two hours and then you do your search for that you don’t like just around the car which is what they’ve done. Three days the only search party was from family.
Hill: Obviously we can go through that with you I mean its not its detailed searching so you know, what they’ve got to do, what they do search they’ve got to search properly so they cant search something with the chances of them missing something. See if they miss something it just don’t move forward and then, subsequently if something turns out they know that it’s been a faulty investigation because they should have found something. I mean there’s been examples of that there has been examples of it so it isn’t within the search parameters And we went back down there to discuss it but that’s something that we can go through with you and id like to go through that with you with Maps because you know.
Chris: For me if they turn around and say they have a helicopter out within 2 hours after that car was reported missing, reported crashed er I think …
Toni: You would have found him.
Chris: I thought it was 2 hours?
Hill: I think it was 20 minutes.
Toni: An hour yeah 20 minutes.
Gina: The helicopter was up by 3.40 and that’s within half an hour.
Hill: And we’ve had a discussion about it, I’m not going to commit myself to anything because I don’t know what’s going to come out of this okay. But the fact that that helicopter was up early okay, search lights, noise, he would have known.
Toni: Body heat as well.
Hill: He would know, before that, before that Ruth. You can hear the bloody thing especially at night time so and if you’ve just crashed a car okay, you’ve had a drink or whatever you’ve abandoned that car and you hear the police helicopter go up and you see the spot light going down you know the chances are he’s…
Toni: Going to hide.
Hill: He’s not going to sit there is he and wait to be found is he? Let’s just wait and see.
Chris: Okay then so that’s 20 minutes.
Hill: Its less than that Chris, I haven’t got the, I think they was up in 15 minutes I think, something like that. 
Gina: When we checked, it was up there at 3.40.
Hill: I think they were already up and I think they’ve just come over. It was a, it was a , it was a good response and it was a quick response than we would normally expect actually so they were probably already up dealing with something else so er lets see what comes out from the the the…
Chris: Post mortem.
Hill: Yeah the PM er then we can go from there look I’m going to, I’m going to speak to a couple of people outside that are waiting and er I’ve got some police officers here because I didn’t want you just turning up and waiting outside and nobody being here. I’m just going to speak with them. Make your decision.
Toni: Er I think we’ve made it, I think we’ve made it.
Chris: You might see Clare outside shes with the, she’s independent from the BBC but they are doing a program in September er for er this sort of thing. So this isn’t something you think about immediately, this is something that.
Hill: I hope Surseh has provided you this information because I’ve spoken to Suresh and I’ve told him that you know, you’re not going to be able to identify him, you’re not going to be able to identify him, you’re not that is that is, you’re not going to be able to do that because of the condition of the body you know and …
Chris: He did but he turned around and said we’d advise you not to but…
Hill: It’s your legal right, it’s your legal right and we can’t take that away from you but I, as a police officer, you know am just advising you, not even as police officer but somebody that’s seen that body, I’m advising you no. If you can, wait until tomorrow. That would be the best time for you
Toni: Yeah
Barry: Yes most defiantly
Hill: At least, at least the body as it is will be cleaned it is you know.
Chris: Well can you suggest for tomorrow yeah if you got, find that there’s markings there, tattoos on the body or on the knee, a scar is it on the knee?
Toni: On his right knee where he had a operation. It goes from here to here.
Chris: That’s why he’s got.
Toni: That’s why he’s got that limp, one of his legs was in traction for three months, no from here to here from his knee bone to connect because his knee disconnected from his…
Chris: And his got tattoos…
Toni: And he was on a traction for three months…
Chris: A body on his arm…
Toni: And it’s a very very thick thick scar.
Gina: Even if they can’t see physically they will be able to with bones.
Toni: He was on a traction for three months.
Barry: What was injured was it cartridge or was it…
Toni: Erm the knee came away, literally the year the ambulances were on strike.
Barry: How old was he when he had that?
Toni: What the year the ambulances were on strike? Boxing Day.
Barry: It would be (inaudible).
Toni: 15 years.
Chris: Cover the rest of the body and just leave that identifiable so Ruth could identify it through that way? Then she doesn’t have to see anything else.
Hill: Yeah.
Chris: Do you understand what I mean? If it’s going to be that bad.
Hill: Yeah, it is and we will do what we can, erm Barry will clean it and Barry will obviously speak to the pathologist and the technician that we’ve here to ensure got to make sure you know. What can be viewed.
Barry: Did he have tattoos on his legs?
Toni: No because he had one massive tattoo on his sorry …
Toni: On his right side just done of a woman, of a Mexican type woman.
Barry: Quite a large one?
Toni: Yeah took up all up this side. His got loads, his got one on his neck but its not Legend he covered up the word Legend with a rose but it looks like a load of ink has been slapped on his neck.
Barry: So a Mexican lady on the right side.
Toni: Yeah.
Barry: Of the torso.
Toni: Yeah, all the way down, covers the whole side.
Stewart Hill takes a phone call …
Barry: Any other sort of larger ones?
Toni: No that’s Jonathon, that’s Jonathon.
Barry: (inaudible).
Toni: Yeah his got something on his back, his arm was covered.
Barry: (inaudible)
Toni: Yeah his arm was covered.
Barry: So any other sort of operation that he’s had?
Toni: Nah only that knee one.
Barry: So the knee operations?
Toni: Yeah he was in traction for three months in hospital and his leg is slightly shorter, maybe an inch shorter.
Barry: Right okay, what about any gold teeth?
Toni: No.
Barry: That’s fine.
Hill: What was the watch? What was the watch he had on?t
Toni: It was the 25th November.
Barry: Do you know which wrist he wore the watch on?
Toni: His left.
Hill: What was it a leather strap watch or…
Toni: No gold.
Gina: Gold it was all gold. Gold face with a gold strap?
Chris: And I think it was like a pink.
Toni: Yeah sort of rose colour, rose colour.
Hill: What was the make of it do you know?
Toni: 25th anniversary it was called.
Gina: Anniversary Royal Oak or something like that.
Hill: That might still be on.
Barry: Well er yeah.
Hill: If its metal strap and that.
Barry: Er yeah.
Gina: And we also know that he had £400 pound on him, so hopefully that will…
Toni: Yeah in his pocket.
Barry: Obviously we’ve not checked the pockets or anything.
Gina: Okay.
Hill: So that’s all done here we don’t. The body gets lifted straight from the water and then we have to take it as it comes (inaudible) erm the body was found just by a worker walking along checking the river at about twenty to three.
Toni: Twenty to three in the morning.
Hill: No it was environmental agency staff checking the water.
Barry: Its not an area where people walk.
Gina: It was a chance.
Hill: There’s photographs of the body in the water you know, I probably wouldn’t have picked it up. Amongst the surface debris in the water.
Toni: Which I thought would have happened further up.
Hill: well when you look at it you’ll think well I cant see how he fell but he did. Unfortunately erm but obviously it took some time to get the body out of the water, because it was in water it takes you know it takes time to remove the body from the position it has been in for some time.
Toni: But we don’t know for sure how long until tomorrow.
Hill: But they’ll put you, know we don’t know how long. I mean they might be able to give an estimate but its, I think it will be pretty difficult. It will be difficult to be precise on that sort of thing.
Gina: Yes.
Chris: So he was probably half in and half out of the water
Hill: Fully in the water but the back, the bum was just above the …
Barry: All that was visible was the back.
Hill: Fully in the water but the back , the bum…

Gina: Half in half out?

Hill: Was sort of above was the vessel was so that’s.

Hill: All: that is visible is the back and from the bum the area.

Gina: So yeah that’s what we meant.

Hill: That that’s all.

Hill: Yeah so so not half from there and half its.

Gina: That’s what we thought.. Yeah.

Hill: But that could change depending on the tide of the water and everything so it’s… You know.

Chris: Alright, in your experience.

Toni: It’s him.

Chris: You’ve obviously seen seen a body in the morgue… Does it look like it’s been in there for three months.

Toni: Oh I no.

Hill: It looks like it’s been in there for a long time.

Chris: Oh.

Hill: There’s a lot of.

Chris: You don’t think he could of been somewhere else and then dumped there later.

Hill: Well will.

Chris: You’ll find that out.

Hill: Yeah, yeah, there’s one question I will be asking the pathologist is, is now can we tell whether that body is drowned.

Chris: Yeah.

Hill: Or if that body was dead before it went in there.

Gina: Yeah.
Hill: And under certain circumstances they can ah but because of the length of time that body may be in there that be compromised so it’s will have to wait and see will have to wait and see but that be one of the questions we’re ask.
Chris: One of the saving graces is probably was cos he was cold if he was only wearing a t-shirt or something it might not of been.

Hill : Yeah…….. Alright then.

Toni: So will hear from you for tomorrow.

Hill: Yep your hear from Barry tomorrow ah.

Barry: What about tomorrow?

Toni: My number.

Hill: You want us to go for Suresh or do you want us to.

Toni: Direct, I’ve already told that Becky as well direct to me.

Hill: Okay.

Toni: Please.

Hill: What stage is that then Ruth.

Toni: All stages now.

Hill: Okay, alright.. So so what’s the likely hood contact tomorrow then Barry will be.

Toni: Will confirm that if he’s still having a meeting tonight… I’ll confirm that with Suresh.

Gina: Well we don’t need the meeting tonight do we?

Toni: Nah we don’t need it..

Gina: Well.

Toni: No we don’t.

Gina: We don’t need it.

Toni: No we don’t need tonight then.

Gina: Because it was really around photos and…

Hill: Yeah.

Gina: What we discussed here really isn’t it.

Hill: Yeah that’s.

Gina: Yeah, so.

Toni: So leave tonight then.

Gina: What’s the point of having it really cos we’re gonna go through that tomorrow may as well just…

Toni: Yeah leave it.

Gina: leave it now and deal with that.

Toni: Take it from tomorrow.

Gina: That’s what will do.

Hill: So should I take a number.

Toni: Says number.

Chris: Do you want the house number just in case you can’t get anything?

Toni; Yeah.

Chris: And the house number will be – says number.

Hill: Now tomorrow okay

Barry: I think: should I put a call into you just before we start.

Toni: No when we can come and view.

Hill: Right what I’ve got is an estimated time… I’ll let you know.

Chris: Yeah.

Toni: Yeah please.

Chris: Than you can turn…

Everyone speaks at the same here is hard to pin point what is said

Toni: Oh yeah.

Gina: We can’t, we won’t be able do get down here till about two anyway.

Barry: No it won’t be.

Gina: Ah okay.

Hill : If we’re gonna be realistic about this ok tomorrow is going to be obviously a full day for everybody it’s gonna be an emotional day for yourself ah…. Barry has things to due obviously during the course of the postmortem and I’ve got other officers here that that obviously they have roles they got to perform during the postmortem…. Your then do the viewing after the postmortem ok… Barry will be on hand I’m not gonna be here tomorrow evening but I’m back on Monday alright now the DNA will be taken – if they can get DNA which ah you know ah… I’ve seen DNA retracted from bodies that have been dead along time a lot longer then then.

Toni: They do it with dinosaurs.

Hill: In certain circumstances….. Without speaking to the pathologist… I’m trusting the lads gonna be the work going forward… So that will be taken for examination and comparison with the DNA that we’ve got, so we’re looking for potential Sunday.. Sunday for the identification to be confirmed okay so you will get ah your either get a phone call confirming it or you get a call saying we’re still waiting for it, it was due but we’re still waiting for it to be done cos it goes off to an laboratory in Birmingham it’s not a police laboratory it’s an independent laboratory that does it that is contacted by the police okay so we’re really, ah, ah, they give it to, but their telling us 48 hours so once that’s done you will be informed ah and, then I think potentially I think the best time for us to meet will probably be Monday ah and I’ll speak to Suresh about it maybe that’s something we can probably arrange or get something in place so then we’ve all made an assessment of what we’ve got, what the situation is and then we can come together and we can go go from there is that okay Ruth?

Toni: Yeah that’s fine.

Hill: Otherwise what happens, as I’ve been in this situation before, you know everyone is going to emotional charged, your going to have 100 and one things your want to ask, your forget that cause your emotionally charged and it’s not productive at all.

Gina: Yep.

Hill: Let’s deal with things

Toni: It’s the best that.

Gina: For everybody.

Chris: I don’t know it (inaudible).

Hill: Is that alright.

Toni: Yeah.

Hill: Yeah.

Toni: Okay.

Chris: Hopefully tomorrow you might get an identification without doing the DNA.

Gina: No your still have to do that anyway won’t you.

Barry: Yeah.

Toni: Well.

Gina: Legally to make sure.

Hill: Nah sometimes you can do it but i not relying on that at all.

Chris:  Yeah yeah.

Hill: So I’m not relaying on that at all, but you know we don’t know, we don’t know, there might be something in his pocket with his name on it, I don’t know.

Gina: Yeah.

Hill: Because when we had a look.

Barry: What hospital did he have the operation at?

Toni: Guys hospital.

Barry: About fifteen years ago?

Toni: Yeah roughly.

Chris: Did he have any Metal put in his knee or anything?

Toni: No not… Yeah I think it was on a traction and it had to be pulled you know stretched.

Barry: What these operations.

Toni: Yeah and he was on traction for three months it wasn’t a little thing.

Gina: yeah.

Barry: So that should be something should be able to determine the.

Toni: Oh God defiantly.

Hill: Have we got disclosure as a verbal agreement at all?

Barry: No I don’t think so.

Hill: I’ll have to speak to Sharon about that did you sign anything Ruth?

Toni: Nothing at all

Hill: Okay, we might not need it but if we do apologise for, make a note if there is and then we get the records he’s medical records and do a comparison…

Toni: Yeah.

Hill: That is one way……. That’ll probably be quicker anyway, but it’s you know will have to wait and see as we go forward, but personally I think you’ve made the right decision.

Toni: Okay.

Hill: You made the right decision… So Erm and hopefully tomorrow your a lot clearer is to… Yeah okay so is there anything else you wanna ask me now I know without the meeting tonight but is there anything you want to ask me?

Toni: Do you think it’s him?

Hill: Do I think it’s him? I, on the clothing, on clothing, from what I’ve seen on the CCTV. erm and the thing that’s been described to him and the clothing he’s said to be wearing. Erm based upon probably his trainers which are very distinctive, I’m surprised he still go his trainers on to be fair, the, the, you know as I’ve describe it, as almost certainly, almost certainly however…

Gina: Yeah?

Hill: I’m sure there just not one pair of trainers made.

Chris: We still need to have a meeting because we would still like to see the CCTV you can see it.

Barry: Yeah that’s all ready.

Hill: We had all that we had all that for you, was we meant to meeting today.

Toni: But it was Suresh, for some reason he cancelled it because he said he tried to get hold of you and you were on two days training.. You were on training.

Gina: You won’t return his calls.

Hill: I was training I was training but we still pencilled in for the meeting but the trading was two days ago so.

Barry: The CCTV we can watch on the DVD player right that first quicker.

Gina: That’s what I said to you.

Chris: Yeah because we need…

Hill: I think.

Chris: to be able to see that.

To many voices speaking here to pin point what’s said

Hill: I was at the training course on Tuesday and I was told that what are we now Wednesday.

Toni: We’re at Thursday

Hill: Yeah it’s Thursday’s now and I was told it was cancelled.

Barry: Yeah you what.

Hill: I thought you cancelled it?

Toni: No.

Chris: I think your could informed Suresh to meet them to go ahead Suresh says can you confirm that the CCTV is gone and he said well I can’t confirm that and he says well there’s no use having a meeting without the CCTV being there, there’s a misunderstanding

Hill: Yeah I think actually, well we’ve got CCTV it’s been done.. So, but you know that aside. we didn’t know we’d were gonna find.

Gina: Ambrose.

Chris: If it is Ambrose, we still want a meeting with us to see CCTV

Toni: We trust you, on Monday.

Hill: Look Ruth upsetting…. I know you’ve got that….. Trust, I assure you I’ve been doing this along time okay and I’ve worked on murder investigation for a long long time okay, I’m telling you now that I will give you the time that you want okay, there maybe times where you might ring me and you can’t get through to me, there’s always going to be them occasions because you know.

Toni: Of course I’ll expect that.

Hill: it will never be deliberate, but I’m telling you now I will give you the time okay? and I’ll be open and honest with you. I’ve got nothing to hide from you whatsoever, nothing alright, I can look you in the eye and tell you that okay and I will give you the time, but it’s not the right time for you to look at it now.

Chris:  Okay so?

Hill: If you say Stuart I want to look at it I will sit here with you now, we’re get the computer we’re go back and we’re do it, it’s entirely up to you, but you don’t do you?

Toni: No.

Gina: No.

Chris: No.

Hill: But its done for you, so I think where we are now, let’s take it step by step.

Toni: Find out if this is Ambrose 100%?

Hill: Then we know where we are don’t we?

Toni: Yeah.

Hill: We know where we are and we go from there.

Toni: Okay.

Gina:  What, because you know ******* has been ringing, ******* has been ringing, you know, what do we tell them that it’s 90% him?

Chris: Well?

Hill: You know I would say.

Toni: We can’t say anything until tomorrow?

Hill: All I would say is what I believe okay, the description of clothing matches what we believe Ambrose to be wearing, or wearing at the time of his disappearance.

Gina: 24th January?

Hill: On the 24th of January on the Friday to the Saturday morning.

Barry: The Dadyals CCTV in my opinion that’s the exact same clothing.

Hill: You can not identify that body that we found and your never gonna be able to identify that body visual.

Toni: So we’re never know whether it is Ambrose?

Hill: Yeah you will do there may be z mark on that body as you’ve just described.

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As with everything we state on this blog, all the statements can be backed up with further evidence in the way of emails, audio or visual recordings. In most cases this involves a combination of the aforementioned.

This is the transcript which was taken from the recording at the morgue. The people involved in this conversation are DSI Stewart Hill, Barry McCarthy, Ruth aka Toni, Chris and Alexandria aka Gina…Transcript starts at 1 hours and 13 minutes …

 
Chris: Here we go…
Hill: Ruth, Alex?
Toni: Hello.
Hill: Okay? We are just going to bring you through now okay. 
Chris: Thank you very much.
Hill: Do you want to come through this way please? 
Chris: (inaudible)
Hill: Do you’s want to take a seat?
Toni: What here?
Hill: Yes, wherever you feel comfortable yourself. Okay, erm, sorry for the delay to begin with, but as you can understand I’ve been quite busy today.  So when I took the call from Suresh my officers arranged to come down here straight down okay. Erm it’s your legal entitlement as I said to Suresh to view the body okay, That’s okay Chris, it’s either before the post mortem or after the post mortem, It’s your decision okay. I will say too you okay, I will be open and candid with you okay, I would advise against it at this stage! Okay, but it is your right, it is your right and I respect that.
Toni: Why? What would be different at any other stage?
Hill: Because, what will? What will happen is they will prepare, the body that we have they will prepare that body for the post mortem. The body is not prepared. The body has literally been lifted from a river, and it’s been in a river for a significant amount of time. There’s a significant amount of debris, decomposition as well, that it’s obviously that would take place as a result of a body been in a river for a certain amount of time. The body has literally been lifted, it’s been wrapped and it’s brought to the mortuary, and that is the condition the body is in! And I can tell you now, I can tell you now because I haven’t seen the body, literally I’ve seen photographs of the crime scene you will not be able to make identification, a visual identification. Clothing, there is still clothing on the body, but nothing has been removed from the body, the body has not been touched at all and that would not happen until tomorrow. So that is when obviously the process of the post mortem starts, so I’ve got to tell you that Alex, I’ve got to tell you that Ruth okay. Because it would be remiss of me if I didn’t, so, but it’s your decision and that’s why I am here. I’m sure that we’ve got a member of staff here now to be able to facilitate it for you but, but I warn you now that there hasn’t been any cleansing of the body at all okay which would be the case if it was after the post mortem
Toni: We were just told that you’ve had it since the 19th , you’ve had Ambrose.
Gina: Yes that’s what we just been told.
Chris: Yesterday.
Hill: Who told you that?
Toni: Somebody’s just informed ******** who was in, who was court.

Hill: Who’s *******?
Toni: ******** in *******.
Hill: No no no.
Toni: He’s just called me, he just called me.
Gina: He heard it from police officers on Tuesday.
Hill: No, No the first, the first call that I made was to you Alex so that’s, that’s the first port of call.
Gina: Okay.
Hill: Then obviously I rang you back an hour later.
Gina: Yes.
Hill: You told me to speak to Suresh. Other members of the family okay, were not contacted okay, until after I had spoken to you.
Toni: ***** was contacted the night before.
Gina: What about *****?
Hill: After.
Chris: No yesterday.
Hill: No after l …
Toni: They just told us it was the day before.
Hill: No after, after because I specifically, because you gave instructions didn’t you? Yeah?
Toni: Yeah.
Hill: We followed those instructions, nobody was contacted until after we had spoken to you, okay?
Chris: (inaudible)
Chris: Did you go yourself?
Hill: No no I dispatch the police from my office.
Chris: Right.
Hill: After I’d spoken to you. Because that was, that was the agreement and I wanted to make sure that you were the first person, first people that were told.
Gina: So why did ***** get to see the photographs before Ruth?
Hill: No ones seen the photographs.
Male: no ones seen photographs.
Gina: but she told us she has.
Toni: No she said the clothes were described to her.
Hill: The clothes (inaudible) he’s wearing clothes, we haven’t touched the body, that will happen tomorrow.
Toni: Was he wearing a jacket?
Hill: Erm he’s not wearing a jacket is he?
Barry: Yes he is.
Barry: The same that’s in the CCTV at Dadyals.
Gina: The River Island jacket?
Toni: So he’s got the clothes, the River Island jacket on?
Barry: No, no the jacket, the coat that is on the Dadyals CCTV that is what the body is wrapped in.
Toni: So he’s got the jacket on then?
Barry: The jacket, the one he was wearing in Dadyals yes.
Toni: So he’s got it on?
Barry: The jeans and the trainers.
Gina: Okay.
Hill: What you’ve got to appreciate, what you’ve got to appreciate the clothing has been in water, dirty stagnant water for a long period of time okay. So we are not really going to know for sure exactly what it is until. There are certain elements of clothing that are distinctive, that have kept their identity. For instance, the trainers okay, they are very distinctive, the belt is very distinctive but the I’m sorry having to describe this to you but it’s very difficult to describe unless you’ve actually.
Chris: Well was he wearing his watch was his watch on?
Barry: You cant tell.
Hill: You cant tell, you can’t tell. So its, so its, I’ve got to go outside in a minute to speak to a couple of people outside okay, so have a discussion amongst yourself. You can or you don’t have to it’s up to you but I would advise you Ruth no, but I understand what your needs are as well so it’s a matter for yourself. So if I can leave you for a couple of minutes just to make, have that discussion is that okay Alex?
Gina: Yes.
Hill: Yeah I’ll go outside, I’ll come back if you say yes we wanna do it we will do it it will only take 5 minutes just to prepare. Obviously we’ve got to remove the body, get it in a position where it can be viewed, if not we can come back again tomorrow after the post mortem where the body will be in a better condition because it would have been cleaned so it’s a complete.
Chris: Will you be able to see the whole body then? After the post mortem, without the clothes?
Hill: There is, there is not a whole body, so it, it’s difficult to describe. I haven’t seen the body itself but the bodies been in water for 3, well for some time. 
Chris: You’re going to do, going to DNA, not DNA your going to do…
Toni: Fingerprints?
Chris: Fingerprint test aren’t you?
Gina: That’s what the coroners told us. 
Toni: Becky said.
Gina: They’ve told us that your going to identify him by fingerprints and we don’t understand that because if he that badly decomposed.
Hill: With all due respect, with all due respect to Becky okay. Becky isn’t an investigator okay, she’s a corners’ officer and she hasn’t seen.
Toni: Yeah she said that.
Hill: I’m telling you now there will be no fingerprints.
Toni: But you haven’t seen him either.
Hill: I’ve seen…
Toni: No you haven’t seen Ambrose’s body.
Hill: Ambrose’s?
Toni: Body.
Hill: No. I’ve seen photographs. I’ve seen crime scene photographs, I’ve seen. The fact that I’ve seen, but I haven’t actually seen the body in person but I’ll tell you now the identification is more than likely to come from DNA. So DNA will have to be extracted tomorrow. The DNA will have to be then compared to the DNA that we have got and that takes 48 hours.
Chris: So then, what day is it tomorrow? So will we know Saturday then?
Gina: No Monday, Monday
Hill: It will be confirmed on Sunday, It may well be, it may well be. It may well be that when they remove the clothing, okay which is going to be difficult within its self. There may be a mark on the body that may be visible for instance, a tattoo?
Toni: The leg.
Hill: Or a leg that we might be able to you know so we are almost 100% sure now that this is Ambrose but it might not be the case I don’t know. 
Chris: Because he…
Hill: The body is covered in debris.
Chris: The autopsy that your going to be doing is that going to include all like if he been hit and things like that, is I going to be a full?
Hill: There’s 2 types we do. We do what we call a standard post mortem ok which is where there are no other surrounding circumstances but we give rise to any foul play or any third party involvement. Where we are unsure whether there’s been any third party involvement or foul play we have a special post mortem. We have a specially qualified pathologist. That is why we haven’t been able to get it done straight away. OK. He will come here. Will it be done here?
Barry: Yes.
Hill: Yes it will be done here and that special post mortem is a thorough post mortem, where you know they will seek to identify the cause of death er and …
Toni: If he’s body is so decomposed can they do that?
Hill: They can, they can …
Toni: So can they tell me if he’s drowned or not?
Hill: They can, they can in certain circumstances, Now i’m not a pathologist but in my 21 years I’ve been to a few post mortems and I know within a certain degree what they can do and what they cant do. So in certain circumstances they can and sometimes they can’t but it really depends. I don’t know how long that particular body has been in the river, I don’t know how long its been er, the type of river whether the waters moving or its stagnant obviously does play its part in it as well. There are certain factors that have got to be taken into consideration, you know. If there’s obvious signs of third party involvement i.e foul play i.e. there’s a, a …
Toni: Injury
Hill: Yeah, there is …
Chris: Crushed skull or
Hill: Fractured skull or there’s broken bones they will be able to identify that so then we know that there’s other issues that we need to investigate. But sometimes because of the length of time its been, its taken, obviously for the body to be found, that they may inhibit certain lines of enquiry that the pathologist may follow but I think that’s something that, this is ifs or buts we don’t know yet because we have to wait for the pathologist to start and have a look at what he or she has got, well it’s a he in this case tomorrow okay?
Chris: What Chapman?
Hill: No it was Chapman
Toni: Chapman or, its Ian somebody?
Hill: No no its Paul, it was Chapman but that was today but he has got others and It was going to take to long and would have gone into the evening and it just would not have been appropriate for that. So we’ve got another one, he’s going to do it.
Toni: so there’s only about 5 of them in this country?
Hill: I’m not sure how many there is, I think there is about 14 but not really that many of them.
Gina: So the reason Chapman didn’t do it is because he couldn’t do it today?
Barry: Because he had others to do.
Toni: Yeah and we.
Gina: So it’s actually getting done tomorrow, so why couldn’t Chapman still do it then?
Hill: Well because there’s, he’s obviously, I don’t know what whether its, whether its, he’s day in court or not, I don’t know, but we’ve got a pathologist. He couldn’t do it today, but he was the pathologist on call today, couldn’t do it today because he had others but we’ve got one tomorrow and its been booked in at 12 o’ clock. 
Chris: How long does it normally take?
Hill: Quite a long time, a number of hours.
Chris: So there should be a good view tomorrow of what were looking at, late afternoon?
Hill: Yeah. Early evening. Yeah, yeah but you’ll be contacted. You will be contacted as soon as we.
Toni: So obviously I don’t want to see him if its all debris goes without saying I want to see him cleaned up. I can’t; I won’t have that out my head.
Chris: That’s the thing.
Hill: And that’s the thing, that’s the concern, that is the concern because you know.
Toni: If it’s going to improve me looking at him then I’ll wait until he’s cleaned up.
Gina: It’s worth the 24 hours wait to be honest.
Toni: Yeah.
Gina: Can we just look at the clothes just by the photos?
Toni: He hasn’t got them.
Gina: We are, because we were supposed to look at them tonight.
Toni: Are we still having a meeting tonight?
Hill: Well that’s up to you.
Chris: Yeah yeah the clothes the clothes and all that.
Barry: No no no I suggest not to look at the photos because it’s exactly the same. The photos  will be the same as looking at the body, just it’s the same coming out of the river.
Toni: Okay.
Hill: So, It’s the body is face down.
Toni: Have you seen them?
Barry: Pardon?
Toni: Have you seen them?
Barry: Yes.
Hill: The bodies face down, okay we can’t move the body, we can’t move the body okay, so if you was to view the body tonight it will be face down, face down. We can’t move the body. Mikes not in the position to be able do that tonight, it will take a specialist to be able to do that. So.
Gina: It’s better to clean him do you know what I mean?
Toni: I’m sorry we’ve dragged you out.
Hill: That’s alright, not a problem.
Chris: See the thing is if we could have had someone come around and explain everything exactly to come around, the same as you are rather than over the phone because, you don’t get a lot over the phone you know?
Hill: Yep, yep.
Chris: Where as if you came around and explained it could have probably saved a bit of a journey.
Hill: Yesterday I made myself available to come around, I would have come around this morning but what obviously happened this morning, the reason I didn’t I do it this morning is because I was under the impression the PM was going to be this afternoon. So we’ve got to do certain things in place to facilitate the post mortem but I didn’t find out until this afternoon that it was, its not going to be, cant fit it in its going to be tomorrow. So effectively we’ve done what we need to do and we are now free now because we expected to be working now so, you know. We can, if you want to meet earlier at Sureshs’. I’ve spoken to him today he said we can do that.
Toni: Okay.
Gina: Well hold on, how do I put it, we’ve just been advised the photos are not being any good, is there any point doing that meeting? 
Toni: Because that’s what its about.
Gina: Its about the photos and that isn’t it?
Toni: And if you’re saying it’s like looking at the body now then.
Hill: Is there anyway, any photographs that we can show?
Toni: Edible, not edible, not eaten.
Barry: There’s one photo of the trainers.
Toni: And I can see and.
Hill: That you can see.
Toni: Nah, but I wouldn’t be able to recognise the trainers.
Gina: They could be anyone’s couldn’t they?
Toni: Yeah, yeah.
Barry: Yeah I just think its just not, I don’t think it’s appropriate to show those photos at this stage.
Hill: You see visually, visually you will not be able to identify that body, you will not be able to. 
Toni: Okay.
Chris: So he was face down in the river? When they found him?
Hill: When they found him? When they found him yes.
Chris: So you just picked it up (inaudible) So he’s how he was basically.
Hill: Yes.

Barry: So everything that’s around the body is also taken out of the water as well, so all debris and twigs.
Toni: How far was it?
Gina: How far was it from the helicopter search and fingertip search and POLSA search and all that? How far was because the helicopters were out within 40 minutes of that car accident?
Hill: Yeah, yeah.
Gina: They would have, sorry this is our view. They would have found him if he was at that river you would have found him. Number 2 the fact that, you know he did have a jacket on. We knew that wasn’t his jacket.
Hill: I think if we can answer if I showed you the map, you would see and you would probably draw your own conclusions as to potentially why, if it is him why he is where he was found.
Gina: Well I’m not being horrible the only reason the focus was on that river was because of Darrens’ jacket. 
Hill: Exactly.
Gina: The fact is as you told us at the last weeks meeting that jacket was put in the back of that boot by Darren. Now everyone’s trying to make us believe that Ambrose left his phone in the car but went to the trouble to go to the back of that car, got his jacket out, after a crash we are talking, get out open that boot take his jacket out, close the boot, run down an alley, drop a jacket he didn’t even need, sorry we’re not buying it
Hill: Yeah, yeah.
Toni: And then be so happy at Dadyals.
Gina: We’ve seen it.
Toni: How can he be all that happy after all them fights?
Gina: On Monday at the meeting you said at five to three Inspector Wise upped that to a medium Yep? 
Hill: Yep.
Gina: But you didn’t receive the call until 15.48 from Alpesh stating he found the jacket so how is that possible?
Hill: Yeah, yeah.
Toni: There’s a lot that don’t make sense.
Hill: I hear what your saying but when, when we show you the map, when we show you the map of where the jacket was found okay. 
Gina: But why (inaudible) why the jacket?
Hill: You know the river, you know the river that we looked at that we looked at, remember when we went down there we looked at the river.
Chris: Yeah by the bypass.
Hill: It wasn’t that river.
Chris: Your on about the one near the canal then you’ve got the river afterwards. Your on about the river afterwards?
Toni: Yes the one I was worried about.
Chris: If you walk along the edge of the canal you’ve got the river one side and the canal the other side?
Hill: Is that right.
Barry: Its actually Pymmes Brook and then the next one is the River Lea and then River Lea navigation, that’s what is says on the map its River Lea Navigation that the body was found in.
Hill: Its gone further from where that jacket was and that further across.
Toni: That’s the one I said.
Barry: Every third stretch of water.
Hill: And the route of that river.
Toni: Expands and opens.
Toni: That’s what I was worried about.
Hill: It doesn’t meet the one where the jacket was, until a hell of a long way down so it’s a completely separate.
Chris: We always thought the jacket was planted anyway.
Hill: Yeah.
Chris: When we got there er the jacket was…
Toni: Was dry.
Chris: Apparently it had supposedly been there 3 days it was bone dry it had been frosty all night the jacket had been bone dry…
Toni: Its pouring, it’s horrible.
Chris: There was no slug trails which we’d expect being raining 3 days.
Hill: Here’s a possible explanation here as to where he is now okay but lets wait and see what happens at the post mortem we haven’t got all information and this is, to us, for us this is the most important part for us because this gives us the indication of whether there was any over foul play, yeah.
Stewart Hill takes a phone-call.
Toni: He looks a bit like Bruce Forsythe from the side don’t he?
Barry: (inaudible)
Gina: Nah he’s not that bad.
Chris: When the accident was reported we insisted that they searched the River Lea and they turned around and said…
Toni: Wouldn’t have gone that far.
Chris: Nah he wouldn’t have, something like he wouldn’t have gone that far and we can’t do it unless we got more…
Toni: More evidence…
Chris: Evidence to prove he’s gone that far.
Barry: They go on certain pointers see because they would say well if, how far do you expect us, that’s what the search team would say.
Chris: The thing is you got to think when you say you’ve got a car, even if it was Ambrose’ car I don’t believe that was Ambrose in that car.
Hill: Yeah.
Chris: But even if it was Ambrose in that car you’ve then got to think well then okay add that to the(inaudible) drunk or whatever How far can he get in two hours and then you do your search for that you don’t like just around the car which is what they’ve done. Three days the only search party was from family.
Hill: Obviously we can go through that with you I mean its not its detailed searching so you know, what they’ve got to do, what they do search they’ve got to search properly so they cant search something with the chances of them missing something. See if they miss something it just don’t move forward and then, subsequently if something turns out they know that it’s been a faulty investigation because they should have found something. I mean there’s been examples of that there has been examples of it so it isn’t within the search parameters And we went back down there to discuss it but that’s something that we can go through with you and id like to go through that with you with Maps because you know.
Chris: For me if they turn around and say they have a helicopter out within 2 hours after that car was reported missing, reported crashed er I think …
Toni: You would have found him.
Chris: I thought it was 2 hours?
Hill: I think it was 20 minutes.
Toni: An hour yeah 20 minutes.
Gina: The helicopter was up by 3.40 and that’s within half an hour.
Hill: And we’ve had a discussion about it, I’m not going to commit myself to anything because I don’t know what’s going to come out of this okay. But the fact that that helicopter was up early okay, search lights, noise, he would have known.
Toni: Body heat as well.
Hill: He would know, before that, before that Ruth. You can hear the bloody thing especially at night time so and if you’ve just crashed a car okay, you’ve had a drink or whatever you’ve abandoned that car and you hear the police helicopter go up and you see the spot light going down you know the chances are he’s…
Toni: Going to hide.
Hill: He’s not going to sit there is he and wait to be found is he? Let’s just wait and see.
Chris: Okay then so that’s 20 minutes.
Hill: Its less than that Chris, I haven’t got the, I think they was up in 15 minutes I think, something like that. 
Gina: When we checked, it was up there at 3.40.
Hill: I think they were already up and I think they’ve just come over. It was a, it was a , it was a good response and it was a quick response than we would normally expect actually so they were probably already up dealing with something else so er lets see what comes out from the the the…
Chris: Post mortem.
Hill: Yeah the PM er then we can go from there look I’m going to, I’m going to speak to a couple of people outside that are waiting and er I’ve got some police officers here because I didn’t want you just turning up and waiting outside and nobody being here. I’m just going to speak with them. Make your decision.
Toni: Er I think we’ve made it, I think we’ve made it.
Chris: You might see Clare outside shes with the, she’s independent from the BBC but they are doing a program in September er for er this sort of thing. So this isn’t something you think about immediately, this is something that.
Hill: I hope Surseh has provided you this information because I’ve spoken to Suresh and I’ve told him that you know, you’re not going to be able to identify him, you’re not going to be able to identify him, you’re not that is that is, you’re not going to be able to do that because of the condition of the body you know and …
Chris: He did but he turned around and said we’d advise you not to but…
Hill: It’s your legal right, it’s your legal right and we can’t take that away from you but I, as a police officer, you know am just advising you, not even as police officer but somebody that’s seen that body, I’m advising you no. If you can, wait until tomorrow. That would be the best time for you
Toni: Yeah
Barry: Yes most defiantly
Hill: At least, at least the body as it is will be cleaned it is you know.
Chris: Well can you suggest for tomorrow yeah if you got, find that there’s markings there, tattoos on the body or on the knee, a scar is it on the knee?
Toni: On his right knee where he had a operation. It goes from here to here.
Chris: That’s why he’s got.
Toni: That’s why he’s got that limp, one of his legs was in traction for three months, no from here to here from his knee bone to connect because his knee disconnected from his…
Chris: And his got tattoos…
Toni: And he was on a traction for three months…
Chris: A body on his arm…
Toni: And it’s a very very thick thick scar.
Gina: Even if they can’t see physically they will be able to with bones.
Toni: He was on a traction for three months.
Barry: What was injured was it cartridge or was it…
Toni: Erm the knee came away, literally the year the ambulances were on strike.
Barry: How old was he when he had that?
Toni: What the year the ambulances were on strike? Boxing Day.
Barry: It would be (inaudible).
Toni: 15 years.
Chris: Cover the rest of the body and just leave that identifiable so Ruth could identify it through that way? Then she doesn’t have to see anything else.
Hill: Yeah.
Chris: Do you understand what I mean? If it’s going to be that bad.
Hill: Yeah, it is and we will do what we can, erm Barry will clean it and Barry will obviously speak to the pathologist and the technician that we’ve here to ensure got to make sure you know. What can be viewed.
Barry: Did he have tattoos on his legs?
Toni: No because he had one massive tattoo on his sorry …
Toni: On his right side just done of a woman, of a Mexican type woman.
Barry: Quite a large one?
Toni: Yeah took up all up this side. His got loads, his got one on his neck but its not Legend he covered up the word Legend with a rose but it looks like a load of ink has been slapped on his neck.
Barry: So a Mexican lady on the right side.
Toni: Yeah.
Barry: Of the torso.
Toni: Yeah, all the way down, covers the whole side.
Stewart Hill takes a phone call …
Barry: Any other sort of larger ones?
Toni: No that’s Jonathon, that’s Jonathon.
Barry: (inaudible).
Toni: Yeah his got something on his back, his arm was covered.
Barry: (inaudible)
Toni: Yeah his arm was covered.
Barry: So any other sort of operation that he’s had?
Toni: Nah only that knee one.
Barry: So the knee operations?
Toni: Yeah he was in traction for three months in hospital and his leg is slightly shorter, maybe an inch shorter.
Barry: Right okay, what about any gold teeth?
Toni: No.
Barry: That’s fine.
Hill: What was the watch? What was the watch he had on?t
Toni: It was the 25th November.
Barry: Do you know which wrist he wore the watch on?
Toni: His left.
Hill: What was it a leather strap watch or…
Toni: No gold.
Gina: Gold it was all gold. Gold face with a gold strap?
Chris: And I think it was like a pink.
Toni: Yeah sort of rose colour, rose colour.
Hill: What was the make of it do you know?
Toni: 25th anniversary it was called.
Gina: Anniversary Royal Oak or something like that.
Hill: That might still be on.
Barry: Well er yeah.
Hill: If its metal strap and that.
Barry: Er yeah.
Gina: And we also know that he had £400 pound on him, so hopefully that will…
Toni: Yeah in his pocket.
Barry: Obviously we’ve not checked the pockets or anything.
Gina: Okay.
Hill: So that’s all done here we don’t. The body gets lifted straight from the water and then we have to take it as it comes (inaudible) erm the body was found just by a worker walking along checking the river at about twenty to three.
Toni: Twenty to three in the morning.
Hill: No it was environmental agency staff checking the water.
Barry: Its not an area where people walk.
Gina: It was a chance.
Hill: There’s photographs of the body in the water you know, I probably wouldn’t have picked it up. Amongst the surface debris in the water.
Toni: Which I thought would have happened further up.
Hill: well when you look at it you’ll think well I cant see how he fell but he did. Unfortunately erm but obviously it took some time to get the body out of the water, because it was in water it takes you know it takes time to remove the body from the position it has been in for some time.
Toni: But we don’t know for sure how long until tomorrow.
Hill: But they’ll put you, know we don’t know how long. I mean they might be able to give an estimate but its, I think it will be pretty difficult. It will be difficult to be precise on that sort of thing.
Gina: Yes.
Chris: So he was probably half in and half out of the water
Hill: Fully in the water but the back, the bum was just above the …
Barry: All that was visible was the back.
Hill: Fully in the water but the back , the bum…

Gina: Half in half out?

Hill: Was sort of above was the vessel was so that’s.

Hill: All: that is visible is the back and from the bum the area.

Gina: So yeah that’s what we meant.

Hill: That that’s all.

Hill: Yeah so so not half from there and half its.

Gina: That’s what we thought.. Yeah.

Hill: But that could change depending on the tide of the water and everything so it’s… You know.

Chris: Alright, in your experience.

Toni: It’s him.

Chris: You’ve obviously seen seen a body in the morgue… Does it look like it’s been in there for three months.

Toni: Oh I no.

Hill: It looks like it’s been in there for a long time.

Chris: Oh.

Hill: There’s a lot of.

Chris: You don’t think he could of been somewhere else and then dumped there later.

Hill: Well will.

Chris: You’ll find that out.

Hill: Yeah, yeah, there’s one question I will be asking the pathologist is, is now can we tell whether that body is drowned.

Chris: Yeah.

Hill: Or if that body was dead before it went in there.

Gina: Yeah.
Hill: And under certain circumstances they can ah but because of the length of time that body may be in there that be compromised so it’s will have to wait and see will have to wait and see but that be one of the questions we’re ask.
Chris: One of the saving graces is probably was cos he was cold if he was only wearing a t-shirt or something it might not of been.

Hill : Yeah…….. Alright then.

Toni: So will hear from you for tomorrow.

Hill: Yep your hear from Barry tomorrow ah.

Barry: What about tomorrow?

Toni: My number.

Hill: You want us to go for Suresh or do you want us to.

Toni: Direct, I’ve already told that Becky as well direct to me.

Hill: Okay.

Toni: Please.

Hill: What stage is that then Ruth.

Toni: All stages now.

Hill: Okay, alright.. So so what’s the likely hood contact tomorrow then Barry will be.

Toni: Will confirm that if he’s still having a meeting tonight… I’ll confirm that with Suresh.

Gina: Well we don’t need the meeting tonight do we?

Toni: Nah we don’t need it..

Gina: Well.

Toni: No we don’t.

Gina: We don’t need it.

Toni: No we don’t need tonight then.

Gina: Because it was really around photos and…

Hill: Yeah.

Gina: What we discussed here really isn’t it.

Hill: Yeah that’s.

Gina: Yeah, so.

Toni: So leave tonight then.

Gina: What’s the point of having it really cos we’re gonna go through that tomorrow may as well just…

Toni: Yeah leave it.

Gina: leave it now and deal with that.

Toni: Take it from tomorrow.

Gina: That’s what will do.

Hill: So should I take a number.

Toni: Says number.

Chris: Do you want the house number just in case you can’t get anything?

Toni; Yeah.

Chris: And the house number will be – says number.

Hill: Now tomorrow okay

Barry: I think: should I put a call into you just before we start.

Toni: No when we can come and view.

Hill: Right what I’ve got is an estimated time… I’ll let you know.

Chris: Yeah.

Toni: Yeah please.

Chris: Than you can turn…

Everyone speaks at the same here is hard to pin point what is said

Toni: Oh yeah.

Gina: We can’t, we won’t be able do get down here till about two anyway.

Barry: No it won’t be.

Gina: Ah okay.

Hill : If we’re gonna be realistic about this ok tomorrow is going to be obviously a full day for everybody it’s gonna be an emotional day for yourself ah…. Barry has things to due obviously during the course of the postmortem and I’ve got other officers here that that obviously they have roles they got to perform during the postmortem…. Your then do the viewing after the postmortem ok… Barry will be on hand I’m not gonna be here tomorrow evening but I’m back on Monday alright now the DNA will be taken – if they can get DNA which ah you know ah… I’ve seen DNA retracted from bodies that have been dead along time a lot longer then then.

Toni: They do it with dinosaurs.

Hill: In certain circumstances….. Without speaking to the pathologist… I’m trusting the lads gonna be the work going forward… So that will be taken for examination and comparison with the DNA that we’ve got, so we’re looking for potential Sunday.. Sunday for the identification to be confirmed okay so you will get ah your either get a phone call confirming it or you get a call saying we’re still waiting for it, it was due but we’re still waiting for it to be done cos it goes off to an laboratory in Birmingham it’s not a police laboratory it’s an independent laboratory that does it that is contacted by the police okay so we’re really, ah, ah, they give it to, but their telling us 48 hours so once that’s done you will be informed ah and, then I think potentially I think the best time for us to meet will probably be Monday ah and I’ll speak to Suresh about it maybe that’s something we can probably arrange or get something in place so then we’ve all made an assessment of what we’ve got, what the situation is and then we can come together and we can go go from there is that okay Ruth?

Toni: Yeah that’s fine.

Hill: Otherwise what happens, as I’ve been in this situation before, you know everyone is going to emotional charged, your going to have 100 and one things your want to ask, your forget that cause your emotionally charged and it’s not productive at all.

Gina: Yep.

Hill: Let’s deal with things

Toni: It’s the best that.

Gina: For everybody.

Chris: I don’t know it (inaudible).

Hill: Is that alright.

Toni: Yeah.

Hill: Yeah.

Toni: Okay.

Chris: Hopefully tomorrow you might get an identification without doing the DNA.

Gina: No your still have to do that anyway won’t you.

Barry: Yeah.

Toni: Well.

Gina: Legally to make sure.

Hill: Nah sometimes you can do it but i not relying on that at all.

Chris:  Yeah yeah.

Hill: So I’m not relaying on that at all, but you know we don’t know, we don’t know, there might be something in his pocket with his name on it, I don’t know.

Gina: Yeah.

Hill: Because when we had a look.

Barry: What hospital did he have the operation at?

Toni: Guys hospital.

Barry: About fifteen years ago?

Toni: Yeah roughly.

Chris: Did he have any Metal put in his knee or anything?

Toni: No not… Yeah I think it was on a traction and it had to be pulled you know stretched.

Barry: What these operations.

Toni: Yeah and he was on traction for three months it wasn’t a little thing.

Gina: yeah.

Barry: So that should be something should be able to determine the.

Toni: Oh God defiantly.

Hill: Have we got disclosure as a verbal agreement at all?

Barry: No I don’t think so.

Hill: I’ll have to speak to Sharon about that did you sign anything Ruth?

Toni: Nothing at all

Hill: Okay, we might not need it but if we do apologise for, make a note if there is and then we get the records he’s medical records and do a comparison…

Toni: Yeah.

Hill: That is one way……. That’ll probably be quicker anyway, but it’s you know will have to wait and see as we go forward, but personally I think you’ve made the right decision.

Toni: Okay.

Hill: You made the right decision… So Erm and hopefully tomorrow your a lot clearer is to… Yeah okay so is there anything else you wanna ask me now I know without the meeting tonight but is there anything you want to ask me?

Toni: Do you think it’s him?

Hill: Do I think it’s him? I, on the clothing, on clothing, from what I’ve seen on the CCTV. erm and the thing that’s been described to him and the clothing he’s said to be wearing. Erm based upon probably his trainers which are very distinctive, I’m surprised he still go his trainers on to be fair, the, the, you know as I’ve describe it, as almost certainly, almost certainly however…

Gina: Yeah?

Hill: I’m sure there just not one pair of trainers made.

Chris: We still need to have a meeting because we would still like to see the CCTV you can see it.

Barry: Yeah that’s all ready.

Hill: We had all that we had all that for you, was we meant to meeting today.

Toni: But it was Suresh, for some reason he cancelled it because he said he tried to get hold of you and you were on two days training.. You were on training.

Gina: You won’t return his calls.

Hill: I was training I was training but we still pencilled in for the meeting but the trading was two days ago so.

Barry: The CCTV we can watch on the DVD player right that first quicker.

Gina: That’s what I said to you.

Chris: Yeah because we need…

Hill: I think.

Chris: to be able to see that.

To many voices speaking here to pin point what’s said

Hill: I was at the training course on Tuesday and I was told that what are we now Wednesday.

Toni: We’re at Thursday

Hill: Yeah it’s Thursday’s now and I was told it was cancelled.

Barry: Yeah you what.

Hill: I thought you cancelled it?

Toni: No.

Chris: I think your could informed Suresh to meet them to go ahead Suresh says can you confirm that the CCTV is gone and he said well I can’t confirm that and he says well there’s no use having a meeting without the CCTV being there, there’s a misunderstanding

Hill: Yeah I think actually, well we’ve got CCTV it’s been done.. So, but you know that aside. we didn’t know we’d were gonna find.

Gina: Ambrose.

Chris: If it is Ambrose, we still want a meeting with us to see CCTV

Toni: We trust you, on Monday.

Hill: Look Ruth upsetting…. I know you’ve got that….. Trust, I assure you I’ve been doing this along time okay and I’ve worked on murder investigation for a long long time okay, I’m telling you now that I will give you the time that you want okay, there maybe times where you might ring me and you can’t get through to me, there’s always going to be them occasions because you know.

Toni: Of course I’ll expect that.

Hill: it will never be deliberate, but I’m telling you now I will give you the time okay? and I’ll be open and honest with you. I’ve got nothing to hide from you whatsoever, nothing alright, I can look you in the eye and tell you that okay and I will give you the time, but it’s not the right time for you to look at it now.

Chris:  Okay so?

Hill: If you say Stuart I want to look at it I will sit here with you now, we’re get the computer we’re go back and we’re do it, it’s entirely up to you, but you don’t do you?

Toni: No.

Gina: No.

Chris: No.

Hill: But its done for you, so I think where we are now, let’s take it step by step.

Toni: Find out if this is Ambrose 100%?

Hill: Then we know where we are don’t we?

Toni: Yeah.

Hill: We know where we are and we go from there.

Toni: Okay.

Gina:  What, because you know ******* has been ringing, ******* has been ringing, you know, what do we tell them that it’s 90% him?

Chris: Well?

Hill: You know I would say.

Toni: We can’t say anything until tomorrow?

Hill: All I would say is what I believe okay, the description of clothing matches what we believe Ambrose to be wearing, or wearing at the time of his disappearance.

Gina: 24th January?

Hill: On the 24th of January on the Friday to the Saturday morning.

Barry: The Dadyals CCTV in my opinion that’s the exact same clothing.

Hill: You can not identify that body that we found and your never gonna be able to identify that body visual.

Toni: So we’re never know whether it is Ambrose?

Hill: Yeah you will do there may be z mark on that body as you’ve just described.

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On the 25th April Ruth, friends and family members went down to where the body was found and took their own photographs.  The photographs taken are below…

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On the 25th April Ruth, friends and family members went down to where the body was found and took their own photographs.  The photographs taken are below…

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As with everything we state on this blog, all the statements can be backed up with further evidence in the way of emails, audio or visual recordings. In most cases this involves a combination of the aforementioned.

This is the transcript which was taken from the recording at the morgue. The people involved in this conversation are DSI Stewart Hill, Barry McCarthy, Ruth aka Toni, Chris and Alexandria aka Gina…Transcript starts at 1 hours and 13 minutes …

 
Chris: Here we go…
Hill: Ruth, Alex?
Toni: Hello.
Hill: Okay? We are just going to bring you through now okay. 
Chris: Thank you very much.
Hill: Do you want to come through this way please? 
Chris: (inaudible)
Hill: Do you’s want to take a seat?
Toni: What here?
Hill: Yes, wherever you feel comfortable yourself. Okay, erm, sorry for the delay to begin with, but as you can understand I’ve been quite busy today.  So when I took the call from Suresh my officers arranged to come down here straight down okay. Erm it’s your legal entitlement as I said to Suresh to view the body okay, That’s okay Chris, it’s either before the post mortem or after the post mortem, It’s your decision okay. I will say too you okay, I will be open and candid with you okay, I would advise against it at this stage! Okay, but it is your right, it is your right and I respect that.
Toni: Why? What would be different at any other stage?
Hill: Because, what will? What will happen is they will prepare, the body that we have they will prepare that body for the post mortem. The body is not prepared. The body has literally been lifted from a river, and it’s been in a river for a significant amount of time. There’s a significant amount of debris, decomposition as well, that it’s obviously that would take place as a result of a body been in a river for a certain amount of time. The body has literally been lifted, it’s been wrapped and it’s brought to the mortuary, and that is the condition the body is in! And I can tell you now, I can tell you now because I haven’t seen the body, literally I’ve seen photographs of the crime scene you will not be able to make identification, a visual identification. Clothing, there is still clothing on the body, but nothing has been removed from the body, the body has not been touched at all and that would not happen until tomorrow. So that is when obviously the process of the post mortem starts, so I’ve got to tell you that Alex, I’ve got to tell you that Ruth okay. Because it would be remiss of me if I didn’t, so, but it’s your decision and that’s why I am here. I’m sure that we’ve got a member of staff here now to be able to facilitate it for you but, but I warn you now that there hasn’t been any cleansing of the body at all okay which would be the case if it was after the post mortem
Toni: We were just told that you’ve had it since the 19th , you’ve had Ambrose.
Gina: Yes that’s what we just been told.
Chris: Yesterday.
Hill: Who told you that?
Toni: Somebody’s just informed ******** who was in, who was court.

Hill: Who’s *******?
Toni: ******** in *******.
Hill: No no no.
Toni: He’s just called me, he just called me.
Gina: He heard it from police officers on Tuesday.
Hill: No, No the first, the first call that I made was to you Alex so that’s, that’s the first port of call.
Gina: Okay.
Hill: Then obviously I rang you back an hour later.
Gina: Yes.
Hill: You told me to speak to Suresh. Other members of the family okay, were not contacted okay, until after I had spoken to you.
Toni: ***** was contacted the night before.
Gina: What about *****?
Hill: After.
Chris: No yesterday.
Hill: No after l …
Toni: They just told us it was the day before.
Hill: No after, after because I specifically, because you gave instructions didn’t you? Yeah?
Toni: Yeah.
Hill: We followed those instructions, nobody was contacted until after we had spoken to you, okay?
Chris: (inaudible)
Chris: Did you go yourself?
Hill: No no I dispatch the police from my office.
Chris: Right.
Hill: After I’d spoken to you. Because that was, that was the agreement and I wanted to make sure that you were the first person, first people that were told.
Gina: So why did ***** get to see the photographs before Ruth?
Hill: No ones seen the photographs.
Male: no ones seen photographs.
Gina: but she told us she has.
Toni: No she said the clothes were described to her.
Hill: The clothes (inaudible) he’s wearing clothes, we haven’t touched the body, that will happen tomorrow.
Toni: Was he wearing a jacket?
Hill: Erm he’s not wearing a jacket is he?
Barry: Yes he is.
Barry: The same that’s in the CCTV at Dadyals.
Gina: The River Island jacket?
Toni: So he’s got the clothes, the River Island jacket on?
Barry: No, no the jacket, the coat that is on the Dadyals CCTV that is what the body is wrapped in.
Toni: So he’s got the jacket on then?
Barry: The jacket, the one he was wearing in Dadyals yes.
Toni: So he’s got it on?
Barry: The jeans and the trainers.
Gina: Okay.
Hill: What you’ve got to appreciate, what you’ve got to appreciate the clothing has been in water, dirty stagnant water for a long period of time okay. So we are not really going to know for sure exactly what it is until. There are certain elements of clothing that are distinctive, that have kept their identity. For instance, the trainers okay, they are very distinctive, the belt is very distinctive but the I’m sorry having to describe this to you but it’s very difficult to describe unless you’ve actually.
Chris: Well was he wearing his watch was his watch on?
Barry: You cant tell.
Hill: You cant tell, you can’t tell. So its, so its, I’ve got to go outside in a minute to speak to a couple of people outside okay, so have a discussion amongst yourself. You can or you don’t have to it’s up to you but I would advise you Ruth no, but I understand what your needs are as well so it’s a matter for yourself. So if I can leave you for a couple of minutes just to make, have that discussion is that okay Alex?
Gina: Yes.
Hill: Yeah I’ll go outside, I’ll come back if you say yes we wanna do it we will do it it will only take 5 minutes just to prepare. Obviously we’ve got to remove the body, get it in a position where it can be viewed, if not we can come back again tomorrow after the post mortem where the body will be in a better condition because it would have been cleaned so it’s a complete.
Chris: Will you be able to see the whole body then? After the post mortem, without the clothes?
Hill: There is, there is not a whole body, so it, it’s difficult to describe. I haven’t seen the body itself but the bodies been in water for 3, well for some time. 
Chris: You’re going to do, going to DNA, not DNA your going to do…
Toni: Fingerprints?
Chris: Fingerprint test aren’t you?
Gina: That’s what the coroners told us. 
Toni: Becky said.
Gina: They’ve told us that your going to identify him by fingerprints and we don’t understand that because if he that badly decomposed.
Hill: With all due respect, with all due respect to Becky okay. Becky isn’t an investigator okay, she’s a corners’ officer and she hasn’t seen.
Toni: Yeah she said that.
Hill: I’m telling you now there will be no fingerprints.
Toni: But you haven’t seen him either.
Hill: I’ve seen…
Toni: No you haven’t seen Ambrose’s body.
Hill: Ambrose’s?
Toni: Body.
Hill: No. I’ve seen photographs. I’ve seen crime scene photographs, I’ve seen. The fact that I’ve seen, but I haven’t actually seen the body in person but I’ll tell you now the identification is more than likely to come from DNA. So DNA will have to be extracted tomorrow. The DNA will have to be then compared to the DNA that we have got and that takes 48 hours.
Chris: So then, what day is it tomorrow? So will we know Saturday then?
Gina: No Monday, Monday
Hill: It will be confirmed on Sunday, It may well be, it may well be. It may well be that when they remove the clothing, okay which is going to be difficult within its self. There may be a mark on the body that may be visible for instance, a tattoo?
Toni: The leg.
Hill: Or a leg that we might be able to you know so we are almost 100% sure now that this is Ambrose but it might not be the case I don’t know. 
Chris: Because he…
Hill: The body is covered in debris.
Chris: The autopsy that your going to be doing is that going to include all like if he been hit and things like that, is I going to be a full?
Hill: There’s 2 types we do. We do what we call a standard post mortem ok which is where there are no other surrounding circumstances but we give rise to any foul play or any third party involvement. Where we are unsure whether there’s been any third party involvement or foul play we have a special post mortem. We have a specially qualified pathologist. That is why we haven’t been able to get it done straight away. OK. He will come here. Will it be done here?
Barry: Yes.
Hill: Yes it will be done here and that special post mortem is a thorough post mortem, where you know they will seek to identify the cause of death er and …
Toni: If he’s body is so decomposed can they do that?
Hill: They can, they can …
Toni: So can they tell me if he’s drowned or not?
Hill: They can, they can in certain circumstances, Now i’m not a pathologist but in my 21 years I’ve been to a few post mortems and I know within a certain degree what they can do and what they cant do. So in certain circumstances they can and sometimes they can’t but it really depends. I don’t know how long that particular body has been in the river, I don’t know how long its been er, the type of river whether the waters moving or its stagnant obviously does play its part in it as well. There are certain factors that have got to be taken into consideration, you know. If there’s obvious signs of third party involvement i.e foul play i.e. there’s a, a …
Toni: Injury
Hill: Yeah, there is …
Chris: Crushed skull or
Hill: Fractured skull or there’s broken bones they will be able to identify that so then we know that there’s other issues that we need to investigate. But sometimes because of the length of time its been, its taken, obviously for the body to be found, that they may inhibit certain lines of enquiry that the pathologist may follow but I think that’s something that, this is ifs or buts we don’t know yet because we have to wait for the pathologist to start and have a look at what he or she has got, well it’s a he in this case tomorrow okay?
Chris: What Chapman?
Hill: No it was Chapman
Toni: Chapman or, its Ian somebody?
Hill: No no its Paul, it was Chapman but that was today but he has got others and It was going to take to long and would have gone into the evening and it just would not have been appropriate for that. So we’ve got another one, he’s going to do it.
Toni: so there’s only about 5 of them in this country?
Hill: I’m not sure how many there is, I think there is about 14 but not really that many of them.
Gina: So the reason Chapman didn’t do it is because he couldn’t do it today?
Barry: Because he had others to do.
Toni: Yeah and we.
Gina: So it’s actually getting done tomorrow, so why couldn’t Chapman still do it then?
Hill: Well because there’s, he’s obviously, I don’t know what whether its, whether its, he’s day in court or not, I don’t know, but we’ve got a pathologist. He couldn’t do it today, but he was the pathologist on call today, couldn’t do it today because he had others but we’ve got one tomorrow and its been booked in at 12 o’ clock. 
Chris: How long does it normally take?
Hill: Quite a long time, a number of hours.
Chris: So there should be a good view tomorrow of what were looking at, late afternoon?
Hill: Yeah. Early evening. Yeah, yeah but you’ll be contacted. You will be contacted as soon as we.
Toni: So obviously I don’t want to see him if its all debris goes without saying I want to see him cleaned up. I can’t; I won’t have that out my head.
Chris: That’s the thing.
Hill: And that’s the thing, that’s the concern, that is the concern because you know.
Toni: If it’s going to improve me looking at him then I’ll wait until he’s cleaned up.
Gina: It’s worth the 24 hours wait to be honest.
Toni: Yeah.
Gina: Can we just look at the clothes just by the photos?
Toni: He hasn’t got them.
Gina: We are, because we were supposed to look at them tonight.
Toni: Are we still having a meeting tonight?
Hill: Well that’s up to you.
Chris: Yeah yeah the clothes the clothes and all that.
Barry: No no no I suggest not to look at the photos because it’s exactly the same. The photos  will be the same as looking at the body, just it’s the same coming out of the river.
Toni: Okay.
Hill: So, It’s the body is face down.
Toni: Have you seen them?
Barry: Pardon?
Toni: Have you seen them?
Barry: Yes.
Hill: The bodies face down, okay we can’t move the body, we can’t move the body okay, so if you was to view the body tonight it will be face down, face down. We can’t move the body. Mikes not in the position to be able do that tonight, it will take a specialist to be able to do that. So.
Gina: It’s better to clean him do you know what I mean?
Toni: I’m sorry we’ve dragged you out.
Hill: That’s alright, not a problem.
Chris: See the thing is if we could have had someone come around and explain everything exactly to come around, the same as you are rather than over the phone because, you don’t get a lot over the phone you know?
Hill: Yep, yep.
Chris: Where as if you came around and explained it could have probably saved a bit of a journey.
Hill: Yesterday I made myself available to come around, I would have come around this morning but what obviously happened this morning, the reason I didn’t I do it this morning is because I was under the impression the PM was going to be this afternoon. So we’ve got to do certain things in place to facilitate the post mortem but I didn’t find out until this afternoon that it was, its not going to be, cant fit it in its going to be tomorrow. So effectively we’ve done what we need to do and we are now free now because we expected to be working now so, you know. We can, if you want to meet earlier at Sureshs’. I’ve spoken to him today he said we can do that.
Toni: Okay.
Gina: Well hold on, how do I put it, we’ve just been advised the photos are not being any good, is there any point doing that meeting? 
Toni: Because that’s what its about.
Gina: Its about the photos and that isn’t it?
Toni: And if you’re saying it’s like looking at the body now then.
Hill: Is there anyway, any photographs that we can show?
Toni: Edible, not edible, not eaten.
Barry: There’s one photo of the trainers.
Toni: And I can see and.
Hill: That you can see.
Toni: Nah, but I wouldn’t be able to recognise the trainers.
Gina: They could be anyone’s couldn’t they?
Toni: Yeah, yeah.
Barry: Yeah I just think its just not, I don’t think it’s appropriate to show those photos at this stage.
Hill: You see visually, visually you will not be able to identify that body, you will not be able to. 
Toni: Okay.
Chris: So he was face down in the river? When they found him?
Hill: When they found him? When they found him yes.
Chris: So you just picked it up (inaudible) So he’s how he was basically.
Hill: Yes.

Barry: So everything that’s around the body is also taken out of the water as well, so all debris and twigs.
Toni: How far was it?
Gina: How far was it from the helicopter search and fingertip search and POLSA search and all that? How far was because the helicopters were out within 40 minutes of that car accident?
Hill: Yeah, yeah.
Gina: They would have, sorry this is our view. They would have found him if he was at that river you would have found him. Number 2 the fact that, you know he did have a jacket on. We knew that wasn’t his jacket.
Hill: I think if we can answer if I showed you the map, you would see and you would probably draw your own conclusions as to potentially why, if it is him why he is where he was found.
Gina: Well I’m not being horrible the only reason the focus was on that river was because of Darrens’ jacket. 
Hill: Exactly.
Gina: The fact is as you told us at the last weeks meeting that jacket was put in the back of that boot by Darren. Now everyone’s trying to make us believe that Ambrose left his phone in the car but went to the trouble to go to the back of that car, got his jacket out, after a crash we are talking, get out open that boot take his jacket out, close the boot, run down an alley, drop a jacket he didn’t even need, sorry we’re not buying it
Hill: Yeah, yeah.
Toni: And then be so happy at Dadyals.
Gina: We’ve seen it.
Toni: How can he be all that happy after all them fights?
Gina: On Monday at the meeting you said at five to three Inspector Wise upped that to a medium Yep? 
Hill: Yep.
Gina: But you didn’t receive the call until 15.48 from Alpesh stating he found the jacket so how is that possible?
Hill: Yeah, yeah.
Toni: There’s a lot that don’t make sense.
Hill: I hear what your saying but when, when we show you the map, when we show you the map of where the jacket was found okay. 
Gina: But why (inaudible) why the jacket?
Hill: You know the river, you know the river that we looked at that we looked at, remember when we went down there we looked at the river.
Chris: Yeah by the bypass.
Hill: It wasn’t that river.
Chris: Your on about the one near the canal then you’ve got the river afterwards. Your on about the river afterwards?
Toni: Yes the one I was worried about.
Chris: If you walk along the edge of the canal you’ve got the river one side and the canal the other side?
Hill: Is that right.
Barry: Its actually Pymmes Brook and then the next one is the River Lea and then River Lea navigation, that’s what is says on the map its River Lea Navigation that the body was found in.
Hill: Its gone further from where that jacket was and that further across.
Toni: That’s the one I said.
Barry: Every third stretch of water.
Hill: And the route of that river.
Toni: Expands and opens.
Toni: That’s what I was worried about.
Hill: It doesn’t meet the one where the jacket was, until a hell of a long way down so it’s a completely separate.
Chris: We always thought the jacket was planted anyway.
Hill: Yeah.
Chris: When we got there er the jacket was…
Toni: Was dry.
Chris: Apparently it had supposedly been there 3 days it was bone dry it had been frosty all night the jacket had been bone dry…
Toni: Its pouring, it’s horrible.
Chris: There was no slug trails which we’d expect being raining 3 days.
Hill: Here’s a possible explanation here as to where he is now okay but lets wait and see what happens at the post mortem we haven’t got all information and this is, to us, for us this is the most important part for us because this gives us the indication of whether there was any over foul play, yeah.
Stewart Hill takes a phone-call.
Toni: He looks a bit like Bruce Forsythe from the side don’t he?
Barry: (inaudible)
Gina: Nah he’s not that bad.
Chris: When the accident was reported we insisted that they searched the River Lea and they turned around and said…
Toni: Wouldn’t have gone that far.
Chris: Nah he wouldn’t have, something like he wouldn’t have gone that far and we can’t do it unless we got more…
Toni: More evidence…
Chris: Evidence to prove he’s gone that far.
Barry: They go on certain pointers see because they would say well if, how far do you expect us, that’s what the search team would say.
Chris: The thing is you got to think when you say you’ve got a car, even if it was Ambrose’ car I don’t believe that was Ambrose in that car.
Hill: Yeah.
Chris: But even if it was Ambrose in that car you’ve then got to think well then okay add that to the(inaudible) drunk or whatever How far can he get in two hours and then you do your search for that you don’t like just around the car which is what they’ve done. Three days the only search party was from family.
Hill: Obviously we can go through that with you I mean its not its detailed searching so you know, what they’ve got to do, what they do search they’ve got to search properly so they cant search something with the chances of them missing something. See if they miss something it just don’t move forward and then, subsequently if something turns out they know that it’s been a faulty investigation because they should have found something. I mean there’s been examples of that there has been examples of it so it isn’t within the search parameters And we went back down there to discuss it but that’s something that we can go through with you and id like to go through that with you with Maps because you know.
Chris: For me if they turn around and say they have a helicopter out within 2 hours after that car was reported missing, reported crashed er I think …
Toni: You would have found him.
Chris: I thought it was 2 hours?
Hill: I think it was 20 minutes.
Toni: An hour yeah 20 minutes.
Gina: The helicopter was up by 3.40 and that’s within half an hour.
Hill: And we’ve had a discussion about it, I’m not going to commit myself to anything because I don’t know what’s going to come out of this okay. But the fact that that helicopter was up early okay, search lights, noise, he would have known.
Toni: Body heat as well.
Hill: He would know, before that, before that Ruth. You can hear the bloody thing especially at night time so and if you’ve just crashed a car okay, you’ve had a drink or whatever you’ve abandoned that car and you hear the police helicopter go up and you see the spot light going down you know the chances are he’s…
Toni: Going to hide.
Hill: He’s not going to sit there is he and wait to be found is he? Let’s just wait and see.
Chris: Okay then so that’s 20 minutes.
Hill: Its less than that Chris, I haven’t got the, I think they was up in 15 minutes I think, something like that. 
Gina: When we checked, it was up there at 3.40.
Hill: I think they were already up and I think they’ve just come over. It was a, it was a , it was a good response and it was a quick response than we would normally expect actually so they were probably already up dealing with something else so er lets see what comes out from the the the…
Chris: Post mortem.
Hill: Yeah the PM er then we can go from there look I’m going to, I’m going to speak to a couple of people outside that are waiting and er I’ve got some police officers here because I didn’t want you just turning up and waiting outside and nobody being here. I’m just going to speak with them. Make your decision.
Toni: Er I think we’ve made it, I think we’ve made it.
Chris: You might see Clare outside shes with the, she’s independent from the BBC but they are doing a program in September er for er this sort of thing. So this isn’t something you think about immediately, this is something that.
Hill: I hope Surseh has provided you this information because I’ve spoken to Suresh and I’ve told him that you know, you’re not going to be able to identify him, you’re not going to be able to identify him, you’re not that is that is, you’re not going to be able to do that because of the condition of the body you know and …
Chris: He did but he turned around and said we’d advise you not to but…
Hill: It’s your legal right, it’s your legal right and we can’t take that away from you but I, as a police officer, you know am just advising you, not even as police officer but somebody that’s seen that body, I’m advising you no. If you can, wait until tomorrow. That would be the best time for you
Toni: Yeah
Barry: Yes most defiantly
Hill: At least, at least the body as it is will be cleaned it is you know.
Chris: Well can you suggest for tomorrow yeah if you got, find that there’s markings there, tattoos on the body or on the knee, a scar is it on the knee?
Toni: On his right knee where he had a operation. It goes from here to here.
Chris: That’s why he’s got.
Toni: That’s why he’s got that limp, one of his legs was in traction for three months, no from here to here from his knee bone to connect because his knee disconnected from his…
Chris: And his got tattoos…
Toni: And he was on a traction for three months…
Chris: A body on his arm…
Toni: And it’s a very very thick thick scar.
Gina: Even if they can’t see physically they will be able to with bones.
Toni: He was on a traction for three months.
Barry: What was injured was it cartridge or was it…
Toni: Erm the knee came away, literally the year the ambulances were on strike.
Barry: How old was he when he had that?
Toni: What the year the ambulances were on strike? Boxing Day.
Barry: It would be (inaudible).
Toni: 15 years.
Chris: Cover the rest of the body and just leave that identifiable so Ruth could identify it through that way? Then she doesn’t have to see anything else.
Hill: Yeah.
Chris: Do you understand what I mean? If it’s going to be that bad.
Hill: Yeah, it is and we will do what we can, erm Barry will clean it and Barry will obviously speak to the pathologist and the technician that we’ve here to ensure got to make sure you know. What can be viewed.
Barry: Did he have tattoos on his legs?
Toni: No because he had one massive tattoo on his sorry …
Toni: On his right side just done of a woman, of a Mexican type woman.
Barry: Quite a large one?
Toni: Yeah took up all up this side. His got loads, his got one on his neck but its not Legend he covered up the word Legend with a rose but it looks like a load of ink has been slapped on his neck.
Barry: So a Mexican lady on the right side.
Toni: Yeah.
Barry: Of the torso.
Toni: Yeah, all the way down, covers the whole side.
Stewart Hill takes a phone call …
Barry: Any other sort of larger ones?
Toni: No that’s Jonathon, that’s Jonathon.
Barry: (inaudible).
Toni: Yeah his got something on his back, his arm was covered.
Barry: (inaudible)
Toni: Yeah his arm was covered.
Barry: So any other sort of operation that he’s had?
Toni: Nah only that knee one.
Barry: So the knee operations?
Toni: Yeah he was in traction for three months in hospital and his leg is slightly shorter, maybe an inch shorter.
Barry: Right okay, what about any gold teeth?
Toni: No.
Barry: That’s fine.
Hill: What was the watch? What was the watch he had on?t
Toni: It was the 25th November.
Barry: Do you know which wrist he wore the watch on?
Toni: His left.
Hill: What was it a leather strap watch or…
Toni: No gold.
Gina: Gold it was all gold. Gold face with a gold strap?
Chris: And I think it was like a pink.
Toni: Yeah sort of rose colour, rose colour.
Hill: What was the make of it do you know?
Toni: 25th anniversary it was called.
Gina: Anniversary Royal Oak or something like that.
Hill: That might still be on.
Barry: Well er yeah.
Hill: If its metal strap and that.
Barry: Er yeah.
Gina: And we also know that he had £400 pound on him, so hopefully that will…
Toni: Yeah in his pocket.
Barry: Obviously we’ve not checked the pockets or anything.
Gina: Okay.
Hill: So that’s all done here we don’t. The body gets lifted straight from the water and then we have to take it as it comes (inaudible) erm the body was found just by a worker walking along checking the river at about twenty to three.
Toni: Twenty to three in the morning.
Hill: No it was environmental agency staff checking the water.
Barry: Its not an area where people walk.
Gina: It was a chance.
Hill: There’s photographs of the body in the water you know, I probably wouldn’t have picked it up. Amongst the surface debris in the water.
Toni: Which I thought would have happened further up.
Hill: well when you look at it you’ll think well I cant see how he fell but he did. Unfortunately erm but obviously it took some time to get the body out of the water, because it was in water it takes you know it takes time to remove the body from the position it has been in for some time.
Toni: But we don’t know for sure how long until tomorrow.
Hill: But they’ll put you, know we don’t know how long. I mean they might be able to give an estimate but its, I think it will be pretty difficult. It will be difficult to be precise on that sort of thing.
Gina: Yes.
Chris: So he was probably half in and half out of the water
Hill: Fully in the water but the back, the bum was just above the …
Barry: All that was visible was the back.
Hill: Fully in the water but the back , the bum…

Gina: Half in half out?

Hill: Was sort of above was the vessel was so that’s.

Hill: All: that is visible is the back and from the bum the area.

Gina: So yeah that’s what we meant.

Hill: That that’s all.

Hill: Yeah so so not half from there and half its.

Gina: That’s what we thought.. Yeah.

Hill: But that could change depending on the tide of the water and everything so it’s… You know.

Chris: Alright, in your experience.

Toni: It’s him.

Chris: You’ve obviously seen seen a body in the morgue… Does it look like it’s been in there for three months.

Toni: Oh I no.

Hill: It looks like it’s been in there for a long time.

Chris: Oh.

Hill: There’s a lot of.

Chris: You don’t think he could of been somewhere else and then dumped there later.

Hill: Well will.

Chris: You’ll find that out.

Hill: Yeah, yeah, there’s one question I will be asking the pathologist is, is now can we tell whether that body is drowned.

Chris: Yeah.

Hill: Or if that body was dead before it went in there.

Gina: Yeah.
Hill: And under certain circumstances they can ah but because of the length of time that body may be in there that be compromised so it’s will have to wait and see will have to wait and see but that be one of the questions we’re ask.
Chris: One of the saving graces is probably was cos he was cold if he was only wearing a t-shirt or something it might not of been.

Hill : Yeah…….. Alright then.

Toni: So will hear from you for tomorrow.

Hill: Yep your hear from Barry tomorrow ah.

Barry: What about tomorrow?

Toni: My number.

Hill: You want us to go for Suresh or do you want us to.

Toni: Direct, I’ve already told that Becky as well direct to me.

Hill: Okay.

Toni: Please.

Hill: What stage is that then Ruth.

Toni: All stages now.

Hill: Okay, alright.. So so what’s the likely hood contact tomorrow then Barry will be.

Toni: Will confirm that if he’s still having a meeting tonight… I’ll confirm that with Suresh.

Gina: Well we don’t need the meeting tonight do we?

Toni: Nah we don’t need it..

Gina: Well.

Toni: No we don’t.

Gina: We don’t need it.

Toni: No we don’t need tonight then.

Gina: Because it was really around photos and…

Hill: Yeah.

Gina: What we discussed here really isn’t it.

Hill: Yeah that’s.

Gina: Yeah, so.

Toni: So leave tonight then.

Gina: What’s the point of having it really cos we’re gonna go through that tomorrow may as well just…

Toni: Yeah leave it.

Gina: leave it now and deal with that.

Toni: Take it from tomorrow.

Gina: That’s what will do.

Hill: So should I take a number.

Toni: Says number.

Chris: Do you want the house number just in case you can’t get anything?

Toni; Yeah.

Chris: And the house number will be – says number.

Hill: Now tomorrow okay

Barry: I think: should I put a call into you just before we start.

Toni: No when we can come and view.

Hill: Right what I’ve got is an estimated time… I’ll let you know.

Chris: Yeah.

Toni: Yeah please.

Chris: Than you can turn…

Everyone speaks at the same here is hard to pin point what is said

Toni: Oh yeah.

Gina: We can’t, we won’t be able do get down here till about two anyway.

Barry: No it won’t be.

Gina: Ah okay.

Hill : If we’re gonna be realistic about this ok tomorrow is going to be obviously a full day for everybody it’s gonna be an emotional day for yourself ah…. Barry has things to due obviously during the course of the postmortem and I’ve got other officers here that that obviously they have roles they got to perform during the postmortem…. Your then do the viewing after the postmortem ok… Barry will be on hand I’m not gonna be here tomorrow evening but I’m back on Monday alright now the DNA will be taken – if they can get DNA which ah you know ah… I’ve seen DNA retracted from bodies that have been dead along time a lot longer then then.

Toni: They do it with dinosaurs.

Hill: In certain circumstances….. Without speaking to the pathologist… I’m trusting the lads gonna be the work going forward… So that will be taken for examination and comparison with the DNA that we’ve got, so we’re looking for potential Sunday.. Sunday for the identification to be confirmed okay so you will get ah your either get a phone call confirming it or you get a call saying we’re still waiting for it, it was due but we’re still waiting for it to be done cos it goes off to an laboratory in Birmingham it’s not a police laboratory it’s an independent laboratory that does it that is contacted by the police okay so we’re really, ah, ah, they give it to, but their telling us 48 hours so once that’s done you will be informed ah and, then I think potentially I think the best time for us to meet will probably be Monday ah and I’ll speak to Suresh about it maybe that’s something we can probably arrange or get something in place so then we’ve all made an assessment of what we’ve got, what the situation is and then we can come together and we can go go from there is that okay Ruth?

Toni: Yeah that’s fine.

Hill: Otherwise what happens, as I’ve been in this situation before, you know everyone is going to emotional charged, your going to have 100 and one things your want to ask, your forget that cause your emotionally charged and it’s not productive at all.

Gina: Yep.

Hill: Let’s deal with things

Toni: It’s the best that.

Gina: For everybody.

Chris: I don’t know it (inaudible).

Hill: Is that alright.

Toni: Yeah.

Hill: Yeah.

Toni: Okay.

Chris: Hopefully tomorrow you might get an identification without doing the DNA.

Gina: No your still have to do that anyway won’t you.

Barry: Yeah.

Toni: Well.

Gina: Legally to make sure.

Hill: Nah sometimes you can do it but i not relying on that at all.

Chris:  Yeah yeah.

Hill: So I’m not relaying on that at all, but you know we don’t know, we don’t know, there might be something in his pocket with his name on it, I don’t know.

Gina: Yeah.

Hill: Because when we had a look.

Barry: What hospital did he have the operation at?

Toni: Guys hospital.

Barry: About fifteen years ago?

Toni: Yeah roughly.

Chris: Did he have any Metal put in his knee or anything?

Toni: No not… Yeah I think it was on a traction and it had to be pulled you know stretched.

Barry: What these operations.

Toni: Yeah and he was on traction for three months it wasn’t a little thing.

Gina: yeah.

Barry: So that should be something should be able to determine the.

Toni: Oh God defiantly.

Hill: Have we got disclosure as a verbal agreement at all?

Barry: No I don’t think so.

Hill: I’ll have to speak to Sharon about that did you sign anything Ruth?

Toni: Nothing at all

Hill: Okay, we might not need it but if we do apologise for, make a note if there is and then we get the records he’s medical records and do a comparison…

Toni: Yeah.

Hill: That is one way……. That’ll probably be quicker anyway, but it’s you know will have to wait and see as we go forward, but personally I think you’ve made the right decision.

Toni: Okay.

Hill: You made the right decision… So Erm and hopefully tomorrow your a lot clearer is to… Yeah okay so is there anything else you wanna ask me now I know without the meeting tonight but is there anything you want to ask me?

Toni: Do you think it’s him?

Hill: Do I think it’s him? I, on the clothing, on clothing, from what I’ve seen on the CCTV. erm and the thing that’s been described to him and the clothing he’s said to be wearing. Erm based upon probably his trainers which are very distinctive, I’m surprised he still go his trainers on to be fair, the, the, you know as I’ve describe it, as almost certainly, almost certainly however…

Gina: Yeah?

Hill: I’m sure there just not one pair of trainers made.

Chris: We still need to have a meeting because we would still like to see the CCTV you can see it.

Barry: Yeah that’s all ready.

Hill: We had all that we had all that for you, was we meant to meeting today.

Toni: But it was Suresh, for some reason he cancelled it because he said he tried to get hold of you and you were on two days training.. You were on training.

Gina: You won’t return his calls.

Hill: I was training I was training but we still pencilled in for the meeting but the trading was two days ago so.

Barry: The CCTV we can watch on the DVD player right that first quicker.

Gina: That’s what I said to you.

Chris: Yeah because we need…

Hill: I think.

Chris: to be able to see that.

To many voices speaking here to pin point what’s said

Hill: I was at the training course on Tuesday and I was told that what are we now Wednesday.

Toni: We’re at Thursday

Hill: Yeah it’s Thursday’s now and I was told it was cancelled.

Barry: Yeah you what.

Hill: I thought you cancelled it?

Toni: No.

Chris: I think your could informed Suresh to meet them to go ahead Suresh says can you confirm that the CCTV is gone and he said well I can’t confirm that and he says well there’s no use having a meeting without the CCTV being there, there’s a misunderstanding

Hill: Yeah I think actually, well we’ve got CCTV it’s been done.. So, but you know that aside. we didn’t know we’d were gonna find.

Gina: Ambrose.

Chris: If it is Ambrose, we still want a meeting with us to see CCTV

Toni: We trust you, on Monday.

Hill: Look Ruth upsetting…. I know you’ve got that….. Trust, I assure you I’ve been doing this along time okay and I’ve worked on murder investigation for a long long time okay, I’m telling you now that I will give you the time that you want okay, there maybe times where you might ring me and you can’t get through to me, there’s always going to be them occasions because you know.

Toni: Of course I’ll expect that.

Hill: it will never be deliberate, but I’m telling you now I will give you the time okay? and I’ll be open and honest with you. I’ve got nothing to hide from you whatsoever, nothing alright, I can look you in the eye and tell you that okay and I will give you the time, but it’s not the right time for you to look at it now.

Chris:  Okay so?

Hill: If you say Stuart I want to look at it I will sit here with you now, we’re get the computer we’re go back and we’re do it, it’s entirely up to you, but you don’t do you?

Toni: No.

Gina: No.

Chris: No.

Hill: But its done for you, so I think where we are now, let’s take it step by step.

Toni: Find out if this is Ambrose 100%?

Hill: Then we know where we are don’t we?

Toni: Yeah.

Hill: We know where we are and we go from there.

Toni: Okay.

Gina:  What, because you know ******* has been ringing, ******* has been ringing, you know, what do we tell them that it’s 90% him?

Chris: Well?

Hill: You know I would say.

Toni: We can’t say anything until tomorrow?

Hill: All I would say is what I believe okay, the description of clothing matches what we believe Ambrose to be wearing, or wearing at the time of his disappearance.

Gina: 24th January?

Hill: On the 24th of January on the Friday to the Saturday morning.

Barry: The Dadyals CCTV in my opinion that’s the exact same clothing.

Hill: You can not identify that body that we found and your never gonna be able to identify that body visual.

Toni: So we’re never know whether it is Ambrose?

Hill: Yeah you will do there may be z mark on that body as you’ve just described.

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On the 25th April Ruth, friends and family members went down to where the body was found and took their own photographs.  The photographs taken are below…

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Photographic Evidence Presented By The Metropolitan Police …

As with everything we state on this blog, all the statements can be backed up with further evidence in the way of emails, audio or visual recordings. In most cases this involves a combination of the aforementioned.

 

These are the photographs that were presented as part of the evidence on behalf of the Metropolitan Police.

Once again the Metropolitan Police have chosen to produce dark photographs of items they don’t want shown fully …

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The car accident. The photographs below were taken some 4 days after the accident.The area was not cordoned off and items such as the wheel, number plate and a large amount of debris was left at the scene for the local authority to collect and dispose off. However this did not happen and after 5 days the number plate and wheel disappeared…

Why do you suppose they took the crash scene photographs at night?

A. Could it be to disguise how unmarked the roads were i.e. no signs of a car with no front drivers side wheel travelling along the road?

 B. Or because there were no markings on the road, considering a damaged, drivers’ rear tyre, had been so damaged, that it caused the wheel to receive a big dent and, the tyre to become deflated?

C. Maybe it was because there were no marks left by the front passenger wheel, which  was so damaged, that it was supported by a jack when we went to see it in the Police pound at Perivale?

D. And last but not least, could it be because there were no signs of any brake fluid or other fluids which would usually leak from the car, after being damaged at the front in the way the BMW was damaged?

The 1st photograph below shows the entrance to the alleyway.  No 2 shows where TL exits the vehicle. The 3rd one shows the barrier that the BMW crashed into. The 4th photograph shows the view towards the river down the alleyway. The 5th one shows where the BMW came to a stop and the final one shows the bus stop on the north-bound carriageway, TL said he went to after getting out of the car. ev4

The 1st photograph below shows the entrance to the alleyway.  No 2 shows shows where TL exits the vehicle. The 3rd one shows the barrier that the BMW crashed into. The 4th photograph shows the view towards the river down the alleyway. The 5th one shows where the BMW came to a stop and the final one shows the bus stop on the north-bound carriageway, TL said he went to after getting out of the car.

Below is the alleyway, right next to where the BMW is said to have come to a stop. The photograph next s the bottom of the alleyway, which is near to where DFs jacket was found, in a field on the marshes…

Isn’t it amazing how the Metropolitan Police photograph areas they want to be seen and when they are trying hard to be believed…ev1

The 1st photograph shows the north gate,which leads to the boating community. The 2nd shows the boating community and the 3rd one shows the view across the River Lee towards path. The 4th one shows the view south towards Stonebridge lock. ev3 ev2

 

The next 3 photographs are around the 24 hour convenience shop Dadyals which is situated on Bowes Road, Arnos Grove, where Ambrose and TL are captured on C.C.T.V. At the time this was captured, Ambrose is said to have already been in a number of fights, was blind drunk and high on cocaine.

Does that description look fit the smile and relaxed demeanour of Ambrose  in these photographs? Although Ambrose seems very happy and relaxed, TL does not… ev11

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Photograph 1 shows where Ambrose’s body was discovered and the next two maps apparently pinpoint where certain things happend…ev5

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Again these maps pinpoint a number of locations where searches/incidences/actions are said to have occurred…

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What did Victor O’lisa, Cassandra Dick, Lucy, Bernard Hogan Howell & The Metropolitan Police do to help in the search for Ambrose Garfield Gene Ball?

As with everything we state on this blog, all the statements can be backed up with further evidence in the way of emails, audio or visual recordings. In most cases this involves a combination of the aforementioned.

I guess I will start by sharing with you, the first communication we had with Victor O’lisa. Well not with him as such, but the first time we had corresponded to him via letter. 

As we were getting no where with the search for Ambrose, the national media were refusing to pick his story up and, Haringey Police were  still refusing to do a proper investigation, we were left with no other option, than to do a silent walk to Colindale Police station, the police station where this nightmare began.   Here is how one local paper put the story out there, for which  we were very grateful…

 

At the end of this walk Ruth handed a letter in for the attention of  Victor O’lisa, which contained almost 50 questions, all relating to Ambroses’ disappearance and what we had been told up to that point.  The questions below was delivered to Victor O’lisa less than 2 weeks after Ruth discharged herself from intensive care, where she was suffering  from pneumonia and pleurisy. 

Ruth Questions To Victor O'lisa 3 March 2015

Ruth Questions To Victor O'lisa 3 March 2015 - 2

Ruth Questions To Victor O'lisa 3 March 2015 - 12

Ruth Questions To Victor O'lisa 3 March 2015 - 4Ruth Questions To Victor O'lisa 3 March 2015 - 5Ruth Questions To Victor O'lisa 3 March 2015 - 6Ruth Questions To Victor O'lisa 3 March 2015 - 7Ruth Questions To Victor O'lisa 3 March 2015 - 8Ruth Questions To Victor O'lisa 3 March 2015 - 9

Ruth Questions To Victor O'lisa 3 March 2015 - 10Ruth Questions To Victor O'lisa 3 March 2015 - 11

 

Below you can see the reply we received from Victor O’lisa,  via email. Here are his

 

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JG IPCC 18th August 2015JG IPCC 18th August1 2015JG IPCC 18th August2 2015

Information given out by Haringey Police to the media and public…

As with everything we state on this blog, all the statements can be backed up with further evidence in the way of emails, audio or visual recordings. In most cases this involves a combination of the aforementioned.

As you can see by the tweet below, Haringey Police were the LEADERS, in putting out the wrong information to the public and other media outlets. From the second Colindale Police were notified of Ambroses’ disappearance, they did EVERYTHING they could to keep the real details f Ambroses’ disappearance, out of the main stream media.

If it wasn’t for members of the public bringing it to their attention on the 9th February, God only knows how long they would have kept the incorrect date up, either way, they left it there until at LEAST the 10th February, which was 2 weeks…

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Here are a few of the Media Appeals, which were made by the police. These media appeals have contained the incorrect information from the first report. Those responsible for printing those stories have either quoted Paul Trevers, DI Sharon Freeman Woods, DS Stewart Hill and “officers”, as the sources of the printed information. Some of these reports are as follows:

Some of the Media Appeals made BEFORE Ambrose’s body was discovered:
⦁ 28th January 2015 London 24 reported the following,: http://www.london24.com/…/missing_tottenham_man_last_seen_a…

⦁ 29th January 2015 the Hendon & Finchley, Barnet & Potters Bar and Edgeware & Mill Hill Times printed the following story: http://www.times-series.co.uk/…/11757655.Man_missing_after…/

⦁ 9th February 2015 the local Guardian which covers Epping Forest, Waltham Forest, Chingford, Wanstead and Woodford, printed the following accounts regarding Ambroses disappearance: http://www.guardian-series.co.uk/…/11780243.Police_issue_…/…

⦁ 11th February 2015 the local Guardian which covers Epping Forest, Waltham Forest, Chingford, Wanstead and Woodford, printed the following accounts regarding Ambroses disappearance: http://www.guardian-series.co.uk/…/11785165.Large_scale_po…/

⦁ Thursday 19th February 2015 the Tottenham and Wood Green independent reported the following: http://www.haringeyindependent.co.uk/…/11805565.Online_app…/

⦁ Monday 30th March 2015 the Voice printed the following piece, as reported by the police: http://www.voice-online.co.uk/…/what-happened-ambrose-ball-…

⦁ Tuesday 31st March 2015 the local Guardian which covers Epping Forest, Waltham Forest, Chingford, Wanstead and Woodford, printed the following police appeal, as reported by the police: http://www.guardian-series.co.uk/…/12555230.Police_hunt_f…/…

⦁ Tuesday 31st March 2015 The Epping Guardian printed the following story, as reported to them by “officers” : http://m.eppingforestguardian.co.uk/…/11999722.Police_hun…/…

Some of the Media Appeals made AFTER Ambrose’s body was discovered:
⦁ Thursday 23rd April 2015 the local Guardian which covers Epping Forest, Waltham Forest, Chingford, Wanstead and Woodford, printed the following accounts regarding the discovery of Ambroses body and before this was confirmed by DNA or the family: http://www.guardian-series.co.uk/…/12908812.Police_find_b…/…

⦁ Thursday 23rd April 2015 the Whetstone and Barnet press printed the following story, in regards to the discovery of Ambrose’s body. Again this is before DNA had been carried out and before family had been offically informed that this was Ambrose: http://www.whetstone-today.co.uk/article.cfm…

⦁ Thursday 23rd April 2015 the Harrow Guardian reports the following, within 24 hours of Ambrose’s body being discovered, before DNA has been confirmed and before the family had identified him: http://m.harrowtimes.co.uk/…/12908812.Police_find_body_in_…/

⦁ 23rd April 2015 the Brent & Kilburn times printed the following storyhttp://www.kilburntimes.co.uk/…/body_found_in_search_for_mi…

⦁ Tottenham and Wood Green Independent Friday 24th April 2015, as reported by the police, again this was before Ambrose was offically I.D’d: http://www.haringeyindependent.co.uk/…/12908845.Body_foun…/…

⦁ 26th April 2015 Mirror reports the following story regarding the discovery of Ambrose’s body, as reported by the police: http://www.mirror.co.uk/…/…/body-found-river-man-who-5589071

⦁ Monday 27th April 2015 This is Local London printed the following story regarding the discovery of Ambrose’s body and his disappearence: http://m.thisislocallondon.co.uk/…/12915117.Body_found_in_…/

⦁ Tuesday 28th April 2015, Tottenham and Wood Green Independent contains quotes from the police: http://www.haringeyindependent.co.uk/…/12916399.Threats_m…/…

⦁ Tuesday 28th April 2015 the Voice report the following as stated by : http://www.voice-online.co.uk/…/body-found-river-confirmed-…

⦁ Thursday 30th April 2015 – The same day as Ambrose’s inquest was opened and adjourned. http://www.haringeyindependent.co.uk/…/12924903.Ambrose_B…/…

Media appeals put out by Ruth and family:
⦁ Ruth made contact with missingperson.org after the police refused to do this on her behalf and even offer to help her do this. The first appeal ran for a week from the 9th February 2015. The support provided by the missing persons organisation was outstanding. These put an appeal out for Ambrose twice. The only down side was that no details were allowed, so it wasn’r very useful on getting any potential witnesses to come forward.
⦁ Ruth also requested wider media attention in order to get more witnesses to come forward. Victor Olisa was asked if Ruth would be able to do Crimewatch and he agreed. Victor Olisa said he would see about Ruth doing an appeal on Crimewatch. However, although Ruth has repeatedly requested this, this has never been done by either Ruth, Ambrose’s family members or the police.
⦁ Thursday 19th March 2015 the local Guardian which covers Epping Forest, Waltham Forest, Chingford, Wanstead and Woodford, printed Ruth’s accounts regarding Ambroses disappearance: http://www.guardian-series.co.uk/…/11866583.VIDEO__Mother…/…

⦁ Wednesday 29th April 2015 the local Guardian which covers Epping Forest, Waltham Forest, Chingford, Wanstead and Woodford, printed Ruth’s accounts regarding Ambroses disappearance: http://www.guardian-series.co.uk/…/12921020.Mother_vows_t…/…

The Metropolitan Police ONLY WITNESS to the “crash”.

The Metropolitan Police’s star witness and only witness to the ‘crash’ TL.

Andrew Walker  “Now you made a number of statements during the course of the police investigation”

TL “Yeah”.

Andrew Walker  “I just want to let you know this. I am not interested in what you said in those statements, I’m interested in what you have to say  today, about the events which unfolded on Friday 23rd January last year. Alight?”

TL gives his full name.

Andrew Walker “Now can you tell me what you recollect of the events, as they unfolded on the 23rd January last year.”

TL “From the start (inaudible).”

Andrew Walker “What I’m really interested in is the Fox public house. I’m interested in your reaction with Mr Ambrose Ball, who I believe you knew as Jay, is that right?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “Tell us about that, so on that day  when was the first time you saw Mr Ball, or Jay?”

TL Er when I come out of the pub.”

Andrew Walker “So which pub was this?”

TL “The Fox. I come out and there was an argument happening. ”

Andrew Walker “So first of all we just need to understand a little bit more about the time. Have you any idea what sort of time this would have been. Was it early evening?”

TL“Quite late.”

Andrew Walker “Quite late evening.”

TL “About 10, 11.”

Andrew Walker “Did you speak to Jay, Mr Ball before the moment you are about to tell us about, when you came out of the pub at about 10 or 11 p.m?”

TL “Nah.”

Andrew Walker “You didn’t peak to him during the course of the evening?”

TL “Nah.”

Andrew Walker “Did you see him at all?”

TL “Nah.”

Andrew Walker “So tell us you came out of the pub, (inaudible), it was about 10 p.m.,  11 p.m. What happened?”

TL “Er it looked like everyone was kicking off. One of my mates…”

Andrew Walker “When you say kicking off, what do you mean?”

TL “Just about everyone outside the pub was going mental.”

Andrew Walker “In what sense were they. Were they shouting at one another, fighting one another?”

TL “Yeah, they were hyper.”

Andrew Walker “How would you describe it?”

TL “Just hyper, like eveyone.”

Andrew Walker “So people were, people were shouting at one another were they?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “People were talking loudly?”

TL “There was a lot going on.”

Andrew Walker “So what happened then, what do you remember next?”

TL “Er my mate V was having like an argument with Jay. And er my friend D was getting in the middle of it. And I’m hearing like Jays name and I come over and V, and then that all got stopped.”

 Andrew Walker “Yes. Then what?”

TL ” A couple of minutes after that, my mate V who was arguing with him got hit, Knocked out.

 Andrew Walker “So a couple of minutes later someone got hit and knocked out?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “Who was that?”

TL “Er my mate V.”

Andrew Walker “And who was responsible for knocking out V or hitting him?”

TL “I don’t even know his name.”

Andrew Walker “You don’t know his name. Had you seen him before?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “So did you see how V came to be knocked out? Did you see the lead up to him being knocked out?”

TL “Yeah.

Andrew Walker “So did you see how he, how V came to be knocked out?”

TL “Er the altercation got calmed down and like everyone was going their own ways, and then er 2 lads just jumped out of nowhere and hit him in the face, and  kicked him on the floor and ran off.”

Andrew Walker “Where was Jay when all this is happening?”

TL“Like my friend was on the left, he was on the right.”

Andrew Walker “But he wasn’t involved in the altercation with V, that resulted in him being knocked out?”

TL “No  he didn’t touch him or anything. He didn’t tell the guys to hit him or anything.”

Andrew Walker “So after V was knocked out, what happened then?”

TL “Er, I’ve gone over to help him up. He’s got up and probably thought it was me that hit him and he took a swing at me. V’s gone over, er D’s gone over and grabbed  him, said what you doing that’s T.And he’s got back to his senses. He went on his way.”

Andrew Walker “What happened then?

TL “Er me and D got into E car, a cousins friend, dropped us to Southgate.”

Andrew Walker “So you and D got into a car. Who’s car was it?”

TL “Er my friend E and his cousin, I don’t know his name.”

Andrew Walker “Do you know what type of car it was?”

TL “Not sure.”

 Andrew Walker “Alright.”

TL “Right now I can’t remember right now.”

Andrew Walker “And where did you go in this car?”

TL “They dropped us of at Southgate station.”

Andrew Walker “Just to be clear Jay wasn’t in the car at this stage with you, was he?”

TL “Nah.”

Andrew Walker “Tell us what happened next. You were at Southgate station. What happens next?”

TL “Got out, er me and D standing there. I think Jay was just there already.  And er we were talking and D said he was going to the toilet in the kebab shop. So while me and Jay was talking, D was taking a bit long. Er Jay was asking where I was from and that, and I said Tottenham. Asked where D was from I said Southgate, he said we may as well just leave him then innit and we went on our way.”

Andrew Walker “So you had a conversation with Jay. What was that conversation, sorry your voice trailed off.”

TL “We were just talking and then he asked me where I lived and I said Tottenham.  He said I live there as well, do you want a lift back.”

Andrew Walker “So he asked if you wanted a lift back?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “And what happened then?”

TL “Er left D,  got in the car and drove towards Tottenham but we dropped,  stopped off at Arnos Grove.”

Andrew Walker   “So you stopped off at Arnos Grove. So just at this point, who is in the car?”

TL “Just me and Jay.”

Andrew Walker  “So were you in the passenger seat?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker  “Jay in the driving seat?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker  “Do you remember what type of car it was?”

TL “Er a BMW.”

Andrew Walker “Do you remember what colour it was?”

TL “Not right now, no.”

Andrew Walker “Alright. So you stopped off at Arnos Grove,  why was that?”

TL “I just went to the shop.”

Andrew Walker  “For, for, to buy what?”

TL ” (inaudible) to buy a drink.”

Andrew Walker  “So when you get to Arnos Grove, who gets out of the car, do you stay in the car, do you get out of the car?”

TL “Er Jay got out of the car. I stayed in the car. And er he was chatting to 2 people in the car and, I’ve looked out of the car and recognised them. So I’ve got out of the car to talk to them”

Andrew Walker “So Jay got out of the car. Started talking to 2 people.”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “And then you recognised them. Where did you, did you know their names?”

TL “Er I know one of them, Barry. I recognised Barry, I recognised the other guy, I don’t know his name.”

Andrew Walker “What was the conversation about?”

 TL “Er I don’t even know just Jay and them 2 just talking.”

Andrew Walker “So what happened then?”

TL “Er got, went in the shop and brought, I brought a beer and I think Jay brought a beer and got back in the car and drove off.”

Andrew Walker ” What happened then?”

TL “Then we got in the car and drove off.”

Andrew Walker “Yes. So what happens then, tell us about that journey?”

TL “Erm from Arnos…”

Andrew Walker “Did you recognise the route you were taking?”

TL “No I can’t remember the route we took.”

Andrew Walker “So what happened?”

TL “Er we were driving back to Tottenham and then when we’ve got through that route, near to Tesco, where the crash was, well the driving, he was driving quite fast. Er  it had a crash. We pulled over and then Jay got out of the car, walked around the car, got back in the car and I was just thinking like we were gonna call the AA or whatever it was. (inaudible) and carried on driving. I could tell the car was like gone like.  You could hear it, it was driving off to the right a bit.”

Andrew Walker “Yes.”

TL “And I was thinking like what  are you doing just pull over, but he was determined to get that car back.  I asked him to let me out. Just tapped  him, said goodbye and got out of the car and  he just drove off in the car.”

.Andrew Walker “So where did you get out of the car?”

TL “Er I’d say just as he had the first collision. I dunno drove 20 meters from that, pulled over looked at the car, drove another 10 meters and then I’ve got out the car.”

Andrew Walker “What did the car collide with?”

TL “Er like a barrier that’s in the middle of both roads.”

Andrew Walker “Did the airbags go off in the car?”

TL “I don’t think so.”

Andrew Walker “So, so just so I understood it. There’s a collision, you drive another 10  meters, then another 20 meters then you get out or is it you drive another 20 meters and then got out of the car?”

TL “I’m not exactly sure how it was, but he drove, stopped, looked at the damage, drove a bit more and I got out.”

Andrew Walker “So drove, stopped, got out, looked at the damage at  the car, got back in, and is that when you said you wanted to get out of the car?”

TL “Yep.”

Andrew Walker “So he drove a short distance did he and you got out?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “So just help me with this. When you got out of the car where were you? Do you remember where you were? because you would have had to work your way home.”

TL “Er well when I went to the police I showed them exactly where, where everything happened. I can’t really explain to you.”

Andrew Walker “Alright. Have we got a picture plan  Ms H that the witness might be able to identify?”

Ms H”Um mm.”

Andrew Walker “I’m not sure that I’ve got..”

Ms H “Not right now Sir.”

Andrew Walker “I can put my hands on the exhibit. I don’t know if this (inaudible).”

Ms H “Sir it’s not in the appendices, but we had it previously.”

Andrew Walker “Yes.  Now erm  these are photographs of (inaudible)Road. Do you recognise them? If it helps this looks like (inaudible).”

TL “(Inaudiable)”

Andrew  Walker “Down there? Well let’s just see if we can be clear about this. Do you recognise the barriers in the top?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “How do you recognise those?”

TL “Because that’s where the collision was.”

Andrew Walker “So, so the barriers. I’m looking at this photograph here members of the family. This photograph here showing the barriers. So is that where the collision occurred?”

TL “Yeah. And err and the bottom photograph, I think I got out of the car. I think I got out of the car here. I walked around the back of the car here  and I got out the car here and I stood at the bus stop for a bit.”

Andrew Walker “Right, so what I’m going to ask you to do is to just mark on that photograph. Is that alright Ms H?

Ms H “It, it, it’s actually, er a copy that’s already been, I think it’s a copy that’s already being used. I can hand over mine, it’s smaller though, that’s the only thing.”

Andrew Walker “Well let’s just use this one. There don’t seem to be any  marks on here that, that …”

Laurie Roach “It’s the officers.”

Ms H “Sir it’s  the officers copy, she’s been using it for her notes.”

Andrew Walker “I see.”

Ms H “As  opposed to making it an exhibit  now.”

Andrew Walker “I’m not going to make it an exhibit. I don’t think we’re require to under the new act, the old act was more specific. I just wanted to um draw this, so um, just to hold this up to be clear, that’s where you got out of the car?”

TL “I think so yes.”

Andrew Walker “And then you walked across to the bus stop on the other side?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “And you waited there?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “Alright. I’m going to, I’m going to show you this right now. Ms H do you want to have a look?”

Ms H “I’ve actually got 4 additional copies.”

Andrew Walker “So you can see a line drawn…

Ms H “Erm Sir would it be possible to mark up one of the clean copies?”

Andrew Walker “Yes, I, I…”

Ms H “It’s not on this page, but I understand there’s markings elsewhere.”

Andrew Walker “No, if that’s a source of concern, I’m very sorry. These are the photographs you are looking at members of the family.”

Andrew Walker addresses TL “Just mark those that would be very helpful. If you put a large cross where you got out of the car and then another place… That’s perfect. Thank you very much indeed. Now members of the family it’s very hard to see, but on there are the markings where this witness got out of the car and then um moved across the road and you can see above it the collision. This witness er recollects the collision occurring.”

Ruth Lovell “I just want to get my bearings, sorry. And where did the,and  where did he say the collision occurred, his barrier?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “Yes.”

Ruth Lovell “Wait a minute Gina, I just wanna get my bearings. Where’s erm IKEA on here, can you see it on here? I can’t  get my bearings where that is.”

Andrew Walker “Well let’s not worry about it too much at the moment because we’re going to have other witnesses giving evidence, but what’s important is that this witness has identified from the photograph where he was …”

TL “If you’re looking at it, IKEA should be  there.”

Andrew Walker “Sorry, so you know where IKEA is?”

TL “It should be there from the photo.”

Andrew Walker “Does that help you members of the family?”

Ruth Lovell “What over there?”

TL “If you’re looking at it that way it should be there. IKEA should be back here.”

Laurie Roach “So you’re standing where IKEA is,  looking towards the barrier?”

Andrew Walker “Alright. So that is the evidence from this witness and I understand just to be clear that this barrier here, represents where the 1st collision, or the collision took place, the car then drove a short distance. Mr Ball then got out , looked around the car, then got back in, the car then drove a short distance, and you asked to get out. Where you asked to get out you have drawn on this map here.

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “Alright, so that’s clear.”Did you see what happened to Mr Ball after that?”

TL “I sat at the bus stop for a bit and I could hear the car going because the car wasn’t working properly and er you can see there’s like a little bend there. I couldn’t see where the car really ended up. But when I left the bus stop, you could walk a couple of meters and you can see right around there and like I could  still see the car was there but it was on the other side of the road and when I’ve walked up there the car was empty.”

Andrew Walker “So you were waiting at the bus stop. You could hear the car and then at some point did you walk up to see what had happened?”

TL “Yeah because I’m standing at that bus   stop and  er, because I was half drunk  anyway, I was standing there thinking ‘God what’s just happened, and that bus stop was on the wrong side of the road for me so I ended up walking that way anyway.”

Andrew Walker “And as you walked around the corner you could see the car is that right?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “Thank you very much indeed. Now did you see any sign of Mr Ball?

TL “No.”

Andrew Walker “Did you go up and look in the car?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “Were the doors to the car open or closed, as far as you can remember?”

TL “Closed.”

Andrew Walker “Closed. Was the car engine running or not?”

TL “No.”

Andrew Walker  “And there was no sign of Mr Ball that you could see?”

TL “It was off.”

Andrew Walker “There was no sign of Mr Ball that you could see?”

TL “No.”

Andrew Walker “So what happened then? Where did you go from there?”

TL “Er to Tottenham Hale and then erm to my house.”

Andrew Walker “So you walked did you?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “Thank you very much.”

TL “When I walked up there, I think in all the time I walked down Tottenham Hale,  only 2 or 3 cars went passed me.”

Andrew Walker “Alright. Thank you very much indeed. Well members of the family this is an opportunity for you to now ask questions.”

Alexandria Harrison “Right erm first of all can we look at some CCTV please,  at 02:02 (inaudible).”

Daniel Rosello “Is this at the Fox?”

Alexandria Harrison “Yes.”

Andrew Walker “I think your going to have to move positions to be able to see it. May I suggest just in that corner. If you stand, if you stand next to the, to the officer, then that microphone should pick up your voice. That’s it, that should pick up your voice. Thank you.”

Ms H “Sir just from a practical perspective to save time, if there are other clips to view…”

Andrew Walker “Yes.”

Ms H “The officer can have them in advance he can hopefully have them lined up and ready.”

Andrew Walker “Yes.”

Ms H “I think that each time it takes a little bit of time to identify.”

Andrew Walker “Yes.”

Ms H “Yes.”

Andrew Walker “If you’re able, if you know the time…”

Alexandria Harrison “The thing is we saw a compilation disc…”

Andrew Walker “Yes.”

Alexandria Harrison ” And then we saw individual ones. So they’re on different discs and different times.”

Andrew Walker “So what is your timing on it?”

Alexandria Harrison “The timing we want now is the first compilation disc, no sorry, the timing now, is the camera at the front of the Fox pub, at 02:02 which shows the ambulance arriving.  The point (inaudible) is 02:06 where the person who got knocked unconscious was taken to the ambulance but the point is I want to see if this is V or not please.”

TL “I don’t think V got into the ambulance though.

Alexandria Harrison “You don’ think he got put in the ambulance?”

TL “I don”t think he did, I’ll tell you if it’s him though, I don’t think he did.”

Alexandra Harrison “Okay.”

Daniel Rosello Inaudible.

Alexandria Harrison “External front.”.

Daniel Rosello.”At 2:02 or 2:06?”

Andrew Walker “2:06.”

Alexandria Harrison “2:06 please.”

Andrew Walker “Thank you.”

Daniel Rosello (Inaudible.) 2;06, is that the right camera?”

Alexandria Harrison “Yes.”

Ruth Lovell “Can you see that Okay. I just wanna know if you can see it?

Alexandria Harrison “So it’s pointless really because we could see that before. He’s not going to be able to make that at all.”

Ruth Lovell “Well can you see no, or can you yes?”

TL ” No.”

Alexandria Harrison “Okay it’s pointless.”

TL“The cameras are useless.”

Alexandria  Harrison “Yeah.”

Ruth Lovell “Well that is innit? You haven’t seen CCTV before though from the pub?”

TL ” No.”

Ruth Lovell “So you’re saying it’s useless like we know…”

Andrew Walker “No, no, no, no, no let’s stop this now.

Ruth Lovell “Well I’m just saying.”

Andrew Walker “No, no, no.  this is an opportunity for you to ask questions of this witness, not to argue with anyone else in court. Have you got anymore questions for this witness?”

Ruth Lovell “Yes.”

Alexandria Harrison “Yes.   1:46 camera 10 please.”

Ms H “Sir forgive me, I missed what the question was on this part of the…?”

Alexandria Harrison “It was to see whether …”

Andrew Walker “It was V who got put in the ambulance, but it wasn’t possible to see.”

Ms H “Thank you.”

Daniel Rosello  “1:46 camera 10?”

Alexandria Harrison “Yes please.”

TL “Is that where V got punched?”

Alexandria Harrison “You’re gonna see it in a minute. Do you recognise who he’s fighting with?”

TL“Err that’ a different location.”

Alexandria Harrison “Do  you know who he’s fighting with though?”

TL “I don’t know who any of them are.”

Alexandria  Harrison “You don’t know who he’s  fighting with . Can you see the clothing? Erm like he’s wearing a rucksack isn’t he, the one he is fighting with?Can we go back sorry, I just want to concentrate on the clothing.”

TL” That wasn’t V…”

Alexandria Harrison “Can we go back a bit please?.”

 Andrew Walker “So the question is do you recognise …”

TL “No.”

Andrew Walker “That person?”

TL  “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “The person  fighting.”

Ruth Lovell “Or both of them?”

TL “No. None of them.”

Alexandria  Harrison “Both of them?”

Ruth Lovell “Or either one of them?”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “So can we just concentrate on the clothing then and make a note of the clothing as it’s relevant in Dadyals. Oh sorry and can we see the rucksack as well please and what’s on his back.

Alexandria Harrison “Jeans, dark coat.

Ruth Lovell “Yeah we’ve seen the rest, can’t find it now.”

Alexandria Harrison  “And you don’t know who that is?”

TL “He who’s wearing the coat? No  I don’t know who that is.”

Alexandria Harrison “No. Okay. Or any of those two, no?”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “Okay. Erm sorry where did you see V fighting?”

TL “Where the cameras pointing down. Where he got knocked out is probably  a bit closer to us.”

Alexandria Harrison “So it would be out of that shot?”

TL “Probably, yeah. Or it’d be right there.”

Alexandria Harrison “Okay.”

TL “But it wasn’t an altercation like that. He was just standing there and the guy punched him straight in the head and knocked him out.”

Ruth Lovell “You don’t know them two no?”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “Right that’s all we want on the CCTV.”

TL “Okay.”

Alexandria Harrison “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “Do you want to  step back in the witness box where you will be more comfortable there?”

Alexandria Harrison “Erm roughly what time did you see Ambrose at Dadyals, approximately.”

TL ” When, where?”

Alexandria Harrison “Dadyals. Erm the shop.”

TL Arnos Grove?”

Alexandria Harrison “Yes.”

TL “I don’t know about the times.”

Alexandria Harrison “Roughly, not even a rough estimate? No?”

TL “I’d only guess and get it (inaudible) wrong.”

Alexandria Harrison “Okay that’s fine, that’s fine. Erm did you meet, you said you did not meet Ambrose before Dadylas.”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “You did not see him at the pub at all?”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “At the Fox?”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “No. Erm what time did you arrive at the Fox and who did you arrive with?”

TL “I don’t know hat time we arrived at, but I arrived with D and V and L, just that group of friends.”

Alexandria Harrison “Who did you leave with did you say?”

TL “Er when I left I was in the toilet with a bouncer, because I had just got punched in the nose in the smoking area and when I left I left by myself and then, that’s when I saw V getting chased round the car by Jay.”

Alexandria Harrison “Erm so from the Fox where did you go then, and who with?”

TL “Er my friend E and his cousin, I don’t know his name, we got in his car and he drove us to Southgate and dropped us off outside Charcoal Grill.”.

Alexandria Harrison “Dropped us. who’s us?

TL “Me and D.”

Alexandria Harrison “So D was with you?”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “So D was already in the car. Yeah. Er what speed were you going, approximately, when Ambrose was in the car, you know if he was driving fast before the first impact,what sort of speed would you say he was driving?”

TL “A 100.”

Alexandria Harrison “100 m.p.h.?”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “Are you sure?”

TL “No, but he was driving fast.”

Alexandria Harrison “He was driving fast. Do you. Do you remember if he was wearing a seat belt?”

TL “Yeah, proba..”

Alexandria Harrison “He was wearing a seat belt?”

TL “Yeah i think so.”

Alexandria Harrison “Er so when you had the first impact at 100 m.p.h. up by Tesco..”

TL “I dunno if we  crashed then. I think it was on like a turn. We crashed at 40   probably. 30, I dunno.”

Alexandria Harrison “Sorry. So when it crashed into the barrier, that you showed us, what mileage were you going at roughly?”

TL “40.”

Alexandria Harrison “40 m.p.h. at that stage?

TL “I dunno, I dunno. I’d say so.”

Alexandria Harrison “(inaudible) It’s just that there’s a big difference between 40 and 100 m.p.h.

TL “We didn’t crash going at 100. No way. But we were driving at them speeds to get there though.”

Alexandria Harrison “It was obviously fast enough to worry you?”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “Yeah, fast enough to worry you. Erm so after the first impact, erm you said you then got out the car, you both looked around the car. Erm how long were you out of the car looking around it?”

TL “Jay just looked at the car and walked around it.  A couple of seconds, 20 seconds, something like that.”

Alexandria Harrison “Er. What damage. Sorry.  Yes, when you got out of the car, and you both looked around it, what damage was there to the car at that time?”

TL “I didn’t get out of the car.”

Alexandria Harrison “So just Ambrose got out of the car?”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “Looked around. You stayed in the car, bearing in mind, he’d  been driving erratically, just crashed, you stayed in the car…”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison  “Ambrose got out, looked around it, then he got back in..”

TL “Got back  in the car.”

Alexandria Harrison “Then what happened when he got back in the car?”

TL “He was just stressed about his car and he just drove, he  carried on driving his car.”

Alexandria Harrison “So how long were you in the car before before you decided to get out of it?”

TL “It could be a minute.”

Alexandria Harrison “So you were in the car for about a minute before getting out of it?”

TL “I’d say so yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “You got out of it where?”

TL “Near where the crash is. Just drove off, (inaudible), just the bit down here (indicating where the location is on a map).

Alexandria Harrison “So where you’ve shown us by the picture. We’ve got the bus stop.”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “Yeah and then we’ve got what I think the first collision…”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “Sorry. We’ve got the bus stop, then we’ve got where the first collision was and then you said there was a slight corner, you could  hear the car, but you couldn’t see it?”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “Yeah. Erm, so, sorry I’ve lost (inaudible)…”

TL “The car wasn’t driving properly then anyway. It was just driving slow like (inaudible), it was driving.”

Alexandria Harrison “So it was like chuggering?”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “Did what did you hear…what sounds did you hear?”

TL “It sounded like it was just scraping along the floor. ”

Alexandria Harrison “So there were scraping sounds?”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “So  was the wheel on the car at this point or had that already gone?”

TL “What do you mean?”

Alexandria Harrison “Do you know where you said you heard the scraping sound?”

TL “Yes.”

Alexandria Harrison “Did the car  come off in that barrier, the wheel sorry, come off in that barrier where you’ve shown us, what the police have shown us?”

TL “I think so yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “You think so?”

TL “Yeah (inaudible).

Alexandria Harrison “Yeah, so what was the state of the other car, when you went, you said you (inaudible).  Did you notice anything else about the car,   the state of the car?”

TL “When I got out the car and walked passed the car to go home, the car was empty.  I didn’t notice the wheel missing off the car.”

Alexandria Harrison “You didn’t see a wheel missing off the car?”

TL “No, I didn’t notice.”

Alexandria Harrison “Erm how long after sitting at the bus stop,  did make your way over to the car. How long? What was the time lapse in between the bus stop, and getting to the actual car?”

TL “I don’t know exactly. I was there for a bit. Probably 5 minutes, 10 minutes. I didn’t stay there particularly too long.”

Alexandria Harrison “So roughly, if you had to guess?”

TL “About 5/10 minutes.”

Alexandria Harrison “So if we say 5 minutes to be on the safe side, yeah. So we’ll say 5 minutes instead of 10 minutes. So you were at the bus stop for 5 minutes yeah and then from the bus stop, after about 5 minutes you went to the crash…”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison  “And Ambrose wasn’t there.

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “No. Er what did you do at the car?”

TL “Er walking down, looked in the car, no one was in there. Was thinking ‘Ah what the fucks just happened.”

Ruth Lovell “Er can I just ask you why you didn’t get out the car when he hit it first, when he crashed it first, the first time?”

TL “Don’t know.”

Ruth Lovell “Don’t know. Thank you.”

Alexandria Harrison “What side of the car was Ambroses’ … Erm what side of the car was the, where was the damage? What side was it ? If you could just describe the damage that you saw to that car?”

TL ” I think it was on this side, on the right.”

Alexandria Harrison “Sorry…”

TL “I think it was this side on the right. Marks on the side of his car.”

Alexandria Harrison “So what were marks on the side of the car, was there anything else you noticed?. Were there any other marks on the car?”

TL “I can’t remember right now.”

Alexandria Harrison “What about the tyre, the wheels?”

TL “I know one of the wheels fell off, but when I walked passed the car, I didn’t notice the wheel off the car.”

Alexandria Harrison “You didn’t notice the wheel off the car on the drivers side?”

TL “No I didn’t see it.”

Alexandria Harrison   “When you went to the car, where was the car? You’ve shown us where … Where was the car when you actually went to see it, where was it?”

TL “Where I was told.  It was on the wrong side of the road. Side ways, like blocking both lanes kinda thing.”

Alexandria Harrison  “So it was sideways like this…”

TL “Like if we were going that way and a cars going this way, his  car was like that.”

Alexandria Harrison “So when you went to the car did you go round to the drivers side?”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “No.”

TL “Walked passed to the passenger side, looked in, opened the door. I took my grinder and cigarettes off the seat.Went back in the road and carried on walking.

Ruth Lovell “Weren’t you worried about Ambrose, where Ambrose …”

TL “To be honest I was thinking he’s either run that way where I’m going or he’s run that way, like away.”

Ruth Lovell “Weren’t you worried in case he hurt himself ?”

TL “Well straight afterwards when I went to the shop to  get credit I called Jared and I knew he knew.  So I told him what happened, he said I’m gonna call him and find out what happened.”

Ruth Lovell “You didn’t think to look for him, or look around the area to see if he was hurt?”

TL “I, I didn’t think what happened.”

Ruth Lovell “Sorry?”

TL “I didn’t think what happened would happen.”

Ruth Lovell “No I mean after the crash . You said twice he crashed the car. So both times. You weren’t worried when you went to the car and didn’t see him there?”

TL “I was worried  but I wasn’t, I didn’t look so …”

Ruth Lovell ” Just to check and see if he was unconscious, anything. You didn’t think no?”

TL “Before I got out the car?”

Ruth Lovell “No, no. After you went back from the bus stop back to the car and seen he wasn’t there?”

TL “I, I, thought he’s run home.”

Ruth Lovell “Okay.”

Alexandria Harrison “Erm when you got in the car did you take your rucksack off?”

TL “Don’t know, don’t think so, if I had one on.”

Alexandria Harrison “You did have one on it’s on CCTV.”

Andrew Walker “Did you have a rucksack with you that night?”

TL “I can’t remember. I don’t think so.”

Andrew walker “No. Right. Alright.”

Alexandria Harrison “Okay. Um when you got in the car did you notice a coat on the seat, on the drivers seat?”

TL “I didn’t notice one.”

Alexandria Harrison “You didn’t sit on one?”

TL “I don’t know, I don’t know.”

Alexandria Harrison “Oh yes, can we go to Dadyals please?

Daniel Rosello “What part?”

Alexandria Harrison “Can we go back to 2 er …”

Andrew Walker “I thought we weren’t doing videos?”

Alexandria Harrison “Yes because it’s about the rucksack, which is what he was wearing that day.It’s on there.”

Ruth Lovell “In Dadyals.”

Andrew Walker “Alright. If we’re going to be looking at more video footage can we deal with it now, rather than have the witness move back and forth through the court, that’s all?”

Alexandria Harrison “Oh okay then. I thought we had to deal with certain segments”

Andrew Walker “No, no, what I’m saying is bearing in mind we’ve got this afternoon,  it’s 1:17, we’ve got until about 4:30 this afternoon, to hear somewhere approaching 20 witnesses.

Alexandria Harrison “Okay.”

Andrew Walker “And if you’re interested in whether this witness was or was not wearing a rucksack, I’m going to be asking in due course ‘What’s the relevance of this? How is it in anyway relevant to what happened to Mr Ball.”

Ruth Lovell “He was the last person to see my Son alive and he was wearing a rucksack.”

Alexandria Harrison “(inaudible) and there were 2 rucksacks found, one with the body and  one (inaudible), we want to see it.”

Ruth Lovell “And we saw him in Dadyals wearing it with Ambrose, that’s why”

Alexandria Harrison “And outside the pub this person is seen wearing (inaudible) rucksack to what T was wearing in Dadyals.”

Andrew Walker “So, so again you’l have to help me. What’s the relevance, are you saying  that this witness was with Mr Ambrose.”

Ruth Lovell “He was with him 9 minutes before he crashed the car.”

Andrew Walker “Yes we know that. But hat’s the significance of the rucksack?”

Alexandria Harrison “Because it shows, we just tried to show that the 2 people fighting outside the pub were T and V. The footage at Dadyals has the rucksack on, it has the same clothing on.”

Andrew Walker  “That may be, that may be the case. How does it help me answer the question what was the sequence of events that lead to the …”

TL “When V er got knocked out,

Andrew Walker “Just a moment…”

TL “when I’ve gone to help him he’s got up…”

Andrew  Walker “Just a moment…”

TL “he tried to swing for me because …”

Andrew Walker “Just …”

TL “He probably didn’t know who I was …”

Andrew Walker “Mr L just a minute.”

TL “Then (inaudible) said what you doing that’s T…”

Andrew Walker “Just a minute.”

TL “So that’s probably what you saw”

Andrew Walker “Just a minute. I have to ask the questions the sequence of events that led to the cause of death. I don’t understand why, whoever it was in that video fighting, how is that in anyway relevant to what happened to Mr Ball”

Ruth Lovell “He just said that Ambrose (inaudible) out.”

Alexandria Harrison “It’s not,  but  he just said that wasn’t him and that wasn’t V, he didn’t recognise those people, which means we have to take his word for it unless we can prove that he is actually lying.

Andrew Walker “But, you see, yeah …”

Alexandria Harrison “That’s what we’re trying to prove.”

Andrew Walker “You, you don’t have to prove in this court, anything.

Alexandria Harrison “Okay.”

Andrew Walker “You don’t have to prove anything.”

Alexandria Harrison “Okay.”

Andrew Walker “All that I have to do is work out from the evidence that I hear, is what was the sequence of events that led to the cause of death.  I’m not here to try and evaluate whether or not the conduct of those outside the Fox public house was good, bad or otherwise. My task here, is from the evidence, to see if I can work out what was the sequence of events that led to the cause of death.

Ruth Lovell “(inaudible)”.

Andrew Walker “So whose got a rucksack, whose fighting outside, unless it involved Mr Ambrose Ball himself, it’snot relevant. Whether or not a witness is one of 2 witnesses fighting outside a pub is not relevant to what happened to Mr Ball.”

Alexandria Harrison “So how can, then …”

Ruth Lovell “(inaudible) that photo in Dadyals was the last time, apparently, 9 minutes before he crashed (inaudible) Ambrose was seen alive.”

Andrew Walker “Yes. I’ve just said that, yes. We’ve got the CCTV …”

Ruth Lovell “Right but we don’t believe that video wasn’t taken that night, the camera wasn’t working. Right (inaudible)”

Andrew Walker “,Right so the idea is all of the people in Dadyals, on that occasion, happen to be in the same place …”

Ruth Lovell “Mmm.”

Andrew Walker “On another day?”

Ruth Lovell “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “At roughly the same time?”

Ruth Lovell “Mmm, even the clothes aren’t matching in Dadyals.”

Andrew Walker “Alright. Well let’s put the CCTV footage completely to one side. What you say may be inaccurate, it may be from a different day.This witness …”

Ruth Lovell “I’m saying that ……………….

Andrew Walker “What I need to be able to do is to listen to relevant evidence. and it’s not going to help me to understand who was fighting who outside the pub.That’s not going to help answer the sequence of events that led directly to the cause of death.”

Ruth Lovell  “It was 9 minutes before the Ambrose crashed, he was with him. Isn’t that an issue?”

Andrew Walker “No.”

Ruth Lovell “Oh I thought that’s leading up to Ambroses’ death?.”

Andrew Walker “No.  2 people seen fighting outside a public house…

Ruth Lovell “I’m not talking about the pub, I’m talking about Dadyals with the rucksack, it’s 9 minutes before Ambrose crashed the car.”

Andrew Walker “But you’re saying…”

Ruth Lovell “That’ leading up to his death.”

Andrew Walker “You’re saying the video footage is wrong. It shows another day?”

Ruth Lovell “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “So why are we troubling ourselves looking at it at all…”

Ruth Lovell “So…”

Andrew Walker “if you’re saying it shows a different day?”

Alexandria Harrison “Right can I explain why?.”

Andrew Walker “Yes. That’s all I’m trying to understand.”

Alexandria Harrison  “The reason is because we’re supposed to accept as evidence what these people say under oath. Now this is evidence, you’re classing this as evidence, so I thought the relevance of that was to prove that that piece of the evidence wasn’t correct.

Ruth Lovell “And it’s on a different night.”

Alexandria Harrison “That’s the point I was trying to make. Because it’s evidence isn’t it?”

Andrew Walker “So what are you suggesting? Are you suggesting that this witness is not telling the truth in the events that  he’s described in getting into the car …”

Ruth Lovell “Well by his statements her said that he and D got in the car, got in Ambroses’ car…”

Andrew Walker “Not…”

Ruth Lovell “So ho can he do that?”

Andrew Walker “I’m. This witness is giving evidence on oath, today…”

Ruth Lovell “Mmm.”

Andrew Walker “In this court, that’s the evidence I’m interested in.”

Alexandria Harrison “Okay.”

.Andrew Walker “If you want to ask him why he.made different statements at different times, that’s fine.”

Alexandria Harrison “Okay.”

Andrew Walker “The point I am trying to help you with, is that it is not going to help understand the sequence of events, by bringing every single witness who was in the Fox public house and try to show in some way they are not telling the truth…”

Alexandria Harrison “Yeah.”

Ruth Lovell “(inaudible).”

Andrew Walker “That’s not going to help us in this process  because we are not a criminal court and we’re not here to perform that task.”

Ruth Lovell  “(inaudible).”

Andrew Walker “Now Ms K am I missing something here?”

Ms K “I, I’m not sure where the line of questioning goes to Sir, but there maybe further explanation.”

Ruth Lovell “(inauible).”

Andrew Walker “So, alright thank you. So in terms of the video footage at Dadyals are you saying that it’s taken on a different day, it’s not relevant, so therefore showing this witness…”

Ruth Lovell  “That’s not he last time Ambrose was alive there, no. That night.”

Andrew Walker “No, right, so therefore showing this witness footage from Dadyals…”

Ruth Lovell “(inaudible) another night…”

Andrew Walker “No no, just bear with me. That you say is not him at all on that evening, it is in fact taken on a different evening.  How is that going to help us today work out the sequence of events that led to the cause of death?”

Ruth Lovell “Then that means he wasn’t in the car with Ambrose on the night that he died, somebody else was there. Because that didn’t happen on the night. It was another time.  It was Ambrose but it was another night. It wasn’t the night, because we went back to Dadyals and the cameras wasn’t working. They were refurbishing.”

Andrew Walker “Alright. This is not the time for us to make submissions, it’s the time for us to try…”

Ruth Lovell “What’s submissions sorry?”

Andrew Walker  “Sorry it’s a legal term.”

Ruth Lovell “Okay.”

Andrew Walker “At the end of the inquest you’ll have the opportunity to say what you think the correct conclusion should be…”

Ruth Lovell “Okay.”

Andrew Walker “And that’s when you can bring an argument about what you say happened and the consequences of that. But our process here is to try to understand from the evidence, what was the sequence of events that led to and caused the death. And the point I was bringing to your attention is  if you’re saying that the footage at Dadyals is not even on the same day, then there’s little point in showing this witness that footage, because it will make no help at all. Would that be right?”

Alexandria Harrison “Yep.”

Andrew Walker “So what other questions do you have for this witness?”

Alexandria Harrison “Right I didn’t know…”

Andrew Walker “Are you going to suggest for instance that he was not in the car that night”

Alexandria Harrison “No I’m not going to suggest anything like that at all.”

Andrew Walker  “No because this is an opportunity, because if you are suggesting that the witness is not telling the truth about where he was, and you think he wasn’t in the car …”

Alexandria Harrison “No I’m not saying that.”

Andrew Walker  “with Mr Ball during…”

Alexandria Harrison “No.”

Andrew Walker  “During the time, during the last point up until the collision, this is the time to put it to the witness.”

Ruth Lovell  “(inaudible)

Alexandria Harrison “Right that’s what I, because I thought we couldn’t ask erm questions, but seeing as we’ve just been told we can, what I noticed in the bundles is that the police left out the original transcript of his…”

Andrew Walker “No, no, no,no, no.”

Ruth Lovell “So we can’t ask questions then.”

Alexandria Harrison “So we can’t ask questions on what he said?”

Ruth Lovell “inaudible.”

Andrew Walker “You can ask him questions about the sequence of events that led to and caused the death.”

Alexandria Harrison “Okay.

Andrew Walker “So you are accepting are you,  that this witness, was in the car with Mr Ball, in the collision he described as taking place?”

Alexandria Harrison “We don’t know.”

Ruth Lovell “We don’t know we haven’t seen it, so we don’t know.”

Alexandria Harrison “We don’t know.”

Ruth Lovell “We’re trying to find out.”

Andrew Walker “Alright.”

Alexandria Harrison “Especially if you go by ANPR and all that and what we’ve heard now, it seems impossible.”

Andrew Walker “Let’s go back then to further questions that you have for this witness.  Was there anything else you wanted to ask him about the sequence of events

Alexandria Harrison “Yes I …”

Andrew Walker “That he described?”

Alexandria Harrison “Yes I do. Erm did you at any point, during that journey with Ambrose stop and erm take any drugs?”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “You did? So can you please tell us at which point in that journey from Arnos Grove to the crash site did you stop and take cocaine?”

TL “I think it was when we left Arnos Grove we stopped somewhere.”

Alexandria Harrison “So it was after you left Arnos Grove?”

TL “I think.”

Alexandria Harrison  “So where did you stop?”

TL “I don’t know.”

Alexandria Harrison “How long did you stop for?”

TL “I don’t know.”

Alexandria Harrison “Roughly?”

TL “I dunno about 5 minutes maximum.”

Alexandria Harrison “So you, so once you left Arnos Grove, you stopped for 5 minutes …”

TL “I think. If my…In the interview I did before it’s probably much clearer than now. It’ been ages.

Alexandria Harrison “Well yeah it said 5 minutes at the bus stop, 10. Well between 5  and 10 (inaudible). (inaudible) it was narrowed down to 5 or 10.

Andrew Walker “How did you take the cocaine?”

TL “He just put it on his hand.”

Andrew Walker “Both of you put it on…”

TL “No.”

Andrew Walker “He put it on his hand …”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “So was the cocaine bought at Arnos Grove?”

TL “Nah he had it already.”

Andrew Walker “You had it already. Alright.”

Alexandria Harrison “Did you take any coke?”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “You didn’t?”

TL “No.”

Andrew Walker “Now I think it’s important you understand you don’t have to answer any question that might incriminate you. That’s very important, you don’t have to answer any such question if one is put to you, so bear that in mind…”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “When you’re answering these questions.”

Ruth Lovell “Can I ask who you were with at Southgate?”

TL “Er D.”

Ruth Lovell “Just D.”

TL “Yeah.”

Ruth Lovell “(inaudible), where was that? How did you meet up with Ambrose?”

TL “He was at Southgate already when we got there.”

Ruth Lovell “What before you?”

TL “I think so yeah. Or he was following our car.”

Ruth Lovell “Well was he or wasn’t he?”

TL “Well when me and D were talking, we just seen him there.

Ruth Lovell   “Oh so he was there before you then?”

TL “Yeah I’m sure yeah.”

Ruth Lovell “Er did you see anybody else with Ambrose?

TL “Nah.”

Ruth Lovell “was it just you 3 at Arnos Grove, anybody else?”

TL “No in Southgate, D never come …”

Ruth Lovell “In Southgate sorry.”

TL “Yeah we were just there talking. D’s gone into the kebab shop, into the toilet.”

Ruth Lovell “Okay, so just you, D and erm …”

TL “And Ambrose yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “What at Southgate?”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “And then you went to Arnos Grove?”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “From Southgate you all went to Arnos Grove?”

TL “No just me and Ambrose.”

Alexandria Harrison “Right so how long were you in Southgate for sorry?”

Ruth Lovell “Roughly.”

TL “10 minutes.”

Alexandria Harrison “Erm with Ambrose?”

TL “10 minutes.”

Alexandria Harrison “Yeah and straight from there you went straight to Arnos Grove?.”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “Yeah.  And from that you stopped to take some coke. You then started driving (inaudible) miles, quite fast speed … Erm sorry, did you, was Ambrose driving at fast speed before he took the coke or was he driving at a regular speed before he stopped to take the coke?”

TL “No he was driving fast before.

Alexandria Harrison “He was driving fast before …”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “So he drove fast, stopped the car, stopped for a couple of minutes …”

TL “(inaudible) I’ve never been in a car that’s going that fast yet.”

Alexandria Harrison “So it was definitely fast?”

TL “Yeah.”

Ruth Lovell “Sorry you’ve never been in a car that fast?”

TL “Yeah like it was flying.”

Ruth Lovell “Really. Okay.”

Alexandria Harrison “Okay. So you left Arnos Grove, erm Arnos Grove, flew stopped to take coke, flew again crashed into the barrier, Ambrose got out, looked around the car, went about  another 20 yards, you got out, Ambrose continued, you went to the bus stop. After about 5 or 10 minutes you, sorry and while you  were sat there you heard screeching along the road. You’ve then within 5 or 10 minutes gone back around to the car, by the time you got to the car nobody was there.  Is that what you’re saying?”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “Thank you.”

Ruth Lovell “You walked home. You walked home from there. How long did it take you to get home roughly?”

TL “About half an hour, could’ve took longer.”

Alexandria Harrison “Erm did you go by bus?”

TL “No, walked. If you walk  straight down the end of that road you come to Tottenham Hale Retail Park, I walked straight through it.  Through seven sisters up to Tottenham.”

Ruth Lovell “So you didn’t get on the bus no?”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “So you just went to the bus stop. Did you intend to get a bus?”

TL “No. I was just thinking, I was just sat there thinking like ‘Wow what just happened like”

Alexandria Harrison “Do you remember what Ambrose bought when he was in the shop?”

TL “I think he bought a beer.”

Alexandria Harrison “Ambrose bought a beer?”

TL “I think, I dunno. I know he bought me a beer.”

Alexandria Harrison “Okay.”

Ruth Lovell “How many people in Dadyals, well I say how many people.  Was there anybody else at Dadyals when you both went to Dadyals?”

TL “I can’t remember.”

Ruth Lovell “Okay.”

Andrew Walker. “Alright.”

Christopher Harrison “Yes, can I just ask a question?”

Andrew Walker “Go on.”

Christopher Harrison “When you, when you were sat at the bus stop, er did any cars come past, going towards where Ambrose went?”

TL “Not sure. Not sure. I don’t think so.”

Christopher Harrison “No because I was just thinking, if he could have been picked up by someone on the way through or something.

Andrew Walker “I thought you said 2 or 3 cars passed?you”

TL “That’s when I was walking, not when I was at the bus stop.”

Andrew Walker “Oh yeah. So after you were sat …”

Christopher Harrison “Oh so when you were walking from the car?”

TL “When I walked from the bus stop, home, I’m sure there were like 3 cars, 2 cars passed me on that road.”

Andrew Walker “So just, just to be clear about this, you walked from the bus stop to the car, did any cars pass you on your journey to where the car had come to a rest?”

TL “From the bus stop to the car?”

Andrew Walker “Yes.”

TL “No.”

Andrew Walker “There you are. But on your way home, 2 or 3 cars passed you?”

TL “Yeah.”

Andrew Walker “Thank you.”

Christopher Harrison “And did you see, did you see the wheel actually embedded in the railings or not?”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “You didn’t see the wheel in the railings?”

TL “When he’s crashed  yeah?”

Alexandria Harrison “Yeah.”

TL “The car didn’t stick in the railings, like it’s crashed and carried on going, and then stopped and looked at the car.”

Ruth Lovell “What it didn’t, it wasn’t stuck in the railings?”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “What the railings you’ve just shown us in the picture…”

TL “Yeah he’s hit it and carried on going. It didn’t get stuck in the railings.”

Alexandria Harrison “Were all 4 wheels on the car?”

TL “No. When he’s hit the railings, maybe the wheel come off, but he’s carried on moving.”

Ruth Lovell “But you never saw the wheel come off?”

Alexandria Harrison “So did you see the wheel come off? Did you see it in the railing?”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison  “So you saw no wheel in the railings?”

TL “I just saw it in the picture.”

Alexandria Harrison “You saw it in the pictures, not in the railing?”

Ruth Lovell “inaudible.”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “Thank you.”

Ruth Lovell “Inaudible.”

Andrew Walker ” Er Ms H was there anything you wanted to ask?”

Ms H “Yes please. Just a few questions Sir. Erm Mr L you’ve er made a number of statements to the police yes?”

TL “Yeah.”

Ms H “Have you had a chance to look at those this morning?”

TL “Yeah.”

Ms H “I wonder if Mr L can have the statement dated the 27th January please, it’s 3 pages. Do you have that?”

Andrew Walker “I think you’ve got a copy of it.”

Ms H “In the top right it should say 27/1/15. Mr Roach might help you. Alright before we have a look at that let me just ask you this. From the point at which you got into Mr Balls’ car at Southgate station, until the point at which you’ve described as the first crash, at, at any point during that time, did Mr Ball tell you that he’d been injured, or been in a fight and had an injury?”

TL “No.”

Ms H “Was he driving or appeared in any way that looked as though he might have been injured?”

TL “No. He asked me if I wanted to come back to his friends house or whatever.”

Ms H “He asked you if you would go back to his friends. Alright. And then when you crashed the first time and you said Mr Ball got out of the  car and  he walked around but you stayed in the vehicle, did he tell you at that point he’d hurt himself or been injured?”

TL “No.”

Ms H “And when you got back in the car and drove the 20 yards, was there anything in the way he was driving or behaving that made you think that he’d been hurt?”

TL “No, just, I was just thinking he wanted to get that car back to his house.”

Ms H “Alright. And, and just to help you Mr L, if you go to that statement, if you go to the second page, turn over and it starts at the top ‘Whilst there Jay saw a car. You got that. That, that’s at the top of the page?”

TL “Yeah.”

Ms H “Alright and what you say there is ‘That whilst there’ picking up the page before, you just explained that you were at the shop near the shop at Arnos Grove yeah. Whilst there Jay saw a car with 2 of his friends. I knew one of the males as Barry as I know his uncle. I went into the shop. The conversation must have lasted at least half an hour. It was a friendly chat and Jay seemed fine. Yes?”

TL “Yeah.”

Ms H “And then you go on to describe there, that at some point after dropping D off, Jay  had a line of coke in the car, I didn’t.  Is that what you were telling us a little while ago?”

TL “No, that’s, that’

Ms H “Is that another occasion?”

TL “That statement there, that’s why I changed it because …”

Ms H “Okay.”

TL “Because I was drunk at the time. It’s the next day when I spoke to…”

Ms H “And you couldn’t remember.”

TL “Yeah and D told me nah it never happened.”

Ms H “Alright, but er at some point, what you had described was that Mr Ball took a line of cocaine in the car?”

TL “Yeah.”

Ms H “Then you go on to say that the journey continued at quite a fast pace and that Jay was driving at 100 m.p.h. in a very erratic manner, er and, and you put your seat belts on?”

TL “Mm.”

Ms H “Was it, was he driving so fast and erratically that you felt the need to be safe?”

TL “Yeah.”

Ms H “Erm and then you said he was driving on the wrong side of the road and I wasn’t comfortable anymore. Yes? And you were asked about if you went to look for him and just dropping down the page, it’s about. Can you see where there’s a hole punch on the left?”

TL “Yeah.”

Ms H “It’s just above the bottom hole punch. What you describe there is that, when you see, you see in the distance that Jays’ vehicle had been in another collision. And then you say ‘I walked towards Jays’ car, but I couldn’t see anyone there by the time I reached it, the other cars and the black cab had gone. I didn’t see Jay get out of the car or where he’d gone. I reached inside the car’ and you picked up your cigarettes and grinder. And then you say this ‘Close to where the car was there was a small alleyway which I think leads down to the marshes. It was bitch back, black and I did venture down it. Yes do you remember that?”

TL “That’s, that’s not  what I said.”

Ms H “That’s not what you said. Do you remember going to look down an alleyway?”

TL “Is that on here yeah? Is that writ on here?”

Andrew Walker “Just, just pausing a moment.

TL “I wanna ask the police officers if I said that because I didn’t.”

Ms H “I’m reading this statement that you made Mr L. But, but, put the statement aside for the moment. At that time when you’ve looked in the car, did you look down the alleyway?”

TL “Yeah it was directly opposite.”

Ms H “So you did look down the alleyway?”

TL “Yeah but I didn’t venture down it.”

Ms H “Alright so forget the use of the choice of words, but you looked down the alleyway. Is that right?”

TL “Yes, but it’s directly opposite.”

Ms H “Tell us w hat you did.”

TL “Well where the car was and I seen the car crashed.”

Ms H “Yes.”

TL “And I’ve looked like that (TL turns around to look over his shoulder) and the alleyway was right there.”

Ms H “Yes.”

TL “And that’s when I saw the alleyway.”

Ms H “Did you go down the alleyway?”

TL “No.”

Ms H “No.”

TL “That’s been elaborate.”

Ms H “Alright. And, and, just, just again after the um first crash, you weren’t injured is that right?”

TL “Yeah.”

Ms H “And as far as you could tell Mr Ball wasn’t injured and he didn’t tell you he was injured in anyway?”

TL “No.”

Ms H “Thank you very much.”

Andrew Walker “Thank you I’m very grateful for you coming here today and your patience. I’ll release you, you needn’t stay unless you wish to do so, but you leave here with my thanks. Thank you very much indeed.”

Ruth Lovell  “Excuse me, sorry, erm

Alexandria Harrison “Sorry erm …”

Andrew Walker “Just wait there a moment.”

Alexandria Harrison “What was Ambrose wearing,  sorry.”

Ruth Lovell “Can you remember what he was wearing?”

Alexandria Harrison “Even the colours of the T-shirt.”

TL “When he  was   chasing V around the car, I think he had, he took his top off.”

Ruth Lovell “Do you remember what colour the top was?”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “What about in Dadyals did you see the colour of his top?”

TL “No  but in the video he was wearing a jacket.”

Ruth Lovell “When you say running around the car,he was chasing V?”

TL “Yeah.”

Ruth Lovell “Sorry could you just say, can you explain that please?”

TL “V was backing away from him and he was just running around the car. V didn’t wanna go near him.”

Ruth Lovell “What Ambrose was chasing V?”

TL “Yeah.”

Ruth Lovell “Around the car. Gina.”

Alexandria Harrison “Er can I just ask, if as we were just told you put your seat belt on, because you were really worried because of how fast he was going , because of the speed, I just don’t understand why, why did you not  get out of that car if you were that worried?”

TL “Stupidity.”

Ruth Lovell “Sorry?”

TL “Stupidity. I should have, I dunno.”

Alexandria Harrison “Okay. Did you know Ambrose before that night?”

TL “No I’ve heard of him though. Never spent time with him, but I’ve heard of him.”

Alexandria Harrison “Had you met him before?”

TL “No.”

Alexandria Harrison “So you never met Ambrose before that night?”

TL “No.”

Ruth Lovell “So you met him at Dady,  at Southgate for the first time?”

TL “Yeah.”

Alexandria Harrison “And from Southgate you got into a car with somebody you’ve never met before?”

TL “No, but I’ve known his brother.”

Ruth Lovell “How did you know his brother?”

TL “From when D was trying to stop, calm him down. He was like ‘Jay Ball I know your brother’ and then I’ve came over and said yeah I know your brother.”

Ruth Lovell “Oh yeah okay.”

TL “That’s how, that’s how everything stopped.”

Ruth Lovell “Okay, thank you.”

Andrew Walker “Alright. Anything rising out of that? Ms H anything rising out of that?”

Ms H “No thank you Sir.”

Andrew Walker “Thank you very much etc …”

This is the end of the testimony given by TL, the  eye witness for the Metropolitan Police.

Videos…

One Of Ambroses' Aunties's avatarThe DISAPPEARANCE AND DEATH OF AMBROSE GARFIELD GENE BALL ...

Ambrose Garfield Gene Ball – I will always love you

This is a video I did for Ruth aka Toni Lovell, Ambroses’ Mother.  It contains a number of photographs of Ruth and her boys.  I created this video in the hope it would bring Ruth a little comfort, light and joy, during her darkest hours…

What is the Role of ANPR and Speed cameras – Ambrose Garfield Gene Ball

What is the role of the ANPR & speed cameras you may well ask yourself. Well I for one would love to know the answer to that…

According to the Metropolitan police and their star witness, Ambrose was drunk, had taken some cocaine, was said to have been speeding at 100 m.p.h. and was apparently also driving on the wrong side of the road…….Yet he wasn’t stopped once by an ANPR camera, a speed camera or CCTV, which has been proven…

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Posts to share across social media

On this page I will be posting a number of posts which you are more than free to post across social media. These posts contain information about Ambroses’ case, which have arisen throughout the duration of this nightmare.

The information which links to these are in the numerous videos which have been put onto youtube. I have also been working on a new video, which I had hoped to have had done by now, but with one thing or another, this has taken much longer than I anticipated. However, I am still working on it and when it is ready, I will be posting it. Please accept my apologise for the delay in getting this one posted, but it will be coming soon…

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Videos…

Ambrose Garfield Gene Ball – I will always love you

This is a video I did for Ruth aka Toni Lovell, Ambroses’ Mother.  It contains a number of photographs of Ruth and her boys.  I created this video in the hope it would bring Ruth a little comfort, light and joy, during her darkest hours…

What is the Role of ANPR and Speed cameras – Ambrose Garfield Gene Ball

What is the role of the ANPR & speed cameras you may well ask yourself. Well I for one would love to know the answer to that…

According to the Metropolitan police and their star witness, Ambrose was drunk, had taken some cocaine, was said to have been speeding at 100 m.p.h. and was apparently also driving on the wrong side of the road…….Yet he wasn’t stopped once by an ANPR camera, a speed camera or CCTV, which has been proven to be in the areas the Metropolitan Police have said Ambrose was at various times the night of the 24th January 2015.

If ANPR cameras are no good for picking up a driver as described above, the what use are they?

 

 

Below are SOME of the cameras which should have picked up Ambrose and the BMW…

 

Those who have been following Ambroses’ story will be aware of how complicated it has become, mainly due to the lies from witnesses and, the Metropolitan Police throughout various times leading up to and following the inquest into Ambroses’ death.

Taking the fact that things and details have become so messy and muddled, I have decided to put it all down in video form, as much as I can.  Hopefully this will make following Ambroses’ story a lot easier.

Although we do not believe Ambrose left the Fox pub alive or at the very least, severely injured, in order to discount various things the Metropolitan Police and the main witness have said, we have to go through all the boring stuff too, including the journeys, which is what we are going to start with next.

The next video is of the journey from the Fox to Chaseside.

All of these journeys’ are done in real time, as there doesn’t seem to be an issue over timing here, or is there …

 

This is the first of two routes which could  be taken from Chase Side to Oakleigh Road South. 

 

This is the second route to  Oakleigh Road South.

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The next video is regarding the CCTV at Sainsbury’s.  According to  the Metropolitan Police it was the CCTV at Sainsbury’s that is being used, in part, as the evidence which independently confirms’ the BMW as being Ambrose’s.  They stated that’ you can see the lights flash on the BMW. Erm no we couldn’t…’

 

The next video is from Dadyals on Bowes Road, to Sedge Road, which is where the car is said to have come to a stop.  The first video shows you this journey in real time as it were i.e no real speeding.

 

The following video is also the journey from Dadyals to Sedge Road, although this route varies slightly to the previous one. We have done this simply for completion purposes, as some have stated that Ambrose would have taken this route to avoid the cameras on the A406. But as it happens, it too had a few speed and  cameras en-route

In order to save repeating myself too many times, the cameras which were pointed out in the previous video, will  not be repeated in this one. I will only be pointing out any new ones.  In addition to the aforementioned, I will also be speeding the footage up so that you get a better feel for what the Metropolitan police and, TL are saying happened during that journey.

Now for the journey according to the Metropolitan Police and TL, including information I feel is relevant to this sequence of events …  

 

Ruths’ External Tour Of The Fox Public House, Fox Lane, Palmers Green, N13

This is the first video in a mini series of videos I plan to publish, which cover the testimonies which were given by witnesses at the inquest into the death of Ambrose.

The first testimony I will be sharing will be the one given by the C.S.I. 

 

 

 

Part 1 Of TL’s Statements & Testimony – Ambrose Garfield Gene Ball

This is the 2nd video in the ‘mini series’ of inquest videos. This is part 1 of 2.  This is the testimony given by the last person to see Ambrose alive.  He is also the only KNOWN person to have been in the car.  That is of course, discounting Ambrose, as no-one, saw him driving the car after he left the Fox, except for TL…

 

 

This is a video where Ruth, Ambroses’ Mother, tries to explain how she feels today … 3rd June 2018…

 

 

New Evidence From Bundles Handed To The Family By Mistake – Ambrose Garfield Gene Ball

The latest video from Ruth aka Toni Lovell regarding her Sons’ case and the corruption that surrounds it…

 

New Evidence – What Time Did Ambroses Garfield Gene Ball Leave The Fox

 

Were The Police At The Fox The Same Time As Ambrose Garfield Gene Ball