I'm abit tired now but the police should of investigated the staff and management from that nightclub a wholeeeeeee lot more.I would take what the sister says with a huge pinch of salt as she is acting out of grief.
Remember Corrie McTeague’s family were adamant for years that something untoward had happened to him, despite the fact that all the evidence indicated he had been crushed in that bin and taken away.
You've obviously never lived somewhere where everyone kind of knows each other. I'll meet someone in the pub and discover we have 25 mutual friends on Facebook.But do your relatives know the other dog owners and their phones nos?
The original poster said she recognises people in her local dog park I asked did HER relatives also know the people amd their phone nos!!!I really don't think the woman calling her DIL and asking who's dog it is is strange???
What do you mean phone numbers? It was her daughter in law she rang?
Because sadly, she doesn’t want to believe it.I have just seen on twitter that Nicola’s sister does not believe she went into the water
I made sure I put some humour in my dad's speech at his funeral. Some people may have thought that was inappropriate.I’ve laughed nervously when my mum passed away and I held her. I smiled when the doctor came in just because I wanted to be polite. It’s the weirdest thing. You are in total shock, you’ve never experience anything like this and yet you don’t respond all Hollywood which seems to be what some on here expect. I have no idea why I didn’t what I did but there’s no right or wrong. Your mind doesn’t proces it all. But again it seems some people are only satisfied if the husband had re-enacted a dramatic scene from Eastenders.
Actually your sister is your sister so I'm sure she would know if her sister would go in the water... the dog didn't that's obvious and she's saying her sister didn't either.Because sadly, she doesn’t want to believe it.
haha you didn’t answer the original question!You've obviously never lived somewhere where everyone kind of knows each other. I'll meet someone in the pub and discover we have 25 mutual friends on Facebook.
Dissociation. It’s a valid coping mechanism for trauma.I can vouch 1000% for this. The morning I got the call my dad had died suddenly in A&E I moaned I was starving. It’s the shock and the detachment that does it, I can’t describe the feeling but it’s so odd. You almost start acting so normal so your mind convinces you that you’re not you and aren’t affected by it
They didn't because there was CCTV on every entry to and exit from the alley where he was last seen.I'm abit tired now but the police should of investigated the staff and management from that nightclub a wholeeeeeee lot more.
They all live in the same small village. It’s not a reach that her DIL knew Nicola and her partner (prob nearer in age than her MIL) or had their phone numbers or were friends on Facebook.The original poster said she recognises people in her local dog park I asked did HER relatives also know the people amd their phone nos!!!
I totally understand the woman rang her DIL and would know her no.
Sorry I thought my answer was self explanatory. Yes if I described someone and their dog to my brother there's a fair chance he might know who they were. Might be friendly with one of their family members or their partner. Obviously not every single person but it's a fairly small community, and it's not so unusual that I see anything weird about the woman's DIL being able to recognise who Nicola is or be able to get in touch with her partner. I understand not all towns and cities are like this but plenty of places are.haha you didn’t answer the original question!
This could even be where the school bit came in. The DIL maybe called school to ask them to make contact with x child’s parents to say their dog is loose. That’s entirely plausible.They all live in the same small village. It’s not a reach that her DIL knew Nicola and her partner (prob nearer in age than her MIL) or had their phone numbers or were friends on Facebook.
I would doubt it. She lives there and knows the river. You’re suggesting that because you don’t know the river. There’s plenty of waterways near me but none I would think shallow enough to retrieve a ball that way.I wonder if she voluntarily stepped into the river with her wellies on thinking it was a shallow patch while trying to retrieve the tennis ball, and went under? This helps me understand why was so close to the water because that's the bit I'm struggling with. As someone said above there was no need to get that close unless for example she was retrieving the ball, and being so comfortable with the area and having done the walk hundreds of times wasn't as alert as she should've been (she was also distracted with work)
I honestly think there is no more information to release. This case has had an awful lot of manpower thrown at it with no real answers. The police have been methodical imo and followed the electronic information available to them that actually shows Nicola did not leave that area and thus she's gone into the water.I’d say that there is a lot more information that has not been released to the public, that revealed that this was out of character for Nicola
I think it's the same thing. The woman who found the dog called her relative who worked at the school. They then alerted the partnerPlus at the start it said someone found Willow and called the school who called N’s partner to say the dog had been found.
Now the woman who found the dog called her daughter in law, who knew it was N’s dog so called the partner.
That’s two very different versions
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