They say the sperm didn't match.
They say the sperm didn't match.
I think the police should not assume just because someone's DNA is not found on or in a victim, that they cannot be the murderer. I have read media reports that state two different semen samples. however.... reports by media are not reliable. Here's the autopsy report as released by CSI LA 90210 , but in Thai. Anyone?
. https://teakdoor.com/Gallery/albums/u...mb_Autopsy.jpg
^ Must have come from a small lab eh?
^ Took me a while to even figure out how to post pics, is
in gallery, can you zoom it up, please?
^ Delete the word "thumb" from the image address.
/thumb_Autopsy.jpg ... becomes ... /Autopsy.jpg
^
Earth to toddaniels...come in please...
Allow me.Quote:
Originally Posted by septimus
"The burmese boys did it. You not understands Thai Culture."
There you go.
You obviously got the Yasojack free translation.Quote:
Originally Posted by pseudolus
Translated it says they are dead.
Happy the case is finally solved.
I don't know why the AC bar owners end all this speculation by simply handing over the cctv from the night in question.
The more games they play the more their integrity is brought into question.
All this circus about the dna after the crime scene was polluted is useless now.
What do you think the British police report will say?
That the crime scene was contaminated, the investigation was marred, the suspects were coerced with threat of death, witnesses were beaten others were offered bribes for false testimony, then beaten when they refused the offer. And the Police Chief spent an enormous sum on shares in a company that his daughter is CEO of.
Just another day in the life of the RTP .
I have just seen a new picture of Witheridge, and it really does appear she was shot in the jaw and forehead. Also having an interesting chat with the person who has these pictures. Seems a theory is this a a cop's gun being covered up. Police did not count on the massive exposure- and the three top cops transferred yesterday are tired of playing along.
Another Koh Tao gangster posing shamelessly with his weapons.
I'm sure the rest of the penguin penis mob have them also..
https://teakdoor.com/images/smilies1/You_Rock_Emoticon.gif
Under this theory, the entire rape scenario was made up which explains the initial conflicting reports, she was raped, but no she wasn't.
And Nom Sod was just used as bait, by CSI to get Dad to peek his head out and be exposed as the fixer, pure personal politics there.
Telegraph UK
November 13, 2014
By Natalie Paris
In the week that the ruling military has banned a British book about Thailand’s struggle for democracy, another is about to claim that the tourist industry has gone seriously awry.
“Thailand: Deadly Destination” is soon to be published and attempts to explain why a million fewer tourists are predicted to visit the beach-rich nation this year, following a military coup and the unsolved murder of two British backpackers in September.
The book’s publicity material claims that, in terms of tourist safety, Thailand scores very badly. “In 2014, just as in the years preceding it, there were train, bus, ferry, speedboat, motorbike and car accidents, murders, knifings, unexplained deaths, numerous suicides, diving accidents, robberies gone wrong, anonymous bodies washing up on the shores and a string of alcohol- and drug-related incidents.”
It pulls no punches and paints a bleak image of the future, going on to state: “Thailand has weak democratic institutions, an economy slipping into recession, faces issues of corruption across many of its key services and is host to international crime syndicates, awash with despised foreigners and drifting perilously towards civil war.”
John Stapleton, the author, claims that those who know the country well were less surprised by news of the murder of two British tourists. He said: “The international coverage of the recent brutal killing of two British backpackers on the island of Koh Tao has highlighted what many long-time observers of Thailand already knew, that its tourist industry is poorly managed and the Land of Smiles has come to justifiably be regarded as one of the most dangerous tourist destinations on Earth.”
British author Andrew MacGregor Marshall, whose book “A Kingdom in Crisis: Thailand’s Struggle for Democracy in the Twenty-First Century”, was banned by the Thai government on Tuesday, agreed that tourists should be wary. Now fearful of returning to Thailand, even though he has a Thai wife, he was nonetheless prepared for the furious reaction that his book exploring Thailand’s politics might provoke.
He said the murders in Koh Tao exposed the dark side of a country loved by many Western tourists. “Thailand is still relatively safe to visit,” he said, “as petty crime is widespread but murders and assaults targeting foreigners are relatively rare. But tourists should be aware that this is a country where things can very suddenly go very wrong, and where there is no credible functioning justice system.
“Many potential visitors are now being deterred due to the military regime and regular revelations of corruption and crime. That’s a tragedy, but it’s sensible for tourists to exercise extreme caution while Thailand remains ruled by an unaccountable and criminal elite.”
Full article: Thailand 'most dangerous tourist destination' claims book - Telegraph
So this is what he calls his book....Quote:
Originally Posted by Sumocakewalk
and then goes on to say this....
Nobody can dispute the fact that Thailand has it's problems, including violent crime....but the number of tourists harmed has to be viewed in relation to the huge numbers that visit the place; in order to put things into a bit more perspective.Quote:
Originally Posted by Sumocakewalk
Ya reckon that's US he's talking about?.....do you feel "despised"???....:)Quote:
Originally Posted by Sumocakewalk
The quote about petty crime being widespread actually came from a different author, Andrew MacGregor Marshall, who wrote the recently banned book "A Kingdom in Crisis: Thailand’s Struggle for Democracy in the Twenty-First Century".
John Stapleton is the author of the book "Thailand: Deadly Destination".
^^ ^
Jesus, What a lot of hysterical propaganda.
Turds that write these pathetic books are only taking advantage of the weak minded who actually believe this stuff or have an agenda against Thailand and its people.
Try go living in America where gun crime is rampant or Australia where a trip into the cities at night time is risky business.
Really grade one stuff these books.
What propaganda?
The article is coherent, founded upon sound statistics and the case is well stated in the context of current material available upon Thailand which ranges the full gamut between vacuous fluff pieces by travel freelancers suckling on the teat of the industry and out and out lies peddled by vested interests.
Terry, you are the one who appears increasingly driven towards hysteria. Thailand is well known to be a cheap, tropical destination where the infrastructure is unreliable, there is an incidence of violent crime, road safety is among the world's worst and where the rule of law is negligible. That the negatives are compensated by the positives ie. low taxation, warm year round climate, cheap whores, reasonable alcohol prices, tolerable ersatz western foods, inexpensive hotel accommodation and cheap transport costs don't alter those negatives.
Get a grip, man. Thailand is only worth it as an all round package because of its value for money. It ain't paradise and isn't even comparable to many other destinations but the combination of those positives, and their good looking women with their easy availability swings it for many. Once the standard of living increases and levels of taxation rise commensurately, and the prostitution of Isaan women by their families is finally outlawed, then the country will reach a par where other destinations will become more attractive.
I would feel safer in America....as long as you stay away from the cops I guess.Quote:
Originally Posted by terry57
I would have thought that this would need to be investigated , but it seems to have been forgotten about .
The murdered felangs mans room mate , who worked in the bar where the two murdered felangs were drinking on the night and had an argument with some Thais , and who was threatened with death and was also accused of being the murder , even before the bodies were found .
This guy quite probably has case solving evidence , but he seems to be gone and forgotten about .
Mr McAnna claimed that two Thai men, who he believes may have crucial information about the murders, threatened to kill him in the early hours of Monday morning while he was drinking at a bar on Sairee beach near to where their disfigured bodies were discovered.
He fled, took refuge in a nearby supermarket and was only able to leave when police were called and arrived on the scene at around 5am. They questioned the two Thai men but no arrests were made.
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With those two men still at large, Mr McAnna spent the day in hiding before fleeing Koh Tao fearing he could be killed if he stayed.
"I need to get off this island," a tearful and visibly nervous Mr McAnna told The Telegraph during an interview conducted inside the back of a taxi before he departed.
"I genuinely thought that was the day I was going to die," Mr McAnna said. "I genuinely thought that this was me dead. That I was gone."
"I phoned my mum, I phoned my sister. I told her I loved her and that I would try and make it home. I said that if this was going to be the last conversation that we had then it was a really sad one to have but she's been great and I love her."
Mr McAnna met Mr Miller last year while both men were living in Leeds. He was the singer and guitarist in a Leeds band called These Fading Polaroids and Mr Miller was an engineering student. Both lived in the Hyde Park area.
Mr McAnna said he recently returned to Koh Tao - where he had previously spent 18 months living and working as a barman - and had planned but failed to meet Mr Miller on the night he and Ms Witheridge were murdered.
Police have yet to make any arrests for the horrific murders and now say they plan to force every man on the 2,000 population island to provide DNA for testing. Locals appear reluctant to discuss the case, apparently fearing reprisals from mafia-style families who are said to control Koh Tao.
Mr McAnna said he believed it was people linked to one such group who threatened to kill him. At around 2.30am he was accosted by two Thai men at Koh Tao's AC Bar, a beachfront nightclub where Mr Miller and Ms Witheridge had been just before they were murdered.
"They just said to me: 'It was you who killed them. You've got two people's deaths on your hands. We know it was you. You're going to hang yourself tonight and we are going to watch you hang. You will die tonight.'"
"So I just ran. I just left and ran," he said.
A terrified Mr McAnna took refuge in a small supermarket into which the men chased him. They tried to convince him to leave but he refused, fearing he would be murdered.
"They wouldn't have shot me. They would have taken me up into the hills and hung me to make it look like I'd hung myself," he said.
Mr McAnna said he did not know if the men who threatened him were directly involved in his friend's murder. However, he did believe they had key information about the murders and were attempting to make him a "scapegoat" for the killings.
"I think they needed a scapegoat. I think they might know who it was. They need a scapegoat and they don't want it to be locals. They want it to be a westerner. So if I kill myself here, if I hang myself here, then it is easy to say: 'See, it was him.'"
Mr McAnna posted information about the alleged threats on his Facebook page at around 4am on Monday and issued a desperate plea for help. "Thai mafia are trying to kill me. Please help me," he wrote.
He said he also spoke to Foreign Office officials in London over the telephone. After being taken from the supermarket by Thai police, Mr McAnna said he spent the rest of the night hiding from the men he feared were going to kill him in the jungle.
"I was scared s*******. I was really scared. So I kept moving every thirty minutes in case anybody had seen me. I would move from one part, to the next part in case there was anyone close that had seen me and could send someone."
Mr McAnna rejected the men's claims that had been involved killing his friend and Ms Witheridge. "Of course I had nothing to do with it." Prachum Ruangthong, the police chief responsible for Koh Tao, confirmed that Mr McAnna had been asked to provide DNA samples as part of investigations into the murders but was not considered a suspect.
The police chief denied recieving reports of death threats against Mr McAnna even though he met him on Monday morning and told the British traveller: "I am sensitive about your feelings. You don't worry, ok?"
Two Thai men were questioned about the incident but they were not arrested. The police chief said he would guarantee the Briton's security while he remained on Koh Tao.
After spending much of Monday in hiding, Mr McAnna travelled to the island's port with a group of British reporters at around 2.30pm. He left Koh Tao on a passenger ferry at 3.10pm.
Mr McAnna's friends took to social media to express their concern. "Sean get off that island now," wrote Jordan O'Hara, a friend. "Can't believe what Tao is turning in to. Madness!" wrote Rachel Howard.
On Monday afternoon, Mr McAnna sat near Koh Tao's main pier in blazing sunshine preparing to board a ferry off the island. "I'm getting nervous," he said, as holidaymakers lined up to board the vessel that would take him to safety.
The 25-year-old Scot vowed never to return to an island that markets itself as a paradise for divers and partiers. "I'm done here," he said, adding that he would only feel truly safe once he had flown out of Thailand. "Something could still happen to me in the next 24 hours."