• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Chow Ang Moh Correctly Disposed Himself Alive in the Rubbish Dumpster! Lets dispose all of them in Ulu Pandang!

Ang4MohTrump

Alfrescian
Loyal
Chow Ang Moh air force gunner LOVE TO SLEEP INSIDE DUMPSTERS!

So got properly disposed alive! Nice? Ang Moh Ah Neh are More Ah Neh than ABNN Ah Nehs!






https://hk.news.yahoo.com/英士兵失蹤近兩年-父曝愛睡垃圾桶疑遭-當垃圾-碾碎-025000201.html



英士兵失蹤近兩年 父曝愛睡垃圾桶疑遭「當垃圾」碾碎


星島日報


13k 人追蹤

2018年8月3日 上午10:50


133dcf00-96cd-11e8-be21-1da29557eb98__2018080310540024304.jpg

麥基格兩年來無音訊,網友在網上發布照片,希望大家幫忙尋人。(網圖)
【星島日報報道】英國23歲的皇家空軍士兵麥基格(Corrie McKeague)於2016年9月24日凌晨外出後,從此消去蹤影,當地警方找了近兩年都沒有結果,他的父親在社交網站爆料指,兒子有酒後有爬進垃圾桶睡覺的習慣,並相信他可能早就被當成垃圾壓扁碾碎身亡。
麥基格父親表示:「我相信他已經死了,所以也不會繼續苦苦盼著他回家。」
當地警方指,2016年9月24日凌晨3點25分,麥基格(Corrie McKeague)最後身影出現在馬蹄區(Horseshoe)一處死巷,他走進巷子里就再也沒有出來,幾個小時後垃圾車和清潔工人就前往收垃圾。
麥基格的父親馬丁(Martin McKeague)提到,兒子從以前就有酒醉後在垃圾桶睡覺的壞習慣,事發之後他與妻子一直不願相信,後來聽說當地警方調查發現當天的「垃圾」卻重達110公斤以上,而平日只有10多公斤的垃圾,懷疑可能有人就在里面。另外,警方發現麥基格當晚手機訊號移動的軌跡和垃圾車路線一致,然而持續搜索卻再未找到消息。
馬丁表示:「我相信兒子不是失蹤是已經死了,而且是被當成垃圾般「碎屍」,我不會再苦盼著他回家,甚至是期望找到任何一片遺骸,畢竟這太困難了。」
不過,麥基格的母親仍不放棄,她堅信「活要見人、死要見屍」,只要沒有明確找到遺體的一天就還算是失蹤。雖然各大社群網站都有人特地替麥基格成立「尋人」頁面,但至今都沒有任何實質的收穫,英國警方也在今年4月宣布結束調查,只剩下部分親友還在努力尋找他的身影。



http://www.theweek.co.uk/92523/corrie-mckeague-missing-airman

Corrie Mckeague: missing airman ‘in Suffolk rubbish system’

Jul 31, 2018
RAF gunner’s father says he believes his son’s remains are ‘essentially irretrievable’
_98859101_corriemckeague6.jpg

Family photo
The father of RAF gunner Corrie Mckeague, who vanished in September 2016 after a night out in Bury St Edmunds, says that the family now considers it “beyond any doubt” that his remains are in the Suffolk waste disposal system.
“Unlike other missing persons investigations where they do not know where their loved one is or what happened to them, we do know what happened to Corrie,” Martin Mckeague wrote in a Facebook update yesterday.
The younger Mckeague, a gunner stationed at RAF Honington, was seen on CCTV cameras entering a loading bay in the town centre after a night out with friends and has not been seen since.
An exhaustive investigation followed multiple avenues of inquiry, including the possibility of foul play, but detectives concluded that there was no compelling evidence of third-party involvement.
Instead, it is thought that he climbed into one of the large bins belonging to nearby shops and fell asleep.
A bin lorry collecting refuse from the loading bay the following morning registered a weight of 113kg from one bin, an unusually heavy load which supports the theory that Mckeague was inside.
Police searched a landfill site at Milton, Cambridgeshire twice in 2017, but no trace of the missing airman was ever found. The search was officially called off in April this year.
However, Martin Mckeague says that the evidence presented to the family has made them “certain he is somewhere in the Suffolk waste disposal system”.
Paraphrasing Sherlock Holmes in Arthur Conan Doyle’s 1890 novella The Sign of the Four, he said: “Once you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth.”
The vast area which would need to be searched, including toxic dump sites, mean that his son’s remains are “essentially irretrievable”.
He has previously spoken of his fears that the 23-year-old might have acted deliberately after getting the unexpected news that he was to become a father.
“I just can’t help thinking this would have weighed on him heavily and he may have actually chosen to get in that bin that night knowing what would happen,” Martin told the Daily Mirror in March.
“It’s as probable as anything else and it makes it no less heartbreaking.”
The family plans to hold a memorial for Corrie at a later date.





https://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=12065488


The Big Read: What happened to the RAF man Corrie McKeague who vanished into thin air? Inquiry closes with a grim conclusion

6 Jun, 2018 12:08pm
13 minutes to read





Corrie McKeague’s disappearance has confounded police, transfixed amateur sleuths and sparked one of the most baffling manhunts in recent memory.

Daily Mail





CLICK ABOVE URL for Video










Additional reporting by the Daily Telegraph.
The man who vanished into thin air

A young man in a pink shirt, hands buried in the pockets of his fashionable white jeans, strolls jauntily through the centre of the cathedral town of Bury St Edmunds.

He stops, looks around, and decides to turn right, past a couple of hanging baskets.

Then he disappears into a cobbled loading area immediately behind a branch of the high street bakery Greggs.



It's 3.25am on Saturday, September 24, 2016, and these grainy CCTV images, circulated by Suffolk Police, show the last known movements of 23-year-old serviceman Corrie McKeague.

He was reported missing the following Monday, around 48 hours later, after failing to report for duty at his nearby airbase RAF Honington. That was almost two years ago.

Since then, McKeague's disappearance has confounded police, transfixed amateur sleuths and sparked one of the most baffling manhunts in recent memory, the Daily Mail reports.

At its centre is a single, unanswered question: how could a grown man, walking through the centre of a town equipped with numerous CCTV cameras, vanish into thin air?

Police say it's virtually impossible to walk more than a few metres from where McKeague was last seen without being caught on camera.

There was no obvious way, at that time of night, to hide from view by entering an adjacent building. And detectives can find no evidence to suggest he was taken away in a car or other vehicle.



https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/20...no-longer-missing-waste-disposal-system-says/



Corrie McKeague no longer missing and 'is in waste disposal system', says father
  • TELEMMGLPICT000136308378_trans_NvBQzQNjv4BqLUm2LqZ7QfPrWh62iB90NZLgSKpDMVVnj1jA7VtkUMM.jpeg
Save
TELEMMGLPICT000136308378_trans_NvBQzQNjv4BqLUm2LqZ7QfPrWh62iB90NZLgSKpDMVVnj1jA7VtkUMM.jpeg
Corrie McKeague was 23 years old when he vanished on a night out in Bury St Edmunds Credit: SUFFOLK CONSTABULARY
31 July 2018 • 8:17am



The father of Corrie McKeague has said his son is "no longer missing" as he claims he knows what happened to him and that he is in the waste disposal system.
The missing airman was 23 years old when he vanished on a night out in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, on September 24 2016.
Police believe he climbed into a waste bin and was taken away by a refuse lorry. He had been stationed at RAF Honington, around 10 miles from Bury St Edmunds.
No trace of him has been found, and police said in March that the investigation was being handed to a cold case squad.
Martin McKeague, Corrie's father, said on Facebook that he knows "what happened to our son", adding: "We are certain he is somewhere in the Suffolk waste disposal system, but his remains are essentially irretrievable."



Mr McKeague wrote that police came to visit the family in Scotland to review the facts of the investigation in detail in October last year and February this year.
The evidence presented to him was "as thorough as it was compelling", he said, and that experts "concluded beyond any doubt that Corrie had ended up in the Suffolk waste disposal system".



"Accepting that conclusion has clearly not been easy for the McKeague family in Scotland, nor anyone else," he wrote.

landfill-site_trans_NvBQzQNjv4Bq-0_BeXveWtkglNgu4xhH_dQWvddsC9-WQ7RkHFrKmKE.jpg

Police officers search a landfill site in search of missing airman Corrie Mckeague Credit: Christopher Furlong /Getty

He said the remaining areas were either "too toxic to search" or "so vast it could take years to do so".
He said there are plans for a memorial for Corrie in the future.

Related Topics

  • landfill-site_trans_NvBQzQNjv4Bq-0_BeXveWtkglNgu4xhH_dQWvddsC9-WQ7RkHFrKmKE.jpg


https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-suffolk-45015080

Corrie Mckeague: Airman 'somewhere in Suffolk waste disposal system'

  • 31 July 2018


Related Topics


Image copyright Family photo Image caption Corrie Mckeague, from Dunfermline, Fife, was last seen at 03:25 BST on 24 September 2016
Missing airman Corrie Mckeague is "somewhere in the Suffolk waste disposal system", his father has said.
Corrie Mckeague was 23 years old when he vanished on a night out in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, on 24 September 2016.
Writing on Facebook, Martin Mckeague said: "Corrie is no longer missing... after looking at all of the facts and evidence we now know what happened."
But Corrie's mother Nicola Urquhart insisted she had "not given up" the search for her son.
Police believe the airman climbed into a waste bin and was taken away by a refuse lorry.
Mr Mckeague said his son was "known to sleep in and on top of bins, a fact that has been corroborated by Suffolk Police from their interviews".
He also said that on the night Corrie went missing, one bin had a recorded weight of 116kg - "an unusually high number for this bin, which tells us my son was inside".
He acknowledged that Corrie's remains were "essentially irretrievable".
But Ms Urquhart, who is divorced from Mr Mckeague, said she would "keep fighting for the answers I need".
Image copyright Nicola Urquhart Image caption Corrie Mckeague, pictured with his mother, was last seen in Bury St Edmunds
In a post on Facebook, she said: "Corrie is missing, he has not been found, nor has their been any corroborated evidence shown to me yet to say what has happened to my son.
"Although to the very depths of my soul, I know and feel Corrie is not AWOL, I CANNOT state this is a fact, as there is no proof."
Ms Urquhart also confirmed she would be meeting the police in August "to be given answers".
Mr Mckeague, originally from Dunfermline and serving at RAF Honington in Suffolk, disappeared after a night out in Bury St Edmunds.
No trace of him has been found, and police said in March that the investigation was being handed to a cold case team.
His father wrote that police came to visit the family in Scotland to review the facts of the investigation in detail in October and February.
He said he had been presented with evidence that was "as thorough as it was compelling" and experts had "concluded beyond any doubt that Corrie had ended up in the Suffolk waste disposal system".


_98859101_corriemckeague6.jpg

"Accepting that conclusion has clearly not been easy for the Mckeague family in Scotland, nor anyone else," he wrote.
Image copyright Suffolk constabulary Image caption The airman was last seen on CCTV pictures walking through Bury St Edmunds after a night out
Mr Mckeague said the remaining areas were either "too toxic to search" or "so vast it could take years to do so".
He added: "We thought there might be a small glimmer of hope for the Mckeague family that a card reader could be used to identify the whereabouts of Corrie's bank card in the landfill site.
"I myself searched the internet to see if that technology could help but found nothing to support that theory.
"It was also the view of the National Crime Agency and Suffolk Police... there is no technology currently available that can, in these case circumstances, undertake such a task."
Mr Mckeague said there are plans for a memorial for his son.

Police said in March there were "no realistic lines of inquiry left" in the investigation.
The investigation into the disappearance has cost £2.1m and Suffolk's police and crime commissioner said the government had agreed to contribute with a special grant, expected to be about £800,000.


_97221546_corriewithnicola1.jpg



_97670802_corrie-pub--suffolkploice.jpg
 
Top