Not quite irrespective of the wishful thinking. No body but plenty of false trails offered by her uncle João as to where her remains were discarded, not exactly the actions of an innocent man. Then there are the missing tools testified to by the murdered girl's stepfather and the presence of all her footwear in the family home. Finally, not forgetting the evidence of a neighbour who saw Joanna on her return journey carrying her shopping and last but not least we have the confession of the mother on her first appearance before the investigating magistrate. All together a sorry mess and most certainly not the actions of a loving mother whose daughter had simply disappeared.
All we need now to conclude this sorry tale is to know what exactly did the murderous twosome do with Joana's remains? Was she fed to the pigs, buried somewhere or sent in the boot of a car to a breakers yard in Spain to be crushed?
- João could either be one of those manipulative nutters who crave power, or could have been beaten and threatened with worse and gave a false confession. He had a dodgy background and doesn't seem to have been particularly popular.
If he
had made a false confession, the next question was obviously what had he done with the body. If he really didn't know, but was being threatened, I find it plausible that he invented new possibilities to keep beatings, or worse, at bay.
- The missing tools: one was a knife with a black handle. Leandro said they didn't have any large knives with black handles. The saw: Leandro did say that he had a similar one at some time, but couldn't find it, when asked. In his press interview, he said he didn't know where João could have got it from, unless he'd stolen it from a neighbour. That comment gave me the impression that it wasn't an object that he would have used sufficiently frequently to notice that it was missing, let alone when.
- The presence of all her footwear: there's nothing to corroborate that other than one witness statement by someone who didn't even live there.
- Yes, there's a witness statement that she was seen on her
way home with her shopping.
- Yes, it would seem that Leonor had made a confession to an accidental death after several days of interrogation... but under what conditions?