According to the opening post, the purpose of this thread was to discuss what Martin Grime's evidence meant and if it had been misunderstood.
A lot of opinions were posted, mostly by posters who support the parents. They seem to have misunderstood the aim of the thread and haven't really addressed the question posed in the first post.
A good post in my opinion;
"To claim the alerts were to cadaver odour is factually incorrect...it has not been possible and is impossible to determine what the alerts were to...poeple have opinions...and that is all they are... To claim the alerts may have been to cadaver odour of course is correct" post #52
The above post is good because the expert who trained and used the dogs shared his opinion which has more credibility than others' because of his experience and knowledge. He said;
My professional opinion as regards to the EVRD's alert indications is that it is suggestive that this is 'cadaver scent' contaminant.
http://www.mccannpjfiles.co.uk/PJ/MARTIN_GRIMES.htmSo we have an expert opinion. Grime goes on to say;
This does not however suggest a motive or suspect as cross contamination could be as a result of a
number of given scenarios and in any event no evidential or intelligence reliability can be made from these alerts unless they can be confirmed with corroborating evidence.
http://www.mccannpjfiles.co.uk/PJ/MARTIN_GRIMES.htmSome people seem to think that he's referring to forensic confirmation, but that's clearly wrong, because cadaver scent can't be confirmed by forensic tests.
So 'corroborating evidence' means something else.
Corroborating evidence (or corroboration) is evidence that supports a proposition already supported by initial evidence, therefore confirming the original proposition.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corroborating_evidenceSo Eddie's unconfirmed alerts were;
G5A
Rear bedroom of the apartment in the immediate right hand corner by the door.
Veranda outside parent's bedroom.
Garden area directly under veranda.
McCann villa
a pink cuddly toy in the villas lounge
Mother and child clothing (after removal)
Given that Grime's opinion was that these alerts were triggered by cadaver scent, and that the alerts seemed to be suggesting a connection between the site of the missing child's disappearance, her toy, her clothes and her mother's clothes, there had to be an attempt to find corroborating evidence in my opinion.
The PJ tried but failed.