@@simondavids9438 Thanks fella, that bomb thing in Broadheath messed up my plans so will go to Migrant Hotel on Wednesday after my radio show will upload soon as I am back home
He was a veteran, and the bombs were in a cupboard. They were viable, and were destroyed in a controlled explosion on a nearby farm. They had been there since WW2, and if they had been a threat to anyone, the last chapter would not have been a controlled explosion "on a nearby farm". Bear in mind, all were transported quite safely to said "nearby farm". I say, this motorcycle isn't dangerous locked up in a garage, and the same applies to a WW2 veteran's souveniers.
Good video pal.
@@simondavids9438 Thanks fella, that bomb thing in Broadheath messed up my plans so will go to Migrant Hotel on Wednesday after my radio show will upload soon as I am back home
He was a veteran, and the bombs were in a cupboard. They were viable, and were destroyed in a controlled explosion on a nearby farm. They had been there since WW2, and if they had been a threat to anyone, the last chapter would not have been a controlled explosion "on a nearby farm".
Bear in mind, all were transported quite safely to said "nearby farm". I say, this motorcycle isn't dangerous locked up in a garage, and the same applies to a WW2 veteran's souveniers.
@@RedPillRachel Do you know what types of bombs they were? Did police detain the individual?
@N4TXTV the individual died in his family home, leaving the surviving relatives in possession and unaware of their existence. No arrests were made.
Avocet drive and the surrounding estate wasn't built until late 80s/early 90s.
@@martinthompson3505 Interesting, means he took them in there unnoticed, and had them for decades, unnoticed.