Nora Quoirin: Did it take 7 hours to alert the Malaysian police?

(LEFT OF BOARD)

DATE: 04-08-2019
TIME: 13:45:00
VICTIM: FEMALE
AGE: 15 YEARS
NAME: NORA ANNE
NATIONALITY : IRELAND
LAST LOCATION: SORA HOUSE
CLOTHING: UNDERWEAR
TIME: 07:00:00 MORNING

(RIGHT OF BOARD)

AGENCIES INVOLVED:-

1) FIRE DEPARTMENT:
1 OFFICER
1 SUPERVISOR
7 MEMBERS
2 PEOPLE
4 MUSTEAM

2) PDRM (POLIS DIRAJA MALAYSIA — MALAYSIA POLICE FORCE)
1 OFFICER
? MEMBER

3) K9 PDRM (MALAYSIA POLICE )
2 MEMBERS
1 DOG

4) PBS: 2 MEMBERS

5) THE DUSUN STAFF – 4 PEOPLE

6) VILLAGE PEOPLE – 10 PEOPLE

7) MUST TEAM – 8 PEOPLE

Screenshot_2019-08-24-15-07-29

Below left of board;

Last searching: 06.45pm (2 groups)
07.00pm (check porch?)

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There is very little information in all of the media covering this case that provides the time when the police were notified. Little, not none. The 13:30 timestamp below makes sense if we consider the whiteboard was drawn up within the next 15 minutes.

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It was the action plan of what to do next, which resources to use, and how to co-ordinate with hotel staff. It’s also clear that the disappearance was noticed at 07:00 according to what was told to police on Day 1, whereas the media reported the disappearance at 08:00 [although various times were reported, ranging from 06:30 to 08:30].

If these times are accurate, it raises a disturbing question. Why did it take so long to alert the authorities?

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