I think I read somewhere yesterday that the slurry being spread is on a neighbor’s farm. That neighbor’s tank was drained and nothing discovered. However it’s believed that the body parts are from a secondary kind of collecting tank which sits under where the animals live in the shed. It would normally be impossible to put a whole intact body into that type of tank without either lifting the massive concrete tank cover or chopping up the body. That was the explanation I saw yesterday evening anyway
It seems there were two slurry storage units under the slatted sheds on the missing man's farm, a main one and a secondary one, the main one was drained as part of the search but this second one, how ever big or small it was, clearly was not thoroughly checked, hence the appalling scene we have now with this unfortunate man's remain being put into a slurry tanker and spread out on fields.
How are the guards going to explain this one away?
From the link I posted yesterday :
"The shed contains two slatted units. Locals who observed the initial investigation said the main unit was emptied at that time, but the smaller secondary unit was not fully cleared.
According to those present, slurry remained in the second unit and was agitated, pumped into slurry tanks, and spread on Friday. It is understood that the alarm was raised when the spout of the slurry spreader became blocked.
Earlier in the afternoon, a large slurry agitator — a metal mixer used to break up solids in tanks — along with a pump and gutter system feeding into the slatted unit, appeared to be the focus of examination by Dr Collis and investigating Gardaí. Slurry spreaders are also being forensically examined.
A truck carrying two large metal skips arrived at the scene and placed them outside the slatted unit.
Meanwhile, Gardaí have returned to one of two fields where slurry was spread yesterday. Up to twelve uniformed officers, equipped with metal litter-picking tools, were seen walking in a line across the area, moving slowly and methodically as they combed the ground."