So CAL waits 2 to 2 1/2 hours to have the first ransom note opened. (I've checked with the FBI and no one else in their history has ever not opened a sealed ransom note immediately upon its discovery -- CAL is the one and only not to open a sealed ransom note).
Then, on March 16 (15 days after his son has been kidnapped) Condon receives the Dr. Denton sleeping suit in the mail around 10 in the morning. It's the first (possible) tangible piece of evidence of Charlie's existence in 15 days and what does CAL do?
He waits 15 1/2 hours to take a look at it. (Instead of having someone from Condon's house driving it to Highfields in under 2 hours).
Finally, on the evening of May 12th, CAL gets word while he's out to sea that a body has been found 4 1/2 miles from his house. According to Edwin Bradley Bruce (in his 5/18/32 NJSP statement), he drove CAL to Highfields and arrived there around 1:00 A.M.
After endlessly searching for his son for 72 days, the body of his son might be a mere 10-minute drive from his house.
What does CAL do?
He waits 14 hours to view the body at 4:00 P.M.
What was he doing that was so much more important than seeing if the body ten minutes away was his son's or not?
Who here would not have been at the morgue when CAL arrived home or at least first thing in the morning?
Lucky Lindy. A man with a whole lotta of time on his hands.