Let $a(n)$ be the sequence of composite numbers (starting from $4$). Let $$b(n)=a(n-1)a(n-2) \operatorname{mod} a(n)$$ Obviously, $b(1)=b(2)=0$.
I conjecture that with the only exception for the $b(3)=0$ all terms are belong to $\left\lbrace2,3,6,8\right\rbrace$.
My second conjecture is that the sequence $b(n)$ can be partitioned into blocks $\left\lbrace8\right\rbrace$ and $\left\lbrace3\underbrace{2\cdots2}_{2k-1}6\right\rbrace$.
My third conjecture is that for $b(n)=6$ the remainders of the division $a(n) \operatorname{mod} b(n)$ are belong to $\left\lbrace0,2\right\rbrace$.
My fourth conjecture is that we take the sequence $a_1(n)$ of composite numbers without Sarrus numbers instead (simply as complement of primes and Sarrus numbers), then for $b_1(n)=6$ we have violation of the rule above somewhere, exactly $a_1(n) \operatorname{mod} b_1(n) = 4$. If so, then $b_1(n)-1$ is the Sarrus numbers (since it is divisible by $3$). The sequence of such Sarrus numbers begins
561, 1905, 8481, 18705, 23001, 87249, 154101, 206601, 215265, 289941, 427233, 526593
Here similarly $$b_1(n)=a_1(n-1)a_1(n-2) \operatorname{mod} a_1(n)$$ and Sarrus numbers is a composite odd numbers $n$ such that $n$ divides $2^n - 2$.
Is there a way to prove all or part of those conjectures?