Monday, 20 June 2022

Chilling Messages - Trevaline Evans

Disturbing messages have been posted on benches in connection to an antique shop                                 owner who went missing thirty-two years ago

"Justice awaits those responsible for the removal and disposal of Trevaline Evans (in this life or next) from Rhuddlan Golf Club on March 19, 2019, at noon. May the Lord have mercy upon their soul."

Trevaline Evans mysteriously vanished 32 years ago

On June 16, 1990, an Antique shop owner then aged 52 left a note in her shop window which read "Back in 10 minutes" and simply disappeared without a trace. 

Her car was left parked a little way from the shop and no money has ever been withdrawn from her bank account, there seems to have been no reason for the disappearance, no debts, no pressures, nothing untoward. The case still remains open today.

I published a full and detailed blog previously, you can read it here:

In May this year, a report was published by Wales Online and made national by The Daily Mirror. The article talks of some "chilling messages" that have appeared on a bench that bears a plaque in memoriam to Trevaline.

The message that was written on the plaque openly makes an accusation that someone has moved Trevaline Evan's remains, but so far as I am aware Trevaline was never found so if the allegation is true then someone not only knew where she was but was probably the same person responsible for killing her and disposing of the body.

The messages allege that Trevaline's remains were moved from Rhuddlan Golf club and that "justice awaits" the perpetrator. Are we going to see the killer revealed? 

The message written last year read:  "In memory of Trevaline Evans Vanished 16/6/1990. Found - Rhuddlan GC (Golf Club) 14/3/2019 Removed 19/3/2019 RIP". 

There have been two similar messages left, the first was last year some 30 miles from Trevaline's hometown Llangollen in Wales and the more recent message was written on the plaque on a bench on the hillside of Prestatyn close to an abandoned miner's cottage

The more recent message read:

"Justice awaits those responsible for the removal and disposal of Trevaline Evans (in this life or next) from Rhuddlan Golf Club on March 19, 2019, at noon. May the Lord have mercy upon their soul."


Plaque on a bench on Prestatyn Hillside

So why post these messages so long after the disappearance? Why is this happening? Clearly, someone knows something and has held this information for many years. It is a real puzzle as to where Trevaline Evans went and who was behind the disappearance. 

If her remains were somewhere on the golf course, why were they never found? How were they placed there without the ground being disturbed and the greenkeepers alerted? I do understand that there were allegations made that the body was hidden beneath the floorboards of the golf club but this appears to have been false.

North Wales police dug up the bar area some three years ago acting on information from two men, Andrew & Lee Sutton but nothing was found. The brothers made a complaint to the Independent Office for Police Conduct about the way that the case was managed but it was referred back to the local force and dismissed. I have to say I feel these messages on plaques could be connected to the Sutton brothers/

This case is somewhat baffling and I would like to learn more about it, but there is very little to suggest a killer or even a motive for a seemingly well-loved and well-liked antique dealer who ran a curiosity shop. There was no sign of any fraudulent behaviour such as money laundering through the shop and Trevaline's bank account was never touched

If you have any thoughts on this case or would like me to look into a cold/unsolved case for you then I will be delighted to hear from you.

I am a highly experienced cold case investigator/researcher and work on case reviews of all kinds in the UK. I prepare files and dossiers, research cases for documentary and film production as well as blogs and books.

You can find me on Twitter: Jarad Cold Cases

I'm also on LinkedIn: Jarad Adams LinkedIn








 




Monday, 18 January 2021

Back In Two Minutes - An Update

 

Okay so here we are back at the case of missing Trevaline Evans, a case which I brought to you in my blog back in October 2020. You can read the original article Here

I am bringing this short update for you as a reader kindly sent me the pictures shown below, for which I am very grateful.

As you will probably know Trevaline Evans disappeared from the small Welsh town of Llangollen, where she owned an antique and collectables shop. The town only has a population of around 3,700, but is a popular tourist town that attracts quite a number of visitors during the summer season.

Trevaline, by all accounts was a popular local lady with a number of friends, many of whom visited her shop a lot for a coffee and a chat. In fact on the day that she vanished it is estimated that she had received between 25 and 30 visitors and customers to her little shop.



This "memorial" bench, for Trevaline Evans has recently been placed on the route to Rhuddlan Golf club

The bench (pictured above) is sighted alongside the Prestatyn to Dyserth walkway, approximately 30 miles from Llangollen.


This plaque was fixed to the bench but has been badly defaced, interestingly other similar benches in memory of other local people have not been damaged hardly at all

According to locals, the plaque was not authorised to be fixed to the council owned bench and the reason for it being placed there has now become something of a puzzle to the walkers that stroll through the area and to the police.

The inscription reads:

"In memory of Trevaline Evans vanished 16/6/1990. Found Rhuddlan GC 14/3/2019, removed 19/3/2019 RIP"

GC thought to stand for Golf Club where it was alleged by two brothers that Trevaline's body had been buried under the bar.

Trevaline left her shop around 12.40 hours, was seen around the area a couple of times, with the last confirmed sighting near her home in Market street at around 1400 hours on June 16th 1990 and has never been seen since. 

Her bank accounts have never been used since and despite the case being treated as a murder enquiry and many hours of police investigation, she has never been located. 

The plaque on the bench suggests that her body or remains were found at Rhuddlan Golf Club in March 2019, but there is certainly no official record of this and the police deny any such finding. 

As far as the police are concerned the case remains active, but unsolved. 

So what has happened to cause this plaque to appear? Why would someone go to the trouble of engraving such an item? Seems very suspicious to me. The writing says "Found", but that seems to be untrue.

Trevaline's husband was arrested on suspicion of her murder at one point, but there were no charges ever brought and he passed away in 2014, aged 83.

Sorry this is only a short post, I will bring you a full article in due course. I just wanted to update you all with this interesting yet confusing news.

If you have anything further to tell me or you need my professional services then do make contact:

My emails are:

jarad.adams@lollytruecrimeworld.co.uk

jaradcoldcases@protonmail.com

Connect with me via LinkedIn

Follow me on Twitter


 







 









Wednesday, 6 January 2021

Brandon Hill Park Murder - Unsolved

39 year old Derek Grain was found in a pool of his own blood by a nurse walking to work 

On the morning of Halloween 1980 a nurse was making her way to work When she made the gruesome discovery of the body of a visitor to the city of Bristol UK, murdered and dumped.

The man had been battered to death using a road traffic cone filled with sand. Derek Grain had been visiting Bristol on business with British Aerospace in Filton.

Mr Grain had been staying at The Unicorn Hotel for approximately two months and in fact his car was parked there, not used for more than 24 hours before the murder.

Grain had been out for the night at Vicki's and Curves, two nightclubs in the city, where he had been drinking heavily. It seems that he had enjoyed a good and entertaining night with nothing to suggest any problems.

He was last seen leaving Curves nightclub at around 2am, when he headed off alone toward Brandon Hill Lane. There is no explanation as to why Mr Grain took that route and this has become part of the baffling case that ultimately ended in his murder.

The motive for the killing seems to have been robbery as Derek Grain's jacket had been ripped off and approximately £60 stolen, not a massive sum in modern day, but a considerable amount back then. Considering that I started work around my college studies in the mid-eighties and my hourly rate was £1.80.

Grain's bank cards had also been scattered intentionally around his body and were covered in blood. 

It appears that when Grain was drinking he was quite lavish and a little too open in flashing money around, but it was the ferocious way that he had been murdered that was of very real concern. He had literally been kicked in the head and chest as he lay dying and whilst it is unlikely, there is the possibility that in fact he may either have been attacked by two different thugs or the original assailants returned to make sure that they had "finished the job".

Detective Inspector Brian Theobald said at the time "There is a strong possibility that more than one person was involved and the assailants would have at least been spattered with blood as it was a particularly vicious and brutal murder" .

Mr Grain was not a fighter and according to his work colleagues although he enjoyed going out drinking he would never get involved in fights or pub brawls.

There was a massive murder hunt and a number of people were questioned about the savage killing but nothing led to the assailants being identified.

A major lead that seems of great importance features calls made to the police and a local paper, The Bristol Post claiming that a red Jaguar car had been seen in the area at around 3am but the owner was traced and it was confirmed he was not anywhere near Bristol on the night in question.

However, it is very interesting that Mr Grain's hometown was Hitchin, Hertfordshire and that is where the red Jaguar was registered. 

Sadly , despite the progress of forensic science and the fact that some 40 detectives worked on the initial investigation, this murder has never been solved.

Derek Grain was not married and as far as I can ascertain was not in a relationship with anyone. He was not and had not been involved in any illegal or criminal activity.

There seems to be just robbery as the only true motive for this killing but, why such a vicious murder? Had Derek maybe got into an argument, maybe knocked into someone whilst drunk or even chatted innocently to a lady who was with a jealous partner?

The curious thing is that Grain was going in the completely opposite direction to his hotel and there is nothing to suggest why. I feel that this is a very indicative reason for his being murdered in the early hours of that Halloween morning.

Surely even after all this time someone will recall a night when a friend or loved one came home with blood on them, maybe you recall a person dumping some clothes without real explanation, maybe burning clothes and shoes? 

If the red Jaguar was involved, does 
anyone remember being paid to clean it? Loyalties change, even 40 years on, someone knows who was responsible for the cruel and vicious murder of this Aeronautical engineer. If you have that knowledge, even if the assailants are now retired or dead, you should come forward and help the police close their files.

If you do have information then contact UK Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111 

If you want to contact me about this story or to take up my professional services as a cold case reviewer/investigator then please pop me an email.. .

jarad.adams@lollytruecrimeworld.co.uk 
Or
jaradcoldcases@protonmail.com

Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/adams_jarad

Connect on LinkedIn: 
https://www.linkedin.com/in/jarad-adams-8360751b4/





 

Wednesday, 9 December 2020

Lee Balkwell - Was it Murder?

 

Experts say Lee Balkwell's murder appears to have been staged

33-year-old Lee Balkwell was found trapped between the drum and the chassis of a concrete mixer on a farm at South Ockendon, Essex, England on July 18th 2002, the time was 0100 hours.

The first and most obvious question is; what was a man doing on a farm, with a huge cement truck at that time? Okay so I understand work goes on late into the night sometimes but, logic says if a cement truck is mixing and tipping at that time of night then a worker or two would surely be around to spread the poured mixture. Maybe it was the depot and he was unloading, loading or cleaning but he would have other men there too.

Very oddly, there were apparently no lights on, in or around the truck, so how was Lee Balkwell seeing to do his work, if it were just a simple work accident?

Essex police have always treated the incident as a "tragic accident", but it doesn't seem quite that clear cut to me and I am aware that lee's 73-year-old dad, Les Balkwell believes that in fact his son was murdered.

Reports from a team of Metropolitan Police detectives, hired by Lee's father to review the case and a pathologist, Professor Dick Shepherd say that the accident couldn't have happened in the way that it described and it looked "too neat" to have been an industrial accident.

Essex police have already admitted to failing to investigate the death of Lee Balkwell properly and failing to preserve evidence correctly. 

The Independent Police Complaints Commission (IPCC) said in their report in 2012 that Essex Police's initial investigation had been "seriously flawed" and undermined by the assumption that death had been as a result of an accident. They recommended an independent homicide investigation in 2008 and again in 2012. 

Les Balkwell said "I believe that all the evidence points to murder. I have fought all these years to get to the truth and to bring justice to those responsible for Lee's death. This has taken a terrible toll on the physical and mental health of me and my family. I feel that time is running out".

A team of retired career homicide detectives presented Essex police with new evidence yet the investigation was formerly closed down in 2018 and despite pressure from Lee Balkwell's family and the detectives, police refuse to re-open the case. 

On March 25th 2013 Lee's body was exhumed from his grave at Upminster Cemetery and re-examined by Home Office pathologist in a two-hour review, curiously the examiners declared that there was "no evidence of torture". 

Whilst Les Balkwell had somehow expected there to possibly be evidence of stab injuries or ligature markings still visible, violent and obvious physical marks are not necessarily the only signs of a murder.

I would very much like to scrutinise any toxicology reports and maybe any close examination evidence of skin that was made at either autopsy examination, particularly the one made soon after the death. Let's consider such methods of murder as injecting poisons, insulin or even air if the "bubble" is big enough. 

It interests me that the pathologist was clear that there was no evidence of torture, yet the body had been compressed between the drum and the chassis of a massive concrete mixing truck suffering considerable crushing injuries, I believe. I will picture a concrete truck similar below just so that you can imagine the damage that would be done should you become trapped between the mixing drum and the base of the lorry.

A concrete mixer, similar to the one in this report

Now whilst I accept that pathologists are extremely good at their job, I fail to see how any medical examiner could be so absolutely sure that none of the injuries sustained by a man whose body had been stuck in the way that Lee Balkwell's were caused by any sort of physical torture.

Interestingly, the pathologist that carried out the autopsy on Lee Balkwell (Dr Michael Heath) has since been discredited and disciplined for bungling the post-mortem examinations of two women which led to their respective partners being tried for murders that they simply did not commit.

Another point in relation to examinations of Lee Balkwell's body, a separate pathologist, Dr David Rouse, who originally said that there was no evidence of assault, restraints or grip marks on the body, later said in a report that "It was not possible to rule out the idea of the victim suffering an assault and being dragged across the yard". Why wait some five years to say that? Had he been "silenced" perhaps? After all, as I will demonstrate a little later, one of the possible "culprits" was by late 2006 locked up in prison.

To be fair and honest a report published by The Guardian newspaper stated that "The emergency crews called to the concrete firm lorry on a farm in Essex in the early hours of a summer morning met a scene that will stay with them forever. Mangled between the drum and chassis of a concrete-mixer lorry was a torso of a man, his legs twisted and lying on a pile of dried cement".

I would be happy for a pathologist or coroner to contact me and convince me otherwise, feel free if you are qualified in such a profession.

My opinion on the way that the second autopsy was carried out is much the same as Les Balkwell in that he held "serious concerns", particularly when an inquest in 2008 had already ruled that the verdict was "unlawful killing" possibly manslaughter! As far as I am aware the results of the second autopsy have never been made public by the police, why if the death was caused by "a tragic accident"?

One very curious point here is that Lee's mobile phone was buried with him and the police did not do an examination/assessment on the sim card. They still didn't carry out an examination of the phone or sim card despite exhumating the body, they then returned the phone to the grave when the re-burial was carried out. 

A very relevant point of this story is that when ambulance paramedics assessed the scene, one wrote in his pocketbook the words "Foul play", another stated that she believed that she was looking at "a suspicious death" and the third noted that he was "not keen to touch the body because he did not want to damage or destroy evidence", yet the police just took the death as an accident, really? Why not make a thorough investigation and ask questions of people connected? 

The fact is that the police totally contradicted themselves as they say that they treated the death as suspicious for the first 35 days but then why did they destroy Lee's clothes on the same day that he was found, without even having them examined by a pathologist first?

Now comes somewhat of a twist in this messy story; Lee worked for the Bromley family at their company "Upminster Concrete", The Bromley family were, to say the least, "known by the police" and some four years after Lee's death, Simon Bromley was given an eight-year prison sentence for what the judge described as "operating a cocaine business in a large way" and for attempting to sell a high-powered rifle with Titanium bullets, which he said would "destroy all the main organs".

David Bromley, father to Simon was also convicted of conspiracy to supply cocaine and was sentenced to three years in prison. 

In 2009 Simon Bromley was back before Basildon Crown Court where it was said that he had benefited from £606,178 (Six hundred and six thousand, one hundred and seventy-eight pounds) from the proceeds of crime over the years, he was made subject to a confiscation order and told he must pay £210,158 (Two hundred and ten thousand, one hundred and fifty-eight pounds) or serve a further three years in prison. 

A final point, in this case, is that Lee Balkwell had told his father Les, that he needed some £23,000 in cash in order to settle a debt, shortly before his death and had appeared distressed on several occasions. However, when his father pressed for the reason for him having such a large debt and why he was so distressed, Lee refused to enlighten him further.

It is my opinion that Lee may well have become entwined in the secret and illegal drugs business of the Bromley's and had maybe run up a debt of some kind in connection with that business. It is worth noting that Lee and his wife had a baby on the way and he may well have seen a little "investment" would bring him some well needed extra cash.

I will close by saying that over the years since Lee Balkwell's death his father has received death threats and has been given police protection on more than one occasion and so we are back to a question; Why would you threaten a man who simply wants answers concerning his son's death, if that death was just an unfortunate "accident at work"?

I will leave it there and you can draw your own inference. 

If you do have any information in regards to this case then please either contact Essex Police 01375 391212 or contact Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111 

If you would like to discuss this case or indeed you have a UK cold case that you'd like me to investigate, review or simply blog on then please get in touch. 

To email me: jarad.adams@lollytruecrimeworld.co.uk
              or : jaradcoldcases@protonmail.com

You can connect with me on LinkedIn: By clicking here

Follow me on Twitter: Click here































Friday, 27 November 2020

The Unsolved Murder of Alistair Wilson

 



Alistair Wilson was a family man, just 30 years old, born on 4th March 1974 and worked at The Bank of Scotland. He was the second born to his parents Alan and Joan Wilson.

He was shot three times on the doorstep of his home in Nairn, Scotland on November 28th 2004, almost 16 years ago. 

The murder enquiry that ensued is still one of the biggest of it's kind ever to take place anywhere in Scotland and has been described as "Scotland's most mysterious unsolved crime".

There seems to be no motive for the killing but despite attracting massive amounts of media interest this "most baffling case of modern times" remains unsolved, no one has ever been arrested, in fact, there has not even been any suspect suggested.

Alistair didn't owe anyone money and was not exactly a rich man, he lived a normal, everyday family life, going to work by day and enjoying time with his wife and two young sons at home. His father lived in a flat on the top floor of the family house in Crescent Road, Nairn. 

Alistair was a quiet and reserved child and rarely went out after doing his school homework. He went on to study accountancy and business law at Stirling University where he graduated in 1996. He took his first bank job later that year and having completed his training was still with the same employers when tragedy struck.

At approximately 1900 hours on 28th November 2004, a man who was not known to the Wilson's knocked at the door of their home, he was described as being stocky, aged between 30 and 40 years, wearing blue jeans, a blue jacket and a baseball cap. Veronica Wilson, Alistair's wife initially answered the door and the man asked for Alistair Wilson by name. 

Curiously the caller at the door only said "Alistair Wilson" rather than doing as you and I would and saying something on the lines of "Good evening, is Alistair Wilson in please". This apparently did not concern or alarm Mrs Wilson at all, something which I find a little odd. 
I know that if someone knocked at my home and just said "Jarad Adams" to my partner, she would be very cautious.

I am also quite confused as to why Veronica Wilson did not try to establish this "unknown" caller's identity before summoning her husband. In my professional opinion, this is a very questionable action, particularly when you consider that there were two small children in the house and Mr Wilson worked in a bank.

Anyway, Alistair was upstairs reading bedtime stories to their sons at the time and having been called down by his wife he went to speak to the visitor. After just a few minutes he went to his wife, looking very confused and carrying an empty blue envelope with the name 'Paul' written on it. 

He asked his wife was she sure that the unknown visitor had asked for him, and when she assured him that "Yes, he asked for you in person"
Alistair then went back to ask the visitor to ascertain what the meaning of the envelope was, that was when Veronica Wilson heard three gunshots. 

When she rushed to the door she found her husband badly wounded on the doorstep, she called an ambulance and the police but sadly Alistair died soon after in hospital.

Clearly, the name 'Paul' on that envelope was significant and I suspect the fact the envelope being blue to have been of some relevance too, but it is not clear as to what it meant.

According to Mrs Wilson, neither she nor Alistair sensed any element of concern or danger at the time. Really? I fail to see that. Let's just look at this point: 

An apparently complete stranger had knocked on the door, not even exchanged any pleasantry with Veronica and her husband had been handed an envelope that was unsealed, with nothing in it and clearly addressed to a person that was not him, yet he returned to the front door to speak with the stranger again, completely unperturbed. Well, I know that Scots are friendly people but really no fear was seen in such a strange, if not creepy situation? I don't buy it.

I feel that a big, big question here is "Who was Paul"? I don't feel that there was any mistaken identity as according to Veronica, the visitor definitely asked for her husband by name, so why Paul? Why was the envelope empty?

My feeling is that the killer knew that the envelope would form a key part of the murder enquiry and would be all over the media news thus taking a message to Paul, maybe something like "you're next mate". 

Let's consider for a moment that Alistair lived in the highlands of Scotland and may not have been the easiest person to locate so maybe the message for Paul was something on the lines of: "We found him, we will find you". 

I have a very strong feeling, call it years of experience, but my gut says this was and is a much bigger case than the highland police would have us believe. Almost certainly Mr Alistair Wilson was involved in something on quite a major scale. The police say that their investigations took into account the possibility of some kind of infidelity, but they found nothing, I have to say I am not entirely convinced.

My thoughts are based on evidence that has been gradually released into the public domain including the factor of the very unusual gun used to commit the murder and even the sound that it made when fired.

The weapon was found in a drain in Seabank Road, Nairn, just a few streets away from the murder scene. Apparently, when quizzed on why that particular street had not been searched at the time of the killing, police said that "it was outside the search parameters". I really don't see that nor accept that as a reasonable excuse, in fact, it just arouses my suspicions more.

A council worker, Charles McLachlan, had been called to clean out drains and gullies in Nairn in preparation for winter weather when he found an unusually small pistol, the sort carried by Russian prostitutes. The Haenel Schmeisser hand-gun weighed only 400 grams and was just four-and-a-half-inches long, certainly not a common, everyday murder weapon for sure. 

The pistol is most unusual in that it is 6.35mm in calibre, semi-automatic pistol only 11 have been found in Britain. It is known as "the handbag gun" or "ladies gun". Obviously, the weapon would have been very easy to conceal and Alistair probably barely saw it before it was fired and he was dead.

I am not in the habit of posting a lot of pictures but in this case, the gun is so unusual I will pop it in here:

The unusual gun used to kill Alistair Wilson

The weapon was swiftly sent off for forensic examination but there was no DNA evidence nor fingerprints were found. It has been suggested the Scottish weather had washed the gun clean but, it is actually much more likely that the gun had been thoroughly cleaned by the killer and was disposed of, indicating that the killing was a very carefully planned and professional job, not a random murder nor a case of mistaken identity when it came to the victim.

So why kill a relatively young family man who simply made his living by working in a local bank? Well a former Scotland Yard detective, Peter Bleksley made an in-depth study of the case and indeed published a book called "To catch a killer" looking at the story in detail.

As a result of his writing, Peter Bleksley has received several calls over the years about Alistair Wilson's murder and has been given some curious information. He told The Press & Journal "The information I have been given is that the man went to the front door of that house to negotiate not to assassinate. He was clearly prepared to kill, as he had a gun, but he did not intend to kill, something went wrong".

Now that is a very interesting avenue to explore, what was there to negotiate? I understand that Alistair worked in a bank but, a business banking manager wasn't likely to be negotiating any legitimate form of bank business at his front door in the dark. In fact, he had recently been offered a new job as a regional director of the Building Research Establishment in Inverness and had been due to start there a week after he was murdered.

There has been very little in the way of witnesses in this curious case and the perpetrator seems to have evaded all the local CCTV completely.

One of the few witnesses who did feel he may well have travelled on a bus with the person responsible for murdering Alistair Wilson was a man named Tommy Hogg, he said that he even saw the man heading toward the house.

Tommy said that he will never forget the face of the stranger that sat next to him and his wife on the bus on that November night. "I said to myself as we got on the bus "that guy is weird". 

Mr Hogg told the media; "I kept looking at him, he kept looking away. Every time I caught his eye, he would pull his collar up. I remember saying to my wife that I thought he was up to something, she agreed".

According to Hogg, the stranger left the bus at the stop before Alistair's house and headed in the direction of Crescent Road, but even after the man had turned the corner he continued to play on Tommy's mind.

Tommy said "Later on that evening my wife went to the chippy to get us some dinner and when she came back she told me someone had been shot. She came back in and said to me 'you're not going to believe this but there has been a murder in Nairn, the place is swarming with police".

Mr Hogg reported what he and his wife had seen and the police claimed to have identified the man from the bus, spoken to him and eliminated him from their enquiries. Tommy, however, is not convinced as the police did not even tell him that the had found the man. They also failed to issue an e-fit description of the man, even though Veronica had given a very clear description, I wonder why.

Interestingly, Peter Bleksley wrote in his book published two t
years ago that he was not a big fan of the theory that the man on the bus was Alistair Wilson's killer and I am inclined to agree with him.

A killer travelling by the local bus? Is a man that has just fired six shots into another man and killed him then going to stand at the bus stop with gun powder residue on his hands? No, I think not. If the theory of a hitman being specifically hired to kill Wilson is to be believed then the bus theory is an absolute non-starter. 

Peter Bleksley said very similar things "Gut instinct was telling me that he could not be the murderer. Too many potential witnesses, too high of a risk of being captured on CCTV and how are you going to escape the scene, hail a bus? I don't think so somehow".

Now I am not 100% sure where Peter Bleksley gained the information that lead to him publishing his theories on the murder of Alistair Wilson, but nonetheless, I will give you the story and see what you make of it.

Apparently, a source of Peter Bleksley told him: "Alistair was killed because of the finances of Livingstone Football Club. That is common knowledge among some members of the legal profession in the Central Belt. The reason nobody has come forward is because they don't want an assassin at their front door".

Apparently, Livingstone Football Club rose rapidly through the ranks of football and finished third in the top flight in 2001-2 but, their finances were in a bad way and they were forced into administration by The Bank of Scotland in February 2004. I think we may see a bit of a pattern forming here as Alistair worked in that very same bank.

To be fair the allegations have never been addressed by the Scottish police and as nobody from 2004 is still at the club, they cannot investigate themselves. 

Now according to Peter Bleksley, he had spent some time in Scotland looking into the case and whilst in a local public bar he popped into the toilet and a voice from behind him said: "Don't turn around, it was an in-house job, we just couldn't prove it". 

There had been some police officers sitting in the bar that night and Peter is of the mind that it had to have been one of them who spoke to him, but he has not been able to confirm that.

The question that springs to mind is, what does "in-house" mean? Was it a reference to Alistair's working life or his home life? Could it have been a hint of a family member being responsible or someone else?

I personally have a feeling that the whole football club story is a bit of a red herring and that there is something connected closer to home, but that is very much just my own opinion. I will just close by saying that since Police Scotland started their cold case review in 2017 they have been trying to trace a man who lived close to the Wilson house at the time of the murder but has since moved to live in North America.

Interestingly the man that the police would like to speak to, Shaun Douglas was not interviewed by police at the time of the murder, but left for America soon after the event. His family say that there is no chance that Shaun could have had any involvement in the killing but, he has not made any attempts to make contact with Scottish police. 

One last point which I feel to be very relevant and that is that the Wilson family did not sell up and leave after the murder and in fact still live there today, crossing the threshold on which Alistair Wilson met his end on a daily basis, I'll leave you to think on that.

If you would like to make contact with me, whether to chat over a case, to collaborate on a matter or to engage me in my professional status I will be pleased to hear from you. 

You can contact me by email: 

jarad.adams@lollytruecrimeworld.co.uk

jaradcoldcases@protonmail.com

Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/adams_jarad

Connect with me on Linkedin: 











































Wednesday, 11 November 2020

The Strange Disappearance of Martin Allen - 1979

Martin Allen (aged 15) vanished on his way home from school in 1979

 
This case is brought to you with thanks to one of my loyal Twitter followers for alerting me to the story. Before we progress let's make it clear that as far as the law is concerned Martin Duncan Allen is a missing person and hopefully this publication will help to raise awareness not only of this case but of the many youngsters who go missing every year.

Teenager Martin Allen was last seen making his regular underground train journey home from school on the afternoon of November 5th 1979, there have never been any further sightings of him, so what happened to him? 

His description at the time of his disappearance was; 
Under 5 feet tall, exceptionally short for his age and younger in appearance, (although his photographs appear as if he was indeed 15 to 16 years old, in my professional opinion)
Shortish brown hair
Braces on his teeth
His school uniform that he was wearing consisted of a white shirt, grey trousers, blue and yellow striped tie and a distinctive dark blue blazer with a gold and red quartered shield motif, with a gold and blue scrolled motto.
He was also wearing slightly unusual blue 'POD' shoes with a white band and a Casio black watch.


We do know that he actually did reach home very briefly but, left again almost at once and was expectedly making his way to his brother's home but never made it. The teenager was in his school uniform, including a very easily identifiable blazer yet he seemingly vanished into thin air, really??

Let's get a little background; 

Martin was born in Islington, London on October 19th 1964 and was the last child to be born to Eileen and Tom Allen. He began his life in a council flat in a district of North London called Hornsey, where he grew up until he was 12. His mum worked as a secretary at a local primary school, (Tufnell Park Primary) and by all accounts, the family lived a relatively peaceful life.

Hornsey is by most part a residential area of London in the borough of Haringey with its own shopping area and tube station in the London postcode area of N8. The area is not and never has been a particularly bad area but like any other area of local authority housing, the place where Martin grew up was not the best and the crime rate was quite high.

In early 1977 Tom Allen was offered a very good job as a chauffeur to the Australian High Commissioner, the job came with an opportunity for the Allen family to move to a cottage in the somewhat exclusive & high classed area of Kensington directly connected to the High Commission. As we go along I will attempt to show you why I think this part of Martin Allen's life ultimately lead to his disappearance. 

Before I get into this one there are two points that I will make; firstly there has been a great deal of speculation in the media on this case with regard to Elm Guest House and VIP paedophiles, I do not intend to discuss that as the allegations against the house were dismissed and the case of the VIPs hyped up by "Nick" aka Carl Beech during Operation Midland between November 2014 and March 2016. 

I have been studying this case and the many reports surrounding it, before sitting down to write. As a result of that, I feel that a lot of time has been wasted and the "public eye" taken off this investigation by conspiracy theorists. 

The other thing that really does concern me is that there has not been a single arrest, no one has been questioned in relation to this matter. When you consider that it has been forty-one years and this disappearance concerned a 15-year-old boy.

Okay, so let's look at this a little further into things and I will give you my opinions. .

So, a young boy grows up nice and peaceful, doesn't get in with any gangs or unsavoury types, lives on a council estate where the chances are he enjoys quite a decent community spirit. Suddenly when he is twelve his life is turned upside down when his father gets a very high profile job in a very powerful organisation and the whole family move to a somewhat exclusive area of London and live in an "elite" cottage provided as part of Tom Allen's job. 

Now let's be fair here, the sudden change of employment for Tom doesn't seem what you might term "an everyday occurrence". Even more back in the 70s than now, jobs like chauffeuring for the Australian High Commission aren't exactly advertised for 'Joe Bloggs' in the local job Centre. I speak from experience when I say that certain jobs are often in a closed shop and passed along from "a man who knows a man", so that rang alarm bells as soon as I began to research this case.

So, Martin changed schools to become a pupil at Central Foundation Boys Grammar School in Cowper Street London EC2, where he apparently excelled in most of his academic subjects. The nearest underground station for Martin to get to and from school was Old Street, which is both a mainline and underground station. 

Old Street station is fed by the Bank branch of The Northern Line between Moorgate and Angel and The Northern City Line between Moorgate and Essex Road Stations. 

On November 5th Martin Allen had spent the day at school as usual and travelled home on the London Underground just as he always did. He planned to go to see his brother, Bob, who lived close to the Holloway Road. Martin remembered that he had to travel home first as he needed to pick up some money for Bob's wife. 

Martin's usual afternoon routine was to travel with his friend Ian Fletcher from Old Street station to Kings Cross station using the Northern Line, then he would get a Piccadilly Line tube Southbound and get off at Gloucester Road. 
Interestingly he would often meet up with his mum on the train, she would sit on the same seat so as he knew where to locate her. Eileen was attending a class on that day and would be home later than normal.

Of course on the 5th November 1979, his mum was not travelling, whether there is any relevance, I can't be sure; I do feel it certainly seems likely that whoever took the teenager away had a good idea of his travel routine and may well have been aware that his mum would not be on the train on that particular day.

He said cheerio to his school buddies at Kings Cross station at around 1550  hours and the last time they recall seeing him he was heading for the Picadilly Line platform to catch his train home. I can only assume that they travelled from Old Street with Martin, then took their own route home, This was to be the last confirmed sighting of the teenager. 

More than ten people gave statements to say that they saw a boy fitting Martin's description on the underground train with a man around 30 years old, with fair hair and a moustache. The only thing that again really doesn't necessarily make sense is that the "witnesses" claimed to have been travelling on different lines, Northern, District and Picadilly lines so clearly at least some witnesses were either mistaken or intentionally mislead police, something that sadly happens a lot in investigations with lots of media coverage. 

Martin's brother confirmed that Martin did arrive home very briefly at around 1700 hours, collected the money for his sister-in-law and left almost at once. Now there are various unconfirmed sightings but they are timed between 1550 hours and 1645 hours so if he popped into his home at around 1700 where were the men he had been seen with? I can't imagine that they were waiting outside, particularly bearing in mind the location of the Allen family home.

Strangely, it has been said that Martin usually arrived home at around 1620 hours, yet his brother clearly said he popped into the home at around 1700 hours so where did he go during those extra 40 minutes and why did nobody question that time difference at that point? Could those 40 minutes bear relevance? Yes, in all honesty, I believe to be very important. The walk from Gloucester Road tube station to Reston Place where he lived is no more than a five-minute walk.

I somehow doubt that Martin's brother would have been mistaken in seeing his own brother enter the house and leave again, so something doesn't add up here. We could suggest the really dark possibility that his brother was lying but I really do doubt that, so I think we are on a safe bet that Martin Allen popped home at 1700 hours on 5th November 1979, so he vanished on route to his elder brother Bob's home.

There are some quite disturbing statements in this story and if they are deemed to be true then I can only question why the people concerned did not react differently. One lady said that she had seen a man push a boy matching Martin's description up against the wall in Gloucester Road underground station, so why allow that to happen unchallenged? If I was to see a child being assaulted I would instantly either intervene or call for help, such as report the incident to station staff.

There are crucial reports of Martin with a man on the platform of the underground station at Gloucester Road tube station they travelled to Earls court and alighted there. According to witnesses that rode in the same carriage the boy, thought to be Martin Allen appeared 'distressed and apprehensive', the man held the boy at the back of the neck. 

The disturbing part that really doesn't seem quite true is that the witness claimed that the man was heard to tell the boy "don't try to run". Now let's be fair we are talking about a weekday at peak rush hour time on a very noisy train that would have been pretty packed, yet the witness heard that, really? 

I'm not sure if all my readers will have ridden on the London Underground but trust me even in modern times with much quieter, smoother running trains we quite often have to raise our voices in order to hear one another at peak times when travelling on the tube in that area of the city. I really find a lot of witness statements, in this case, to be either far-fetched or created as part of some sort of a pretty elaborate cover-up.

What really concerns me in this particular case is the fact that despite an intense search by The Metropolitan Police there have never been any further sightings of 15-year-old Martin Allen or his "abductor". This man that everyone is so sure they saw has never been identified or indeed come forward. 

So getting to the point, what do I think happened to Martin? Do I think he was abducted and murdered by a paedophile? In all honesty, it is likely but not from any VIP ring. If he was taken by force at all I believe it was by a gay man or group of the same that frequented the gents' toilets either at Gloucester Road or Old Street, or both. I reiterate that Martin would almost definitely be on his own by the time he reached Gloucester Road on his return and outgoing journey as reports say he parted from and met his school buddies at Kings Cross.  

I feel from reading between the lines Martin was struggling with or had realised his sexuality and was visiting the little dens of iniquity known by the gay fraternity as "cottages" before or after school and maybe teasing other guys, but something went wrong, He was then put in a difficult position where he had to actually go through with sexual activity and when he said no was taken away by force. 

In support of this, if the witnesses are to be believed then the man that Martin Allen was seen with on that afternoon is described as:
Aged between 30 and 40 years
Around 6 feet tall
Blonde haired with a moustache
Reasonably well-spoken
English speaking
and the important bit. . .
"looked like a raving poofta" 

I believe that there is a possibility that there is also a connection to this "job" that his father had with the Australian High Commission. A lot really doesn't make sense there and it is known that certain people such as Sidney Cooke drove as chauffers for them from time-to-time. How did a council flat dweller from a working-class background get such a job? 

I feel that the boy may have been targeted through the High Commission and that is why when his brother said that he believed the disappearance was connected with someone 'High up', he was advised to be quiet or risk getting hurt. In my experience with another case, people such as those working in The Australian High Commission do not like their activities discussed. 

One point that I know has been suggested by a fellow researcher is that maybe any abductor may well have not been from the UK, hence he was able to vanish without being identified or apprehended. Was he Australian perhaps? Many pieces of the jigsaw puzzle drop into place if my suspicions are correct.

One thing that does raise concern in my mind is that Martin Allen had contact with many celebrities, government officials and even royals. He had photographed Margaret Thatcher, the then Prime Minister and Prince Charles with Diana. Maybe, just maybe if he was a bit of a keen photographer he "saw too much" one day? I'm not sure what he could have seen or even photographed, but it does make me wonder.

There has been another similar case mentioned in connection with this one and that is the disappearance of Vishal Mehrotra, the difference is that Vishal's body was found, I am really not convinced that Martin was murdered immediately, possibly at a later date and the body disposed of far away from London.

Vishal Mehrotra vanished on 29th July 1981 almost two years after Martin Allen, he also went from London, the area of Putney. I am not sure that the two disappearances are linked but, it is, of course, possible and I may blog on that case on another occasion. 

Unfortunately, The Metropolitan Police initially treated Martin Allen as "just another teenage runaway" for the first few days, simply because there are just so many that do run off every day.  Quite a few days had passed before they decided that in fact, things were somewhat more serious. 

I will be following this up in due course with a further blog on some points of this case when I have had time to really digest the evidence but for now, my submissions are that I believe Martin Allen was not so much 'abducted' but went off with a man not quite wilfully, shall we say "by being persuaded".

I believe there is a very strong chance that there was an Australian involvement and I am not quite satisfied that he was murdered at the time, but may well be dead now. I do not believe that his disappearance was linked with a VIP paedophile ring and I do not feel that there was any connection to any guest house, least of all "The Elm Guest House".

Although this is the end of this blog, I will not be resting from this case so I hope that you will get in touch if you would like to discuss things further. 

Of course, if you have any information, even after all these years that may bring Martin Allen's family closure then contact Crimestoppers 0800 555 111 or via their online web page https://crimestoppers-uk.org/give-information

If you want to get in touch then my emails are:

jaradcoldcases@protonnail.com

jarad.adams20@gmail.com

Follow me on Twitter: https://twitter.com/adams_jarad

Connect on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jarad-adams-8360751b4/




















 















Chilling Messages - Trevaline Evans

Disturbing messages have been posted on benches in connection to an antique shop                                 owner who went missing thir...