Tuesday, 6 October 2020

Victoria Hall - unsolved murder 1999


Victoria Hall was 17 when she was abducted on her way home from a night out in Felixstowe, Suffolk, her body was found five days later in a ditch, the case remains unsolved

This unsolved murder investigation by Suffolk Police was re-opened on 9th September 2019, the twentieth anniversary of Victoria's disappearance.

The teenager had been on a night out with her friend Gemma Alger at the Bandbox Nightclub, in Bent Hill Felixstowe but never returned home. The two friends had left the club at around 0100 hours, made a stop at Bodrum Grill take away, then walked two miles back to their home area of Trimley St Mary. 

The pair had reached the junction of Faulkners Way and High Road at around 0220 and said "Goodnight" to one another just 300 yards from Victoria's home, but she is thought to have been snatched from the roadside before she reached her house. 

Victoria's body was found in Creeting St Peter, Stowmarket, which is some 25 miles from where she lived. Her body was found naked and in a deep water-filled ditch on 24th September 1999. Autopsy investigations were unable to clarify exactly how the A-level student teenager had met her death and could only confirm that she had suffered some level of asphyxiation 

Since re-opening the investigation in September 2019, police have reported that they have received over 50 calls from the public in relation to the case, but it's 21 years ago so things are never going to be straightforward. 

Suffolk police said that they cannot elaborate or give details yet but some good new lines of enquiry were generated from those calls and investigations are ongoing. They have said that the case was made 'live' again and was being fully re-investigated by a new team of officers after new information came to light. 

Victoria's father who still lives in Trimley St Mary near Felixstowe said "They are sifting through those calls and the information that was given but it's a painstaking process but it gives us hope"

As a part of the new investigation, Suffolk police released details of items that belonged to Victoria Hall that have so far never been recovered, along with some CCTV footage of people visiting the area where the body was dumped (pictures at the bottom of the page, courtesy of the BBC)

Parents of Victoria describe her as a vivacious, teetotal "Model daughter", a description that I am slightly confused by as she had been to a nightclub, but I guess not everyone has to consume alcohol to attend a club. The main thing is that as it sounds like Victoria would have been completely sober, so she must have been literally forced into a vehicle of some kind, rather than getting into a car with a person under the influence.

There are one or two points of interest that I am not clear on with this case; one, in particular, is her friend Gemma said that she remembered hearing a scream but "never really gave it a thought", hmm a little odd in my estimation. Two girls have just walked back from town together, just after parting company for the night one hears a scream but doesn't think "Oh hold on I just left my friend, maybe I ought to see if she is OK". 

Interestingly reports from local residents say that they also heard screams and a car with a heavy sounding exhaust roar off at around the same time that Victoria was thought to have been abducted but they also "Never really took much notice". Forgive me maybe I am just nosey but despite living in the suburbs surrounded by busy railway and not far from major road networks, if I was awake at that time of the morning and heard screams I would at the very least have a lookout and maybe even contact the police. Sorry I digress, I just thought I'd put it out there

Moving on . . .

CCTV clips released by police that are thought to be relevant show a van pulling up by the gates to the field where Victoria's body was found, The van reverses back then drove forward again to the field entrance. The driver is then seen leaving the van, entering the field and looking around on the ground close to the entrance as if looking for something. Did this man drop something on the night of Victoria's murder and return in hope that he would find the item perhaps?

A second clip shows a group of people with torches going into the field by the same entrance under the cover of darkness, I can't help but wonder what they were looking for, maybe considering moving the body or retrieving evidence. So far the people in the CCTV clips have not been identified or come forward for elimination as far as I can establish. 

The curious part of this case is that a man was arrested on December 18th 2000 and charged with Victoria's abduction and murder but was later acquitted at trial. It seems that the trial in November 2001 relied very much on geological soil samples a scientific argument went on between the prosecution and defence counsels which lead to a jury finding the suspect not guilty and he was acquitted. 

Adrian Bradshaw, the man charged with the murder of Victoria Hall was the owner of a local newspaper company The Felixstowe Flyer and said that he was relieved to have been rightly acquitted but he expressed his sympathy for the family that are left behind, grieving for their much-loved daughter.

During the two week trial at Norwich Crown Court, counsel for the prosecution said that Mr Bradshaw was seen near to Victoria Hall's home on the night that she disappeared. Evidence was submitted to the court that showed soil samples taken from Mr Bradshaw's Porsche car matched the soil from the area where Victoria's body was found. The court also heard how other witnesses from the local area said that they had heard "horrifying" screams, followed shortly after by a "throaty" exhaust sound which was alleged to have come from Mr Bradshaw's Porsche 944.

The accused did admit to drinking 10 pints of beer and several shots of Vodka at the same nightclub where Victoria ad Gemma had been drinking that night. Prosecution witnesses said that Mr Bradshaw had taken a taxi ride from the club and dropped off just a few hundred yards from the Hall family home.

There were no sightings of the Porsche at the time when it is thought Victoria was taken and it was argued by a "specialist witness" geologist that the soil traces found in the car could have come from other areas of East Anglia, despite the samples being almost absolute matches for the soil in the field where Victoria was found. A friend of Mr Bradshaw, a 27-year-old hairdresser, Peter Dugdale told the court that when the accused went out drinking, he was a 'happy drunk' and never had a malicious bone in his body. 

The jury took just 90 minutes to find Mr Bradshaw not guilty of abduction and murder which seems a little strange, after all the evidence was all there, but that is the difficult part of trials by jury, cases that seem really obvious can go completely the opposite way. 

Outside court Mr Bradshaw said, "Obviously my sympathies go out to Vicky Hall's family. A jury of 12 normal people have reached their verdict, I had confidence in myself. I did not commit this crime. I am innocent". 

I am quite struck by Mr Bradshaw's choice of words "I had confidence in myself", hmmm not really the words that I would have chosen if I believed myself to be an innocent man, but I cannot accuse the man, he was acquitted and that's that, I will just say "I don't necessarily agree with the jury's verdict in this case" particularly when a senior police officer Detective Superintendent Roy Lambert who lead the massive murder hunt at the time said, "I believe we have obtained as much evidence as we can. We have been investigating this case for over two years and I believe we have looked down every avenue for the person who did this offence".

Victoria's father Graham Hall said "We are numbed by the verdict, whether Adrian Bradshaw was found not guilty or not made very little difference to us. Unless someone owns up to their actions on that night and tells us exactly what happened, that is the only little bit of help we could have".

So readers, have I told you a story of an unsolved murder or has it been solved but the killer has escaped justice? Well, the jury said that justice was done and that the police got the wrong man, I will leave you to decide. Just bear in mind that with the case very much active again new evidence apparently came to life so if I get any updates I will, of course, bring the information to you but one thing that is almost certain Adrian Bradshaw can sleep easy in his bed as laws of double jeopardy will ensure that unless really exceptional circumstances arise he can never be re-tried for Victoria's murder. 

If you do have any information on this case then please do contact The Major Investigations Team at the incident room on 01473 613513 or contact Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111 

If you would like me to review a case for you for documentary, film, radio, podcast or for future blogs then please get in touch 

My secure email is: jaradcoldcases@protonmail.com

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Clothing similar to that from Victoria Hall's case:




 



















Wednesday, 30 September 2020

Where is Leah Croucher

 

Leah Croucher vanished on February 15th 2019 from Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, England 

This case is very strange with several twists and turns that I will try hard to make sense of as we go along. Let's start with the basic details. . .

19-year-old Leah Croucher was last seen by her parents at 10pm on Valentines Day, February 14th 2019 and reported missing the following day when she did not return home from work. 

During the early evening of February 14th 2019, Leah made her usual walk back from work but, interestingly during that walk, the 'Location' setting on her mobile telephone was switched off, Something which according to her telephone network service provider Leah had never done before and from that time onwards the location was never turned back on. 

At 6pm that evening Leah arrived home, changed her clothes and left the house again wearing a tracksuit, she left on foot and told her mother that she was going to a friend's house for a short time.

By 7.15pm Leah was home again and according to her parents her behaviour seems absolutely normal, but for some reason, she was lying to her mum as it was later discovered that Leah's friend did not see her that evening at all, so for at least 75 minutes of February 14th 2019, there remains a question as to where the 19-year-old went.

She left home at 8am on 15th February 2019 to make her usual journey to work, she was wearing a black padded coat, black skinny jeans, black Converse high top shoes and carrying a small black rucksack. Beneath her coat, Leah was wearing a very distinctive grey hoodie, bearing the logo of a Taekwondo club run by her dad "Stewartby". 

At 8.13am that morning Leah Croucher was seen by CCTV walking along Buzzacott Lane, Furzton, Milton Keynes, this is the last actual confirmed sighting of her and at 8.43am her mobile phone was switched off.

Leah should have been at work by 9am but failed to arrive, she had not called in sick or booked any time off so that absence was unexplained.

During that same morning, three separate witnesses reported seeing a girl fitting Leah's description walking by Furzton Lake, The times of these sightings range from 9.30am to 11.30am and all three said that the girl was "visibly upset and crying" whilst talking on the phone, of course, none of the "witnesses" attempted to approach the girl and enquire if she was OK. 

Police have never been able to confirm if this was Leah Croucher, but if it was then she had to have been using a different mobile phone, as previously mentioned hers was switched off. Incidentally despite appeals, no other young female has come forward to say that it was them by the lake on that morning.

When 6pm came and Leah failed to arrive home her concerned parents contacted the police and reported her as a missing person and they began to look for the teenager, but there was no sign of her. Local friends were unable to help with any leads so on 17th February 2019 the police held a press conference to officially declare Leah Croucher as missing. During the conference, the police described Leah as white, slim with shoulder-length brown hair and said that she sometimes wore glasses.

The police made hundreds of house-to-house enquiries, made a fingertip search of the area surrounding Furzton Lake and even sent divers down to search the waters, but not a single trace of Leah was found. Further appeals for information were made in the hope that someone would be able to shed some light on the whereabouts of the missing girl, but nothing came. 

On 9th October 2019, a woman came forward to say that she remembered walking by the Blue lagoon Lake in Bletchley in February 2019 where she saw a grey hooded sweatshirt hanging from a tree, it had the "Stewartby" logo on it, Police launched a full-scale search at the Blue Lagoon with divers going into the lake and sniffer dogs used to search the woodlands that surround it. The search was declared complete after 10 days, nothing at all was found. I suspect that the woman concerned gave the police a hoax story, something which often happens in these cases. 

Leah's parents described her as bright, confident and loving, very much a 'creature of habit', even when she did go out for an evening out she always made certain to be home by 1am. They went on to say that Leah was a family-orientated person who cared greatly for her family and friends.

Unfortunately, all is not as sweet as it first appears; Leah was involved in a relationship with a man that was engaged to be married and had lied to her parents by telling them that the relationship was over, when in fact she is thought to have spent a night with him at a local travel lodge just 12 days before she disappeared. even on that occasion, she lied to her parents, particularly her father as he dropped off at the Jury's Inn hotel in Central Milton Keynes and waved goodbye as she walked off into the hotel. Leah had told her family that she was spending the night at a hotel with two other girls as they were planning "a girly night", drinking, chatting and gossiping.

It was only much later after Leah had vanished that her parents realised they had been lied to when Leah's bank statement came which showed that in fact, Leah had booked into a much cheaper hotel, The Travel Lodge. Unfortunately by the time, this information came to light the CCTV for the hotel had been overwritten so it could not be established who Leah spent the night of February 3rd 2019 with, but it seems likely it was the engaged man. When questioned, none of Leah's friends knew anything about a night in a hotel and had definitely not stayed with her anywhere.

Leah Croucher's mother Claire said that the relationship had begun in 2018 when Leah suddenly began to talk about this man constantly, unfortunately, this man cannot be named here due to legal restrictions.

Mrs Croucher said that Leah was talking about this man all the time, "it was X this and X that, it was quite obvious she had a soft spot for him, She would go to see him in the evenings, paying £13 each way by taxi in order to spend time with him". "It just wasn't like Leah to do that kind of things, she was such a home-loving sort of person and didn't like going out much". 

Claire went on to say "Then we found out that he was engaged, I remember saying to her, don't go falling for him, he will never be yours". "We were under the impression that she had finished with him then".

Continuing her story Mrs Croucher said, "I didn't take much notice at the time, but now having had the time to think about things I realise she had become moody, which was totally out of character". "She would sometimes be snappy and would go up to her room and sulk. We just put it down to teenage angsts and didn't really take a great deal of notice". 

Police have apparently spoken with the man concerned and ruled him out of any enquiries as he had a solid alibi for the date and time that Leah vanished, although I have to say this doesn't necessarily sit right as there is a big window of time that would need to be accounted for. 
Let's be fair, we believe that she had been to hotels with this man before so could easily have started off at a hotel somewhere for a few days, particularly if she stayed in a "cash-paying" place, "no questions asked", so to speak.

One very interesting point here is that her mobile phone records do not show any sign of secret relationship arrangements for clandestine meetings, etc. I am sure that there must have been telephone calls, text messages, maybe messages on services such as Whatsapp, but according to the telephone company there is nothing at all

Mrs Croucher did say that Leah had Snapchat and that she was aware that within minutes of things being posted there they are literally wiped, but I am sure that the police would have been able to recover anything if they felt it necessary, I only wonder if perhaps this teenager had a separate 'secret' mobile phone that she used to contact whoever she was seeing.

I am not sure why but don't think that Leah has come to any harm and is most likely still alive. There is the possibility that she has somehow been abducted and murdered but I really am not convinced. The area where Leah was last seen and known to have walked was a busy area, particularly at the time of morning that she was last seen. The area is used by school and works traffic, both vehicles and pedestrians so I am more than convinced that she has taken off with someone or indeed alone to start a new life.

There was a scenario that crossed my mind in that if Leah had been having a relationship with this 'engaged' man then did his fiance find out, track Leah down, enticed her to a meeting in the belief that she would be meeting her man and then killed her. Whilst no possibility should be ruled out in a serious case like this, I don't think this is a likely outcome. 

There are many things that have been hidden in this case and Leah's own father said that he knows that someone from the local community holds key information about what has happened to Leah and in fact, he quite recently threatened to put the name out there if the police don't. 

It strikes me as very curious that Leah's family homes were searched, their cars and workplaces, yet "Mr X", the engaged man has never had his home searched, his workplace or car and Leah's parents recently told the local newspaper "The MK Citizen" that police even refused to forensically examine the engaged man's clothing that he wore on 14th and 15th February 2019. Why is that I wonder? Someone is hiding something in this investigation of that there is no doubt.

One other question that does play in my mind is based on a small point, but I feel may be of importance. and that is: On February 3rd 2019 just 12 days before Leah vanished she stayed at a hotel which she had lied to her parents about, she didn't turn off the location on her phone, yet on 14th February whilst on her way home from work she did, she then vanished the very next morning.

I have a feeling that when Leah went out on the evening of February 14th she was supposed to leave then, but something went wrong, hence the reason for her swift return within just 75 minutes. After all, she had lied to her mum in saying that she was going to a friend's house, there had to have been a reason for that. 

My gut feeling is there is a great deal that is not in the public eye and there was a great deal happening in Leah's life that her parents knew nothing of. I feel in all honesty she is out there somewhere and I would say to her to get in touch with her family and let them know she is safe, even if she does not want to return home. She will be 21 now of course and very much a woman, not the teenager that left home on 15th February 2019, maybe has a child, who knows.

I have read the tragic news that Leah's brother Haydon committed suicide as he was consumed with the loss of his sister and not knowing what happened to her. He was found hanged and taken to hospital but after two days his family had to make an agonising decision to switch off life support equipment due to multiple organ failure. I am so sorry for the family and my heart goes out to them but this is not the place to discuss that further. 

I just hope that Leah makes contact with her family if at all possible and as always in these cases, I will say if anyone does have any information as to Leah Croucher's whereabouts or any information about that may help police on solving this case and getting closure for the family then call Crimestoppers on 0800-555-111 

If there is a case that you would like me to blog on or indeed undertake research for a documentary, film, podcast or publication then please do pop me an email up: jaradcoldcases@protonmail.com

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Sunday, 27 September 2020

What Happens When Murder Goes Cold

 

According to recent research, there are more than 1,100 unsolved murder cases in the UK

Many of the unsolved murders in the UK are quite old, with some dating back several generations whilst others are much more recent. Police forces claim to never truly close cases, they leave them on file and review them from time to time. Is that truly good enough? In my opinion "no it is not", but funding is simply not made available by the government to keep officers active on cases and that combined with the factor of evidence drying up forces a case to become cold.

Sadly many people, even the dedicated true crime fans that I am proud to be associated with will have cases that they have never heard of, cases such as Emile L'Angelier from Glasgow, poisoned in 1857 or Emma Jackson of St.Giles, London, she was a sex worker who was stabbed to death in a room at a brothel in 1863. Both of these cases remain on file with the police but are cold and unsolved.

Of course, there are also the more famous cases of murder that still send a chill down the spine of many to this day, cases such as Jack The Ripper. Those cases have had so much input from members of the public, detectives, armchair detectives, writers and more that the chances of the true killer ever being identified are extremely unlikely. 

According to research figures provided by the BBC London's Metropolitan Police have the largest number of unsolved cases per individual force with 341 cases being unsolved and on the cold case list. It is worth pointing out that this figure only covers the dates from 1996 to the present day, so the actual number of unsolved murders within the Metropolitan force is considerably larger.

So why are so many cases unsolved? Well in murder investigation there are some important points that make a huge difference to the outcome of a case. 

Firstly it is very important to remember that "Time is of the essence" at the outset of any criminal investigation, even more so in the case of murder. It is very important that a crime scene is secured as quickly as possible these days to allow an in-depth investigation by forensic scientists. The first few hours truly can 'make or break' the outcome of a murder enquiry.

The first 24 hours, can sometimes be pushed to as much as 48 hours but as soon as the crime scene is freed up so that anyone can access it then the game is over and things deteriorate. Of course in older times there was either very limited or no forensic science of any sort so a crime scene inspection would have relied on the eyes of the police and detectives to spot particular aspects of a crime,

Victimology says that in many cases of murder, the killer will be known to the victim so if an investigator can establish what put an assailant and a victim in the same place at the same time then a case will begin to build. Establish a reason for the killing and the case is well underway, sadly this is one of the key elements that lets an investigation down as there is seems to be no reason at all for the killing. 

The victimology of a murder enquiry combined with the piecing together of the final days, hours and minutes of a victim's life are the major part of modern investigation. This combined with the forensic investigation is the reason that many more cases are solved in modern times, but still, there are cases that for one reason or another are unsolved. 

Unfortunately, there are many cases of corruption, whereby a person will be "fitted-up", made a scapegoat of and the murder will seem as if it is solved, sadly the true assailant will be out free and roaming the streets. There is wrongly a line of belief in some police officers and other officials minds that "As long as there is a name in the frame, that's all that matters". 

There is a case that I recently reviewed; The murder of Judith Roberts saw a young man with various mental health disabilities (Andrew Evans) sentenced to life imprisonment for murdering the teenager. Despite his confession during a delusion episode, there was absolutely no other evidence to convict Andrew the police still took the case to trial, They obviously knew that Andrew was not guilty of murder but "they had their man they could close the file". Of course, now that Andrew Evans is free and his conviction overturned the case remains unsolved.


There is a theory that the murder was committed by Peter Sutcliffe, the Yorkshire Ripper, but it is just that, a theory without foundation. 

There is another issue with unsolved cases, one that often leads to cases going cold, that is the group of people that either investigate a case so much that they become desperate to name an assailant or really do not do their research properly and just name a particularly well-known killer for many crimes. This then causes the pubic to "take their eye off the ball" because a case appears solved when it is not. 

There is a writer out there selling his books in which he claims two or three serial killers to be responsible for a number of crimes, his theories are unfounded and lack evidence but "hey he's selling his books", and that is so wrong. 

Moving on. . .

When a case has gone cold with no new evidence coming to light and enquiries pretty much exhausted, senior police officers, meet to decide whether the case should be "shelved" and the desks cleared to make room for more active cases. Of course, that is not the end of a case by no means, current police policy is to review cases every two years to see if there is anything new or to see if the ever-progressing world of forensic science can offer anything new. 

Cases are often reviewed by private organisations, independent investigators and the like, sometimes that route can prove fruitful as an independent investigator may just pick up on that little thread of evidence that was either missed by the police or presumed not to be relevant to the enquiry. Once again with the advancement of various forms of science and the ever-growing power of the internet, particularly social media new things come up and cases are solved. 

There are also times when certain things change, a member of a criminal gang leaves or is shunned by his group so he feels it is time to open up and give information about a murder that he previously would have stayed quiet about, loyalties change with time.

A recent post by a journalist from the BBC said: "For many of the cases that are unsolved, it is too late to ever get to the bottom of what happened". I absolutely disagree with that writer, in my professional opinion it is never too late, a case is always worth reviewing, always worth looking over again even old ones. 

Unsolved UK crime, particularly murders are a passion of mine and I will always be more than happy to review a case, just in case, there is one person out there or one scrap of evidence hidden somewhere that can be uncovered and a case turned around. 

Cold cases should never be allowed to go completely cold and more funding should be made available to ensure that they are not forgotten, that's my opinion. 

On that point, I will close this one but don't forget; If you have a British unsolved/cold case that you would like me to review for a documentary, film, podcast, report or blog then please get in touch via the contact form below or e-mail me: jaradcoldcases@protonmail.com

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Saturday, 26 September 2020

Who Killed Patricia Grainger?

 

Patricia Grainger was 25 and a young mum when she was viciously raped and murdered in Sheffield on 10th August 1997, to date no one has ever been convicted of this heinous crime

Okay readers, so here we have an interesting and in some ways a still-active case, being kept alive by Patricia Grainger's son, Daniel. 

Let's have a delve into this one and see just how much we can learn. . .

Despite this case being some 23 years old, there is still a great deal of activity it, which is very encouraging, as we know so many cases like this have been allowed to go cold and almost forgotten.

Patricia Grainger was seriously sexually assaulted, strangled, stabbed multiple times and her breasts and genital area were badly mutilated. These dreadful injuries that resulted in her death were inflicted just a few minutes from her home, her body was then dumped in a local woodland brook. The young mother was found face down and forcibly submerged under the base of a divan bed, but to date, the dangerous killer responsible has never been identified. 

Daniel Grainger was just a small child, aged 5 when his mum's life was so tragically ended but he is still campaigning hard to get justice for her and the family, He has been very critical of South Yorkshire Police in regard to their investigation of his mother's murder. I can fully appreciate his anger and disappointment as the police say that although the matter is "subject to review" they no longer have some of the original evidence in the case. In response to this allegation, South Yorkshire Police said that they had submitted items of clothing that Mrs Grainger had been wearing at the time of her murder to the Forensic Science Service for examination, hence the police were no longer in possession of the items. 

The BBC asked South Yorkshire Police about the missing evidence and asked if they had followed correct procedure in sending the clothing to the FSS but other than confirming that a complaint from Daniel Grainger was being looked into, the force did not provide a comment. Sadly the Forensic Science Service closed down in March 2012 so there is no chance of the evidence being recovered. 

One of the worrying things in my research into this case that I find really disturbing is that apparently there was no sign of any defence wounds on Patricia's body, so either she was made unconscious somehow very early into the attack or taken by surprise, maybe attacked from behind with great physical force, The only other possibility is that Patricia was somehow made to fear her attackers so much that she simply did not fight back, but I have to say that seems unlikely as the human instinct is fight or flight.

Unfortunately, South Yorkshire police still refuse to give Daniel Grainger a copy of his mother's autopsy report, they apparently claim that it is to "protect the public from distress" I have to say that my opinion is the same as Daniel Grainger in that the police won't give up the report for fear he may post it on his website and let the truth out.

There were sightings of Patricia up to just a few hours prior to her body being found and although she had been missing from home during the final few days of her life and her family did not know where she was staying during that period. I cannot help but wonder if she knew her killer, had she been staying with him/her? Her body was found by local youths playing by the brook, known locally as 'Tongue Gutter', I can only imagine the shock and trauma that those kids must have experienced in finding a woman so badly mutilated, that is something which will live with them forever. I feel that maybe more than one person was responsible for such a vicious attack, but the ultimate question is why? 

Here is a little timeline of things to assist with understanding the story:

Patricia had not stayed at her home address in Buchanan Road, Parsons Cross since Monday, August 4th 1997, but her parents said that she often visited friends and stayed over, so it wasn't until after in the week that she was reported missing.

Tuesday 5th August 1997 saw a possible sighting of Patricia close to the place where her body was found, but this is unconfirmed

Thursday 7th August 1997 Patricia was confirmed as seen at Northern General Hospital, but the reason for her being there remains unclear

Saturday 9th August 1997 A possible sighting of Patricia at 7.45am when she was seen talking to a man at the junction of Holgate Crescent and Holgate Road, again that sighting was never confirmed.

A very important piece of evidence is that a very scruffy male was seen in the early hours of Sunday, August 10th 1997 in the Collinson / Adrian Crescent area very close to Patricia Grainger's home address and indeed quite close to where she was found dead. The scruffy man is reported to have intimidated a woman who was passing through the area, he stared directly at the woman who feared for her safety and moved away quickly, The man was described as white, about 30 years old, 5ft 6 inches tall with dark greasy or gelled back hair.

According to the post-mortem report, in this case, Patricia had been strangled, stabbed four times in the neck as well as being sexually assaulted, the actual cause of death was recorded as "inconclusive" because it was also noted that water from the brook was found in her lungs, which suggested that an attempt had also been made to drown her or she had at least been alive when her body entered the water. The report went on to state that Patricia had been badly beaten.  

It seems that Patricia Grainger, who had learning difficulties, the mental capacity of a 12-year-old girl, was partially deaf and was thought to suffer from ADHD was far too trusting and according to local people she would trust anyone that showed an interest in her. Clearly, someone abused that trust and destroyed a young innocent woman's life. Someone in the community where Patricia lived with her young son must be carrying around a really heavy burden of a secret through all these years. 

Has the person or persons that killed this young woman gone on to kill again? Had there been other murders that the same people were responsible for prior to the killing? I mean in my experience it is quite rare that a killer will only strike once in a lifetime unless of course there is a reason to just kill that one person i.e. in anger or deliberate targeting in some kind of 'payback'. As there appears to be no real reason to murder such a nice lady, it hardly seems like a 'gangland killing' or something of that sort. 

In an article originally printed by 'The Star', (a local Sheffield newspaper), David Stopford, head of South Yorkshire's major incident review team said: "Mrs Grainger's murder remains incredibly distressing for those who knew and loved her. Throughout our investigation into her death, specific details about the nature of Mrs Grainger's injuries have not been disclosed for a number of reasons". 

Detective Stopford goes on to say: "We did not feel it appropriate to place potentially harrowing, upsetting information into the public domain, where it could cause additional pain to Mrs Grainger's loved ones". He said "In addition, the release of sensitive information could compromise the ongoing investigation"

I personally do not see how releasing details of injuries in a murder case will do much harm to an investigation, except for time wasters who may come forward purporting to be the killer because they had knowledge of the injuries but any good murder investigator knows that there would be more detail about the victim known by police that would not be known to anyone that was not there and ultimately responsible for the murder. Therefore, it is my submission that the reasoning for withholding such information was if anything counter-productive.

On Monday, August 10th 2020 ITV announced that there is a renewed appeal to find Patricia Grainger's killer some 23 years after the horrific murder took place and a £10,000 reward has been offered to help solve the murder. 

Within the report by ITV, Patricia's son Daniel made an impassioned plea: "No-one can ever imagine the pain and suffering our family have had to suffer as a result of my mum's brutal murder. Whilst many years have passed, the memory of what happened to my vulnerable mum hasn't gone. She was treated as if she wasn't human and brutalised in the most sickening way. She trusted anyone that showed her interest and they abused that trust". 

Daniel went on to say: Someone in the community must know what happened to Pat and has sat on the secret for decades. We are appealing to your better nature. With our reward through Crimestoppers still available for three more months, there is still time for you to do the right thing, to tell the truth, and help us get answers".

In the same ITV appeal, South Yorkshire police gave a statement which reads:

"On the 23rd anniversary of the death of Patricia Grainger, we continue to appeal for information which could lead to us bringing those involved in her death to justice. The investigation into Mrs Grainger's death remains under "continual review" by the force's Major Incident Review Team who look at any new leads or lines of enquiry".

Despite this renewed appeal and the regularly updated "Who killed my mum" website set up by Daniel Grainger in 2008 and now the renewed appeal with an offer of a £10,000 reward, there is still no information coming forward and that is very sad indeed. 

It is worth noting that there have been people questioned and even charged with Patricia Grainger's murder but no one has ever been convicted. . .

In August 1997 three people were held by police in connection with Patricia's murder but they were later released without charge. Apparently, they had been held because they had given conflicting statements as to where she had stayed during her last week of life.

In September 1997 a 45-year-old man was arrested and charged with the murder of Patricia Grainger, he was later released. After he was charged the man's house came under attack by residents of the local council estate where he lived, threw stones threw his windows. The married man took his wife and children to another estate and left his home boarded up, it was consequently set in fire, The case against the 45-year-old collapsed.

In 2008 two ore people were arrested in connection with the murder and placed on bail, the case against them was closed in April 2009, no charges were ever brought against them. 

So we are back to the question "Who killed Patricia Grainger"? Someone somewhere must know what happened, obviously, someone out there has Patricia's blood on his or her hands and her son Daniel is desperate to put the case to rest with closure as to what happened to his mum and who is responsible for it. 

Do you know something? Maybe you remember someone suddenly acting differently? Did someone you know suddenly have a big impromptu bonfire in August 1997? Did someone you know suddenly over away from your area in Sheffield? Did someone arrive in your area in a rush in August 1997? 

There is a young man out there, desperate for answers, there is a reward available for information leading to the conviction of Patricia Grainger's Killer. Maybe you have held the terrible secret all these years? If you have any information then, please call Crimestoppers right now 0800 555 111 and do the right thing

Don't forget if you have any unsolved/cold UK rue crime cases that you'd like reviewed, like me to blog on or you need research undertaken for a documentary, film, book or even a podcast do please get in touch. 

You can email me: jaradcoldcases@protonmail.com

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Monday, 21 September 2020

Judith Roberts Murder Linked to Yorkshire Ripper?

 

For more than 25 years it was believed Judith Robert's killer was behind bars, but all was not that simple or straightforward

Judith Roberts was just 14 years old when she vanished whilst out on a cycle ride on 7th June 1972 in Tamworth, Staffordshire, later the same day her body was found in a field, badly battered and hidden under some discarded fertiliser bags covered with a pile of hedge clippings.

Police believed that Judith had been dragged from her bicycle, into the field then beaten to death and dumped like rubbish.

A massive murder hunt was launched, one of the most intense crime hunts ever known in The Midlands. over 15, 000 sets of fingerprints were taken and 11,000 door-to-door inquiries were made, but the inquiry was stalling. 

Four months into the inquiry, the police had what they thought at the time to be a huge breakthrough, a 17-year-old army recruit named Andrew Evans came forward and confessed to the murder of Judith Roberts.

Evans told police that he had been disturbed by a dream during which he believed he had seen Judith and he asked officers for a photograph of the child. He apparently told the police "I keep on seeing her face, I want to see a picture of her. I think I may have done it".

Police asked Evans if he had ever been to Tamworth and his very unusual reply was "I don't know, I don't know, I could have been, "I don't remember where I've been". When Police pressed Andrew Evans for a straight answer to the question "Did you murder Judith Roberts"? He replied "This is it, I don't know. Show me a picture and I'll tell you if I've seen it". 

Now don't take me wrong readers but does that really make sense? Does that approach not seem just a little questionable, a little odd? Obviously, Andrew would have seen photographs of Judith in the media, on posters, and in many places, after all, there was a nationwide manhunt for a child killer in progress. 

Elaborate Hoax? Yes I think so

I have to say that if I had been a police detective working on the investigation, big alarm bells would have been ringing in my head, something clearly didn't add up. Nonetheless,
 detectives continued to pursue things, believing that they may well have had their man.

Andrew Evans was not your average 'thug' on the street, he had been prescribed medication to treat depression and was widely known to be a fantasist. Bizarrely after 3 days of questioning, he made a full confession to the murder of Judith Roberts and he was charged.

Evans had put forward some alibi stories but these had not held up, He had claimed that he had been in army barracks in the company of three other soldiers but police established that two of the soldiers had in fact left barracks sometime before the time of the murder and the third was simply not traceable, suggesting that Evans had made him up. 

12 months passed and by the time of the trial, Andrew Evans was absolutely adamant that he was innocent and had played no part in the murder of the 14-year-old. Unfortunately, he was not able to provide any credible evidence to support an alibi. 

During the trial, there was no real evidence placed before the jury, save for Andrew's rather shaky and somewhat unbelievable 'confession'. An independent doctor advised the court that Evans was suffering from amnesia, so he was convicted of murder and given a life sentence to prison. His legal team advised him that he had no grounds at all from which to launch an appeal so Andrew Evans spent the next 20 years in custody.

Things began to take a turn when in 1994 whilst serving time at HM Prison Verne in Dorset, Andrew had a chance meeting with Steve Elsworth, who had been at the prison giving a talk on Greenpeace to the prisoners.  

Steve Elsworth made a note of Andrew's contact details and a few weeks later returned to Verne Prison to carry out a formal and in-depth interview with Andrew Evans. As a result of the interview, notes were passed on to Carlton Television and they produced a crime show called 'Crime Stalker'. The knock-on affect of that crime show lead to a documentary being produced that was aptly titled 'The Nightmare'. 

During this part of his sentence, Andrew had also decided to write to an organisation calling themselves 'Justice' and asked them to take on his case and that is exactly what they did. After an investigation, Justice helped Andrew to make an application to the Court of Appeal and he subsequently won the right to go ahead with an appeal. 

The Court of Appeal were told that in 1972 Andrew Evans had been on medication to treat severe depression and that during the trial he had been given a "truth drug" which 20 years on had been proved to produce 'false memories' and that coupled with the very questionable way that detectives had originally handled the case saw Andrew Evans case acquitted. The original conviction was overturned by the Court of Appeal and Andrew was a free man, having been awarded £750,000 (Seven Hundred & Fifty Thousand Pounds) in compensation by The Home Office.

The case thus remains unsolved but in more recent times a theory has been put forward by historian and forensic psychology student Sarah Clark, suggesting that Judith Roberts may well have been an unidentified victim of Yorkshire Ripper, Peter Sutcliffe. She has put the name forward as being responsible for this case and stated that she is working on seven other unsolved murders, which she believes may have also been committed by Sutcliffe.

I am not personally convinced by this theory, although the method of killing does match those used by The Ripper, namely a head injury caused by a blunt instrument. It is in my opinion all too easy to put a murder down to a serial killer, with the attitude "That clears that one up nicely". After all, Sutcliffe will die in prison, so whether he has 12, 30, or 50 murders that he is claimed to have been responsible for then it won't make any difference to his sentence and gets another one off the police's unsolved crime database. 

Of course, that is not the right or appropriate way to deal with serious cases where a person, in this case, a child has been killed. The family deserves better and so does the victim, to be fair a murderer could still be prowling the streets out there, knowing that he or she was responsible for a vicious murder.

Let's take a look at a report from The Birmingham Mail published in February 2019, just to see what they have to bring us. 

They say that Peter Sutcliffe was convicted of the murder of 13 women and attempting to murder 7 more. He apparently matched the description of a man seen very close to the scene of the 1972 murder and a car with an uncanny similar description to the Ripper's car was seen at the scene on 7th June 1972. The interesting part of that report in my opinion is that having been supplied with all that "information" back in 1972, the police did nothing much to act upon it as far as we are aware. In fact, police went on to push for a conviction of a mentally unstable young man, based solely on a confession that was clearly a fantasy story. Why not use the "evidence" of the car and the man's description to pursue their man? 

According to apparent 'news archives' there was evidence put forward at the time as follows:

1. A man matching Sutcliffe's description - black curly hair and long sideburns was seen talking to Judith Roberts shortly before her death

2. The man in question was wearing work clothes and wellington boots, when he was caught Sutcliffe admitted sometimes dressing like this when he was killing

3. Judith was killed by being repeatedly bludgeoned to the head by a blunt instrument, a method of murder used by Sutcliffe.

It has also been suggested that there is a similarity in the way that Judith's body was hidden in comparison to that of red light district worker Helen Rytka, killed by Sutcliffe in 1978. Rytka was hidden beneath asbestos sheeting and of course, Judith Roberts's body was hidden beneath fertiliser bags, but I do not see this as such an odd way to hide a body bearing in mind that Judith was killed in the countryside in a very rural location.

The main point of this blog is to highlight that Andrew Evans was convicted of a crime that he did not commit based on a confession that he made whilst in a delusional state caused by a combination of depression and the medication used to treat it. He was 17 and spent 25 years of his life due mainly to the police's hunger to simply get a conviction, regardless of how truly credible the "confession" actually was.

As to the theory of Sarah Clark, well I am not satisfied that this murder was the responsibility of Peter Sutcliffe at all. I feel that she is swayed by her close ties to the family of Judith. Sarah's mother Donna Osborne was best friends with Judith's twin, Anne, her grandmother was hairdresser to the girls and relatives lived literally just down the road from the murder scene. 

I feel that the story and the whole sadness that surrounded a murder that literally stunned a community have been passed down to Sarah and since Andrew Evans was exonerated she has been desperate to get the case concluded to give the people of her village peace and closure, I feel that this may well have clouded her judgment a little, plus the simplicity to put a serial killer's "name in the frame" is just a finishing touch.

My final word on this case. . .Remember that Peter Sutcliffe having confessed his crimes said that "God had told him to kill Prostitutes", that's right 'prostitutes' not 14-year-old children in quiet villages.

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If you have an unsolved/cold UK case that you would like me to review for a blog, a documentary, film or other publication do please pop me an email, I am always delighted to look into new cases for you.

jaradcoldcases@protonmail.com



 











Monday, 14 September 2020

Doused in Petrol & Burned on Church Steps - Unsolved


31-Year-Old mum of two was blindfolded, forced into a car then dumped on church steps, doused in petrol and set alight in Cheshire in the UK

This story shocked the whole nation, yet 26 years on the vile perpetrators of this heinous crime remain undiscovered and Tracey Mertens family are heading towards their 27th Christmas without her. 

Tracey's children are now adults they were 11 and 12 respectively when the tragedy struck their family after their mum set off from their new home in Rochdale in Greater Manchester heading for Birmingham to collect her benefits book. She had recently moved back to Northern England to be with her on-off partner Joey Kavanagh and their two children. 

It is quite important to note here that Tracey and her partner had originally got together when they were 16 but they had quite a disrupted and somewhat strained relationship and this was exacerbated by the fact Joey was a drug user and always owed people money.

Tracey Mertens had originally planned to travel to her old home in Birmingham and back to Rochdale in one day but ended up spending a night with her sister-in-law, planning to set off back the next day.

The next day Tracey went to her old house as arranged and was surprised within ten minutes to receive a knock at the front door. Two men burst into her home and demanded to know the whereabouts of Joey Kavanagh. Tracey refused to tell the men anything and she was then blindfolded and forced into a very old rough looking yellow Ford Escort car and driven some seventy miles to a village in Cheshire called Eaton. 

Some five hours after Tracey was snatched from her old house a person passing near the church in Eaton heard Tracey screaming and discovered her on the church steps on fire. It was a very cold winter night and Tracey's clothes were smouldering and there was a strong smell of petrol. She was so badly burnt that the witness initially thought she was wearing a Halloween type of costume. 

Tracey was able to give details of her horrific ordeal from her hospital bed before she sadly passed away on Christmas Eve 1994.  Doctors said that the burns covered 95 per cent of Tracey's body, so for the 12 hours that she fought to live I can only imagine that she must have been in excruciating pain. She described her abductors as big, fat and black, around 30 years old with Birmingham accents, but they actually spoke in a foreign language that Tracey did not recognise or understand for most of the time she was with them, detectives believe the language may have been Patois, a Jamaican dialect. They both wore long black leather coats and brown leather hats When detectives visited Tracey's former Birmingham home they noticed that the word 'death' had been daubed on the window with white paint.

Tracey's murder was reconstructed by BBC Crimewatch during which her family spoke of their deep pain at the loss of Tracey. Her daughter Kelly spoke to the programme saying "The happiest times of my life were with my mum, the memories that I have of her and the things that I have been through alone when she should have been there, she deserves to be at peace, but I don't think she ever will be until these dreadful people are caught"

This case was reopened by Cheshire Police in 2003 in hope that with the advances of technology and forensic science the monsters that killed Tracey may be brought to justice but 11 years on police are no nearer to finding the answers. 

Joey Kavanagh flatly denies that Tracey's murder could have been connected to him in any way but I personally do not believe that at all. Here was a man who was a regular drug abuser that had moved over a hundred miles away from Birmingham to Rochdale and when his partner returned she was abducted and murdered by men demanding to know his whereabouts.  It seems interesting that Joey could not offer any insight into who may have been responsible for the mother of his children's murder yet he owed many people money including I suspect drug dealers that he had double-crossed 

Detective inspector Kate Tomlinson from Cheshire police said "Tracey met a violent and horrific death at the hands of her killers. She was so brave and told detectives as much as she could before she died. That information was vital to our investigation team at the time and many lines of enquiry were pursued"

She went on to say "Over the years we have renewed our appeal and a number of people have come forward with information - I would like to thank them for their assistance. However, despite enquiries having been pursued, no one has been identified for Tracey's murder".

A Birmingham man was at one stage charged with conspiracy to murder but the charges were later dropped with no further action. 

I must say that it seems rather curious that even in 1994 the yellow car was not picked by CCTV somewhere en route between Birmingham and Cheshire, it could be a possibility that there was a vehicle change but as Tracey's information was quite detailed I would be surprised as she did not mention it. 

There is, of course, the question of why they chose that particular location to dump and murder Tracey, the area is quite rural so it is not a place people on a journey from one place to another, was this place known to them? Had they visited the church before? Do they maybe have a relative or friend in the area or even possibly know if someone buried in a grave in the churchyard? Maybe records of recent weddings, funerals, etc that had taken place at the church in the months leading up to the murder. 

There is also the big risk that they took in travelling some 70 miles with a woman in the back of a Ford Escort Mark 2, (hardly a big car with lots of space inside), particularly as she was wearing a blindfold and would have probably been moving around trying to get free. After all, a car with two big men inside being driven probably at speed with a woman in the back seat wearing a blindfold could have easily been noticed by other motorists. Something doesn't quite add up there, maybe Tracey was mistaken and the vehicle was an Escort van? Doesn't seem that likely but there is a lot to be learned from that part of the enquiry in my opinion.

As a point of interest Tracey Mertens apparently left Joey Kavanagh and returned to her home town of Rochdale in the summer of 1994 and whilst staying at her sister's house she taped up the letterbox, taped the curtains together so that they couldn't be opened and generally acted rather strangely. A family friend said that she believed that Tracey was afraid of seriously afraid of something or someone, maybe this lady was half expecting to be attacked or murdered? 

Finally, the police say that sometime after Tracey's murder they were approached by a couple that were drug users and informed that the couple had received a call warning them 'if you don't pay up, you will get what Tracey Mertens got'. I will leave you to draw your own conclusions on this one, though the reason for Tracey's murder seems pretty clear cut to me.


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Friday, 11 September 2020

Lyn Bryant - Murder Unsolved

 

Lyn Bryant was aged 40 when she was murdered whilst out walking her dog

On the afternoon of October 20th 1998, a 41-year-old housewife set out on a regular dog walk with her Lurcher called Jay. Lyn Bryant took her usual very familiar route along the Ruan High Lanes, under a mile from her home, a walk that she took alone with her dog every day. She was wearing a Tan waxed coat, dark jeans and a blue jumper with brown walking boots.

Lyn was last seen alive at 1.45pm close to the Ruan Methodist Chapel chatting to a man described as being in his 30s and around five feet, nine inches tall and wearing 'light' clothing. I feel this is one of the earliest indicators of something a little unusual. Remember it was an October day and therefore not that warm, in fact, the weather forecast for that day (link below) suggested rough wet and windy conditions so why was this man dressed so lightly? 


Anyway, I digress. . . 

A tourist found the body of Lyn Bryant in the gateway to a field at 2.30pm, her clothing had been disturbed possibly indicating a sexual motive for the murder, She had been savagely attacked with multiple stab wounds to her neck, throat and back. The tourist called 999 and when the air ambulance arrived at around 2.50pm Lyn was sadly pronounced dead at the scene. 

Evidence shows that Lyn had fought hard with her killer and therefore the person responsible for her death would have been covered in blood, probably bruised and certainly pretty shaken. Forensic officers say that they believed that the killer had been with Lyn Bryant for some time and that injuries suggested that she had been stabbed whilst standing up and again laying horizontally. The dog had not been harmed at all during the attack. 

Lyn had been to her regular job as a cleaner at a local house, then briefly popped in on her parents on her way home. She had then gone out again driving her car, a grey Ford Sierra, when she firstly visited Harris Garage but having discovered that they were out of petrol she then drove on to Chenoweth's garage where she filled her car with petrol, bought some foodstuffs and went home. 

It was noted that during her drive Lyn was followed by a man described as being of large build and around 50 years old with a scruffy beard, he was driving a white van, possibly a Volvo van which was seen on the forecourt of Chenoweth's garage at around 1.05pm. More than 6,700 white vans and their owners have been identified and tracked during the course of the long-running investigation.

Lyn returned home and had lunch with her 19-year-old daughter Erin during which they discussed Lyn's upcoming 41st birthday, before setting out to walk the dog.

As you can see things seemed to happen in somewhat of a succession and over quite a small space of time. I mean let's just take in that at 1.05pm Lyn is at a petrol garage fuelling her car and shopping. By 1.50pm she had driven the mile or so home, presumably put her shopping away, had lunch, got her coat on and made her way to the Ruan Methodist Chapel and was talking to a man. Just 40 minutes later she was found dead in a field gateway. It seems suggestive to me that Lyn Bryant may have gone out quite quickly after her shopping trip in order to meet the male, whilst I am unable to find any actual evidence of this it does seem more of a distinct possibility. Did Lyn go out and unwittingly meet her killer? Just a thought. 

A critical sighting was made by a farmer at between 2.45pm and 3pm when he saw a man walking across a field which does not have a footpath close to it or surrounding it and according to the farmer was never normally used by walkers. The man was wearing what the farmer described as normal clothes and shoes which of course is quite odd for two reasons, firstly the weather was wet and rough and secondly, he was crossing fields in late autumn when it would obviously be muddy. 

A vital piece of evidence is a quantity of vivid blue polyester-cotton mix fibres found on Lyn's body. The police have since identified them as the sort used in the manufacture of polo shirts and sweatshirts. There has been no identification as to a specific manufacturer or brand thus far, obviously, that would narrow things down still further, It is fair to assume that the fibres were left by the killer as they were completely alien to Lyn and her home, again this is suggestive of a link to the man seen wearing 'normal' clothes perhaps, but we should not explore a line with no supporting evidence either.

Some four months after the murder on the 2nd February 1999, Lyn's tortoiseshell spectacles were found just 3 feet from where her body had been discovered plainly sitting on top of the mud, an area which had been intensely searched by police. 

The 2nd February was a dry and mild day with temperatures as high as 8 degrees Celsius in Cornwall so it's not like the glasses suddenly blew out of a tree in a storm or anything. So did the killer return to the murder scene for some strange reason maybe to relive his or her sick fantasy again? Another question which pops into my mind, did the person that reported finding the glasses actually "find" them on that day or on the day of the murder? Did that person have a connection to the murder, maybe the killer was known to them and they hid that from the police?

The police are absolutely certain that there was no way the glasses could have been missed during the in-depth search of the area in October and as the area was a muddy and well-used entrance to a field the glasses would have been damaged or buried long before a six month period had passed. There is something really quite curious about the "discovery" of those glasses that I feel somehow is very relevant to identifying the killer. I truly believe that when the person found those glasses and reported the find to the police it was one of the moments when the police were, in fact, closest to revealing the killer's identity.

During the murder investigation, the police interviewed every male aged between 14 and 70 years old on the Roseland Peninsula but they did not reveal anything of real relevance and certainly did not find Lyn Bryant's killer.

The area where this murder took place is a very remote area of Cornwall and the murder investigation team are satisfied that the killer was almost definitely a local person with good knowledge of the area. Senior investigating officer detective Stuart Ellis said "This is a very remote area and not the kind of place someone is liable to just wander into" He went on to say that it is much more likely that the killer was someone that had a definite reason to be there, whether that be work, family or another connection but the indication is that it is almost certain that the person that was responsible has good local knowledge and local contact.

A very interesting little twist to this story is that in 2013 a self-proclaimed psychic medium and drag queen known as Tristan Rees came forward to police claiming that he had seen regular visions of Lyn's murder and that he was visited by her spirit. During such "visits" the spirit showed Tristan what he described as almost film-like footage of her being followed then murdered. He said that he had begun to receive these spiritual communications just a few months after Lyn Bryant was murdered and they were very graphic, however, he did not contact police as he felt he may be made a suspect. 

Police did indeed treat Tristan Rees as a suspect in as much as they took DNA samples from him but no action was taken against him. Tristan later said that he believed the police had taken his samples because of how much detail he was able to give to them. He described the vehicle in which the killer fled the scene and the killer himself but I think the police possibly saw Tristan Rees more like a suspect than an informant due to the length of time that had passed before he came forward. 

Tristan described the killer as having ginger but greying hair, a wrinkled face and wearing a blue boiler suit and heavy boots which were covered in blood when he left the scene. He was driving a large white van. The clairvoyant said that he was plagued by the spiritual images and visions for some 15 years before he eventually found the courage to contact Devon and Cornwall police and give them his drawings of the suspect and details of the murder. I personally feel that there is good and credible evidence in Tristan Rees's words but it seems the police did not take things seriously enough. 

He said that he left the drawings and description documents at the police station and the spiritual communications stopped, that was the last that he heard of it all until some two years later when two plain-clothed police officers arrived at his home and took DNA samples. As far as I am able to ascertain Tristan has not been contacted further and is unsure whether he may still be considered a suspect. 

I would love to speak to Tristan Rees but I have not so far been successful in establishing contact, I will, of course, advise you here and via social media if and when that changes. 

In 2015 police went back to basics so to speak and undertook a full forensic view of the case during which they examined hundreds of exhibits. A partial DNA profile of the person believed to be Lyn's killer was able to be found 

It has been suggested that there may be links to some other murders of lone women walking dogs within a few months of each other, do I think they are linked? In all honesty, I doubt it. There is a slight possibility that the murder of Kate Bushell may possibly be linked due to some similarities but I feel that the murders of Helen Fleet and Julia Webb are almost certainly separate cases. 

Helen Fleet was murdered in March 1987 so over 11 years before Lyn Bryant and Julia Webb's murder took place some 310 miles away from Roseland Peninsula in Cornwall and even 223 miles from Exwick in Devon and there was no stabbing of the victim at all. The only way I see any link could be established between the killing of Helen Fleet, Lyn Bryant and Kate Bushell is to explain the very long gap between the murders. If anyone has anything that you would like to suggest then do please get in touch, I would be delighted to hear from you my contact details are below and of course you can leave me a comment here. 

Of course, if anyone reading this knows anything or even believes they do then please do get in touch with Devon and Cornwall Police or Crimestoppers at once, remember even the smallest piece of evidence, a name, a vehicle identity or a location can change this enquiry and lead to justice for Lyn and especially for her family left behind, still not knowing who was responsible for her horrific murder or why.

Points of interest

(Not necessarily related to the case) 

20th October 1998 was Tuesday and was the 293rd day of the year (the 42nd Tuesday of the year) This pattern of dates will be exactly the same will be 2026 when in effect you could reuse your 1998 calendar 

In mythology, October began the season for military campaigns and ended the season for farming. In the Roman religion October 19th, the day before this murder the festival of Armilustrium was celebrated in honour of Mars, the god of war. On this day soldiers, and weapons were purified 





Chilling Messages - Trevaline Evans

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