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Murders of Kate Bushell and Lyn Bryant
Exwick Lane (left) and Ruan Methodist Chapel
LocationKate Bushell: Exwick Lane, Exwick, Exeter, Devon
Lyn Bryant: Ruan Methodist Chapel, Ruan High Lanes, Roseland Peninsula, Cornwall
Coordinates 50°43′43″N 3°33′41″W / 50.728479°N 3.561385°W / 50.728479; -3.561385 (Bushell)
50°13′54″N 4°56′29″W / 50.231795°N 4.941366°W / 50.231795; -4.941366 (Bryant)
Date15 November 1997–20 October 1998
Attack type
Murder with a Knife
Weapon Knife
Deaths2
Victims
  • Kate Bushell
  • Lyn Bryant
PerpetratorUnknown
MotiveApparently motiveless killings

The murders of Kate Bushell and Linda "Lyn" Bryant, a 14-year-old schoolgirl and a 41-year-old woman, respectively, occurred in separate incidents of West Country, England. The events occurred in 15 November 1997 and 20 October 1998 respectively. The similar circumstances of the murders led investigators to conclude that there is a high possibility the murders are linked, with both killed with knives while walking dogs along isolated lanes.

Bushell, was found with her throat cut 300 yards (270 metres) from her home. Bryant was stabbed a number of times, her killer had apparently returned to the scene four months later to place her missing glasses back at the site. The apparently motiveless killings, as well as their particularly brutal nature and apparent links, led to fears that a serial killer was at large in the south-west at the time.

In 2018, it was revealed that a DNA profile had been isolated in the Bryant case, leading to renewed hopes that the perpetrator could be identified. There has been speculation that the murders could be linked to the similarly apparently motiveless killing of 66-year-old Helen Fleet, who was also walking her dog in Weston-super-Mare in 1987. If the perpetrator had killed all three victims, he would be an unidentified serial killer. [a]

Both crimes made headline news and received significant coverage in the press and media, and both cases having featured on Crimewatch appeals. As of 2024, the cases remain unsolved. They remain some of the United Kingdom's most notorious unsolved murders.

Murders

Bushell

Kate Bushell
Bushell, c. September 1997
Born1983
Exeter, Devon, England
Died15 November 1997 (aged 14)
Footpath next to Exwick Lane, Exwick, Exeter, Devon, England
Education St Thomas High School, Exeter (Now West Exe School)
OccupationSchoolgirl
Parents
  • Jerry Bushell (father)
  • Susan Bushell (mother)

Kate Bushell, a 14-year-old schoolgirl lived in Exwick, on the western edge of Exeter, Devon. [1] On Saturday 15 November 1997 she set out to walk her neighbours' dog named Gemma as planned, since they were away for the weekend. [1] She walked up Exwick Lane, a narrow rural lane commonly used by dog walkers and Bushell herself. [1] At 6 p.m., with Bushell having not returned home and it being dark, her mother and father drove up the lane in their car to search for her, and also contacted the police. [1] They then searched the footpaths through the adjacent fields and at 7:30 p.m. her father found Gemma, and then saw that Bushell was lying dead next to her. [1] Her throat had been cut. [2]

Three suspicious figures were reported as being near the scene by witnesses: a vagrant, a man with a blue car parked on Exwick Lane yards from the murder site, and a man seen running from the scene. [1] None of these individuals ever came forward to police, and police would later state that this indicated that they had "something to hide". [3]

Most people in the community knew each other well, so it had been noted in the summer of that year that the vagrant had suddenly appeared in the area. [1] In mid-September, a resident noted the unknown man walking past him as he walked his dog on a lane on the outskirts of Exwick. [1] He was described as wearing a long, checky-brown coat with a big collar that was very tight to his neck, and he had long straggly hair. [1] He was between 5 ft 10ins and 6 ft tall, and between 30 and 40 years of age. [1] The witness said he got the impression the man had been sleeping rough in the area. [1] The man was seen around the area several times by the same witness, and was described as always wearing the same big coat, even when it was hot. [1] On the evening of Wednesday 12 November 1997, as the local resident again walked his dog down the lane, the vagrant suddenly came out from behind the trees and startled him. [1] This was only three days before Bushell's murder, and only half a mile from her home, on a lane which she regularly walked down. [1] On the weekend before Bushell's murder, a neighbour saw an orange or red tent pitched near to the spot Bushell was found killed, and it seemed unusual for someone to be camping on their own outside Exeter in mid-November. [4]

On the day of the murder, Bushell had gone shopping with her mum in Exeter city centre. [1] At 4:30 p.m. she left her house to walk Gemma, her next-door neighbour's dog. [1] At 4:55 p.m., a father and his children who were out walking at the same time passed Bushell as she walked her dog up Exwick Lane. [1] A mother and her daughter driving down the lane at 5:00 p.m. reported passing Bushell and her dog as they drove towards Exwick. [1] They noted that she was looking straight at them, which they thought was unusual, and slightly further up the road they saw a man stood by a small blue van that was parked on the southern side of the lane. [1] It was parked facing away from Exwick, and police believe it may have been a blue Vauxhall Astra van. [1] [3] The witnesses questioned what the man was doing there, and said after they heard of the murder that they felt guilty that they had not gone back to help Bushell in some way. [1] The location this sighting was reported was only 100 yards (91 metres) from where Bushell was found murdered, and it was the last sighting of her alive. [1] [4] The sighting was also made only minutes before Bushell's murder took place. [1] About a quarter of an hour before this sighting was made, two other witnesses had driven down the lane and seen a blue Ford Fiesta parked in the opposite direction, and it was not known whether this was the same vehicle. [1] The man did not come forward and neither he or his vehicle were traced. [4]

Half an hour after Bushell was found dead and half a mile away, a man was seen running from the direction of the lane into Cornflower Hill in Exwick, while the police helicopter was circling above. [1] Police did not know for sure if the sighting of the man was connected, and when Bushell's murder was featured on Crimewatch in January 1998 they appealed for him to come forward. [1] He never did.

Bushell's murder made front-page news nationally, provoking a national outcry, and was described in an appeal on Crimewatch in January 1998 as one of those murder cases that "strike a nervous chord across the nation". [1] [4] As it was a child who was murdered, the case gained a particularly high amount of attention. [1] It was noted on Crimewatch that the murder appeared to be the kind committed by a repeat offender, with viewers being told: "unless a viewer can help now, the killer might not be caught until he strikes again". [1] The lead detective on the case, Mike Stephens, said that all the officers on the inquiry were concerned that the murder may just be the start of the killer's attacks. [1] Bushell's murder featured on Crimewatch again on 22 September 1998, as part of the 'Still Unsolved' programme. [4] At the conclusion of this second Crimewatch appeal, it was asked for any individuals who knew the identity of the killer to come forward before he committed another offence. [4] Almost exactly one month after the appeal, Bryant was killed. [5]

Bryant

Linda Bryant
Bryant, c. 1998
Born1957
Died20 October 1998
Next to Ruan Methodist Chapel, Ruan High Lanes, Roseland Peninsula, Cornwall, England
Other namesLyn Bryant
OccupationMother

On Tuesday 20 October 1998, Linda Bryant (known as Lyn), a 41-year-old mother-of-two was killed and investigators quickly concluded that her murder might be linked to Bushell's. [5] [3] At 2:30 p.m. she was found by a gate to a field near her home on the Roseland Peninsula in Cornwall, five miles south of Truro, by a holiday-maker driving past. [5] [3] [6] As in Bushell's case, her dog was found unharmed next to her. [5] She had been stabbed a number of times in her neck and chest and police called the murder "horrendous". [5] [3] She had almost certainly fought with her killer. [3] She had been in contact with her attacker for a considerable amount of time, having been stabbed while standing and also in a horizontal position. [6]

At around lunchtime that day, between about 12:30 and 12:45 p.m., a local woman driving on the nearby road from Truro and St. Mawes noticed a stranger walking down the road who she thought looked "odd". [5] As she passed him in her vehicle, he looked straight at her, and this sighting was later the basis of a photofit. [5] He was 5 ft 10ins, in his early 30s, with a square-ish jaw and dark eyebrows. [5] Bryant drove to Chenoweth's garage at Ruan High Lanes and on the A3078 in her car and arrived at about 1 p.m., where she saw a friend and chatted with her. [5] Whilst they were talking, at about 1:10 p.m., a small, scruffy white van turned into the garage and parked at a strange angle, facing towards Bryant's car. [5] [7] [6] The driver was between 30 and 50 years old, with a round face and a full bushy brown beard flecked with grey. [5] [7] He appeared quite big and seemed to be wearing a waxed green jacket. [5] As soon as Bryant exited the petrol station, the unidentified van followed her out of the garage, which the employees of the garage thought odd. [5] It was later discovered that the van had also been sighted on the Friday and Saturday before the murder, and that it had been sighted parked in the layby beside the chapel where she was found dead. [5] The van was described as either an Austin Maestro, a Ford Escort or a Bedford van. [7]

Bryant returned home but left again at 1:35 p.m. to walk her dog along Ruan High Lanes, which she walked on almost every day. [5] She walked towards the Methodist chapel and then left towards Treworga. [5] Then, between 1:45 and 2:00 p.m., a witness driving past saw Bryant speaking with a man outside the chapel, 100 yards (91 metres) from where she was later found dead. [5] [3] He was described as 5 ft 9ins, in his 30s, and wearing light clothing. [3] A farmer moving his animals at the murder site did not report seeing Bryant at around 2:00 p.m., but she was then found dead at this location shortly after. [5]

Chenoweth's Garage by the A3078 on the Roseland Peninsula, Cornwall. On the day Bryant was murdered, an unknown man followed Bryant's vehicle out of this garage in a white van.

The possible links between Bushell and Bryant's murders were noted on Crimewatch on 10 November 1998, and the lead detective on the Bryant inquiry, Chris Boarland, said that there were "distinct possibilities that they are linked", although he said that the murder could also have merely been local in character. [5] He also said that they were working closely with the Bushell investigation team. [5] Both victims had been out walking their dogs in the south-west when they were attacked and brutally murdered, apparently without motive. [5] Boarland said "I truly believe that if we don't catch this man there is every possibility that he will strike again". [7] An appeal was made to doctors and psychiatrists who may have had a patient that may have been capable of such a violent crime, indicating that detectives thought the killer may have been mentally ill. [5] It was concluded that the man in the white van was a strong suspect for the crime, and it was said that he did not appear to be local. [5]

Bryant's murder made headline news and was heavily reported on in the press and media. [5] The murder occurred at a time when other high-profile killings were in the news: ongoing at the time was the high-profile trial of Michael Stone for the Russell murders in Chillenden, Kent, and three days after Bryant was murdered, Stone was convicted of the crimes. A mother and her two daughters had been attacked by a man while out walking with their dog. [5] [8]

Bryant's glasses were missing from her body and were not initially found by investigators, which detectives noted on Crimewatch three weeks later. [5]

Murder inquiries

Initial investigations

The entrance to Exwick Lane, looking from Exwick.

The police investigating Bushell's murder found a number of man-made dens in the area around where she was found dead. [1] Police appealed for any children or adults who had used those to come forward and eliminate themselves from the inquiry. [1] A black bin-liner was also found which contained an individual's personal effects, and some unidentified fingerprints were found on the bin-liner. [1] On Crimewatch in January 1998, the lead detective Mike Stephens appealed to the community of Exwick directly, saying that someone in the community knew who the perpetrator was and requested that they helped bring him to justice. [1] Despite the high profile of the Bushell case, and the appeal on Crimewatch in January 1998, the killer was not caught quickly. [4] Another appeal was made on Crimewatch's 'Still Unsolved' programme on 22 September 1998, in which Stephens said he was "90% certain" that the killer was a local man or someone who had local knowledge. [4] He also stated that the man was right handed, possibly the owner of a blue vehicle, and may have had prior experience of slaughtering animals, particularly sheep. [4] A psychological profile of the killer was also revealed, which said the killer was likely:

  • Aged between 18 and 35
  • Someone with previous convictions, possibly for sexual offences
  • Someone with sexual and/or relationship difficulties
  • Someone who kept pornography
  • Someone who may have shown cruelty to animals [4]
Bushell was found dead with her throat cut on this footpath, about 100 m (110 yd) behind where this image is taken.

Despite the high profile of Bushell's killing and the appeals, none of the three suspicious figures seen in the area of Bushell's murder (the vagrant, the man by the vehicle 100 yards from the murder site, and the man running from the scene) came forward, and Mike Stephens stated in November 1998: "We must question why some of these people have not come forward." [3] Of the man seen by the blue vehicle very close to the scene, he said: "Despite extensive publicity this individual has failed to come forward and may clearly be Kate's killer... we have to conclude after this period of time the individual has something to hide". [3]

Police found nothing in Bryant's background that would lead them to believe that she could be the subject of such an attack. [3] Detectives traced the owners of 8,000 similar vans to the one the suspect was seen driving in the area of Bryant's murder in Devon and Cornwall, but did not find the vehicle, indicating that the driver may have come from outside the area. [7] A criminal profile of the killer in Bryant's case said that he would likely be:

  • A loner
  • Not in a stable relationship
  • Someone who has a hatred of women, which he may have expressed to friends or even psychiatrists [7]

Detectives believed that Bryant did not know her killer. [7] Lead detective Chris Boarland concluded: "This was a planned murder. It was not about Lynda Bryant. This is somebody who was looking for somebody in an isolated location." [7] In both the Bushell and Bryant cases it was ultimately concluded that the motive was sexual, even though neither of the victims had been sexually assaulted. [9] In both cases this was because of the way their clothes had been disturbed by her killer. [6] [10] The murders were described as "pretty unique nationally and internationally". [11]

6,000 people were DNA tested in the first few years of the Bryant investigation, indicating that investigators had DNA evidence. [6]

'Serial killer' fears

In early January 1999 a knife attack on a mother and her daughter in the area prompted fears of a serial killer being at large in the area, and that he was stalking women in the area. [9] A man with a knife had deliberately driven his car into a 17-year-old girl and then drove her and her mother into a nearby field where they fought their way out of his car while he lashed out and slashed the mother's hands. [9] The attack happened while they walked their dog in a country lane in Netherton, near Newton Abbot, Devon, and Devon and Cornwall police said the similarities between the incident and the two murders were "too obvious to ignore". [9] The man had driven past them on the lane in a blue-grey Vauxhall Cavalier saloon, before coming up behind them again at slow speed several minutes later, before deliberately driving into the daughter's legs. [9] The driver got out and held a knife to the girl's throat, saying he would cut her unless they did as he ordered. [9]

The man matched the descriptions of the suspects in the two murders, described as white, 35 to 40, and of medium height. [9] He was 5 ft 8ins tall and well-built, with short fair hair and with a roundish face. [9]

In late January, there was another attack on a woman out walking her dog, 15 miles from the scene of Bryant's murder, and police also investigated whether her attack was linked to the murders. [2] She had been attacked in a lane near Camborne, Cornwall, by a man driving a black vehicle. [2] He was described as large, between 30 and 40, with light hair and wearing dark trousers and a light top. [2]

Killer returns to Bryant crime scene, glasses found

In February 1999, four month's after Bryant's murder, it was reported that Bryant's missing glasses had turned up at the scene of her murder, despite the scene having been meticulously searched at the time of the killing and them not having been found. [12] Detectives said they believed that the killer could have returned to the gateway where her body was found and placed her missing spectacles there. [12] They had been found at the scene by a local man and given to the police. [12] One possibility investigated by police was that the killer had returned them to the scene as he wanted to be caught. [12]

Possible further attack

On 2 July 2000, there was an incident in which a woman was stalked for more than 300 yards by a man carrying a six-inch knife in Salcombe, Devon. [13] Occurring at 7:30 p.m., her Alsatian dog barked at the man and he ran off. [13] Detectives investigated whether the incident was linked to the murders. [13] The man was white with a suntan, about 40 and clean shaven. [13] He had got out of a dark blue Volvo car and was wearing green corduroy trousers and a blue sweatshirt. [13]

Cold case investigations

"All the advice from our profilers was people who kill like this have an offending history. They might be able to go for a while without committing further offences but they won't be able to go indefinitely... where is this person? Are they dead? Are they in prison? I can't believe they are living a normal life. It is a real mystery."

—Chris Boarland, former lead detective on the Bryant case, 2014 [11]

Despite their high-profile the cases eventually went cold, with both investigations remaining open. [14]

Investigators found that a number of bright orange fibres had been left at or near the scene of Bushell's murder, and police continue to appeal for the public to come forward if they know of anyone who owned such orange clothing at the time. [15] In 2014, it was revealed that these fibres had been contaminated in 1999 with purple fibres from a lab technician when the evidence was examined as part of a forensic review. [16] This led to fears that a prosecution would no longer be possible, but police responded in 2014 by saying that it was still possible as some evidence was unaffected. [16]

Over time, the cases have been speculatively linked to a number of known killers. In 2001, the two murders were linked to Philip Smith in the press, after he killed three women randomly in Birmingham. [17] It was said that he regularly visited Devon and Cornwall with the fairground he worked for, and had a sister who lived in Exeter. [17] In 2012, possible links between Bushell's murder and serial killer David Burgess (responsible for the Beenham murders) were investigated after it was discovered that he had been released from prison between 1996 and 1998, a time period in which Bushell was killed. [18] No links were found to either of these killers.

New leads were investigated after a 20th anniversary appeal on Bushell's murder in 2017, but they did not lead anywhere. [14] Detectives remained convinced that Bushell's killer had a local connection due to the location of the crime scene, which was an isolated rural spot mainly used as a cut-through and by local dog walkers. [14] Detectives have also highlighted how the killer would have taken a knife with him that day to the scene, showing he set out to cause harm. [15]

In October 2018, it was revealed that a partial DNA profile of the killer of Bryant had been isolated during a 2016 forensic review of the case. [6] Detectives said that it could be used to eliminate suspects quickly, and revealed that they were re-testing some of the 6,000 people who had their DNA tested in the original investigation (the police had to destroy previous DNA evidence they had in 2013 due to a change in the law). [6] It was also announced that three suspects arrested in the initial investigation had now been eliminated forensically. [6] It was also said that three men of interest in the Bryant murder had still not been identified: the scruffy, bearded driver of the white van seen following her out of the garage, the man seen talking to her beside the chapel shortly before she was killed (the last known sighting of her), and a clean-shaven man wearing "normal clothes" who was seen by a farmer walking through a field away from the scene, which the farmer said was very unusual. [6]

Detectives believe that the "most critical" sighting in the Bushell murder is of the man with the blue car 100 yards (91 metres) from the murder site. [15] [19]

There remains a £10,000 reward for information leading to the capture of the killer of Bushell. [15] There is also a £10,000 reward for information leading to the capture of the killer of Bryant. [20]

On 14 November 2022, Devon and Cornwall Police launched a renewed appeal to the public, appeal for information to find Bushell's killer. A £20,000 reward was offered by the charity Crimestoppers for information which leads to the arrest and conviction of the offender. [21]

In October 2023, the 25th anniversary of the murder of Lyn Bryant, police launched a new appeal. [22] Crimestoppers offered a £20,000 reward for information. [23]

Lasting notoriety

Bushell's murder case is Devon and Cornwall Police's biggest and most high-profile murder investigation, with the investigation costing more than £1m by 2018. [14] Bryant's case, meanwhile, had cost £2m by 2018. [6] Both Bushell and Bryant's murders continue to be heavily featured in the news, and were heavily publicised on the 20-year anniversary of their killings in 2017 and 2018. [14] [6] [24] [25] [26] [27] Bushell and Bryant's murders are seen as some of the most notorious murders in Britain, and are seen as particularly notorious unsolved murders in the West Country. [11] [20] [28] [18]

In 2009, Bushell's case was discussed in detail in a chapter of a book by Vanessa Brown, titled Britain's Ten Most Wanted: The Truth Behind the Most Shocking Unsolved Murders. [28]

The possible links between Bushell and Bryant's murders continue to be noted in the press and media, and in 2018, retired detective Chris Clark claimed that the two murders could be linked to the murder of 66-year-old Helen Fleet in Worlebury Woods, in Weston-super-Mare, in March 1987. [29] [19] She had also been randomly killed while out walking her dog, which was also left unharmed, and was not sexually assaulted or robbed. [29] Clark claimed that there was a similar sighting of a pale van nearby. [29]

The Bushell case was considered to be linked to the murder of Julia Webb, who was murdered while walking her dog in Sandiway in Cheshire on 22 July 1998, but a link was ruled out one month later. [30] That case also remains unsolved. [31]

See also

Other UK cold cases where the offender's DNA is known:

Notes

  1. ^ A serial killer is most commonly defined as a person who kills three or more people for psychological gratification; reliable sources over the years agree. See, for example:
    • "Serial killer". Segen's Medical Dictionary. 2012. Archived from the original on 11 August 2016. Retrieved 15 June 2016 – via TheFreeDictionary.com. A person who murders 3+ people over a period of > 30 days, with an inactive period between each murder, and whose motivation for killing is largely based on psychological gratification.
    • Holmes, Ronald M.; Holmes, Stephen T. (1998). Serial Murder (Second ed.). Sage. ISBN  978-0-7619-1367-2. Archived from the original on 14 May 2019. Retrieved 19 February 2018. Serial murder is the killing of three or more people over a period of more than 30 days, with a significant cooling-off period between the murders The baseline number of three victims appears to be most common among those who are the academic authorities in the field. The time frame also appears to be an agreed-upon component of the definition.
    • Petherick, Wayne (2005). Serial Crime: Theoretical and Practical Issues in Behavioral Profiling. Elsevier. p. 190. ISBN  9780080468549. Archived from the original on 2 September 2016. Retrieved 15 June 2016. Three killings seem to be required in the most popular operational definition of serial killing since they are enough to provide a pattern within the killings without being overly restrictive.
    • Flowers, R. Barri (2012). The Dynamics of Murder: Kill or Be Killed. CRC Press. p. 195. ISBN  9781439879740. Archived from the original on 1 September 2016. Retrieved 15 June 2016. In general, most experts on serial murder require that a minimum of three murders be committed at different times and usually different places for a person to qualify as a serial killer.
    • Schechter, Harold (2012). The A to Z Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. Simon & Schuster. p. 73. ISBN  9781439138854. Archived from the original on 1 September 2016. Retrieved 15 June 2016. Most experts seem to agree, however, that to qualify as a serial killer, an individual has to slay a minimum of three unrelated victims.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah Crimewatch 1998a.
  2. ^ a b c d BBC News 1999b.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k BBC News 1998a.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Crimewatch: Still unsolved 1998.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Crimewatch 1998b.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k BBC News 2018b.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h BBC News 1999c.
  8. ^ "Timeline of the Russell murders". BBC News. 4 October 2001. Archived from the original on 4 April 2008. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h BBC News 1999d.
  10. ^ BBC News 1997.
  11. ^ a b c BBC News 2014b.
  12. ^ a b c d BBC News 1999a.
  13. ^ a b c d e BBC News 2000.
  14. ^ a b c d e BBC News 2018a.
  15. ^ a b c d Devon and Cornwall Police.
  16. ^ a b BBC News 2014a.
  17. ^ a b Sunday Mercury 2001.
  18. ^ a b The Guardian 2012.
  19. ^ a b DevonLive 2018.
  20. ^ a b PlymouthLive 2020.
  21. ^ "Kate Bushell: Family's plea to solve 25-year-old murder case". BBC News. 14 November 2022. Retrieved 15 November 2022.
  22. ^ Shaw, Neil (19 October 2023). "Fresh appeal to find murderer 25 years after mum killed walking dog". Bristol Live. Retrieved 19 October 2023.
  23. ^ "Lyn Bryant murder: New appeal 25 years after stabbing". BBC News. 19 October 2023. Retrieved 19 October 2023.
  24. ^ BBC News 2017.
  25. ^ ITV News 2017.
  26. ^ Sky News 2017.
  27. ^ DevonLive 2020.
  28. ^ a b Brown 2009.
  29. ^ a b c CornwallLive 2018.
  30. ^ "Police rule out murders link". BBC News. Retrieved 28 August 2023.
  31. ^ "THE brutal murder of Sandiway mum Julia Webb is to be recreated by actors for the BBC's Crimewatch p". Warrington Guardian. 3 September 1998. Retrieved 28 August 2023.

Sources

Further reading

  • Brown, Vanessa (2009). "Chapter 6 - Kate Bushell: Stranger Danger". Britain's Ten Most Wanted: The Truth Behind the Most Shocking Unsolved Murders. John Blake. pp. 147–172. ISBN  978-1-84454-759-3.

External links