Missing Pieces
On the night of August 7, 1985, Jeremy Bamber contacted the police at 3:26 AM, claiming his father, Neville, had just called him to report that Jeremy's sister, Sheila, had "gone crazy" with a gun. Upon entering the farmhouse hours later, the police found five deceased family members: Neville downstairs, and June, Sheila, and Sheila's twin sons, Nicholas and Daniel, upstairs. Sheila was found in her parents' bedroom holding a gun and a Bible, which, combined with her history of schizophrenia, initially led police to believe it was a tragic murder-suicide.However, suspicion soon shifted toward Jeremy due to his highly unusual behavior and new physical evidence. Almost immediately after the incident, Jeremy requested that blood-stained carpets be burned and the house be cleaned. During the highly publicized funeral, he inappropriately asked a photographer to capture his left side because it was his "better profile," and instead of hosting a wake for his grieving relatives, he went to Amsterdam to celebrate with his friends. Furthermore, he quickly began selling off his deceased family's cars and belongings.The physical evidence also heavily contradicted the murder-suicide theory. A cousin searching the house discovered a gun silencer containing red stains inside a cupboard. If the silencer had been attached to the weapon during the killings, Sheila's arms would have been too short to shoot herself. Additionally, the silencer's presence in the cupboard meant Sheila could not have committed suicide and then put the silencer away. A scratch on a kitchen cabinet matched the silencer, suggesting it was attached during a violent struggle with Neville; yet, Sheila's long fingernails remained completely intact, and she had virtually no gunshot residue on her hands.A significant turning point occurred when Jeremy's girlfriend, Julie, changed her testimony. She revealed that Jeremy harbored deep resentment toward his family and desired to solely inherit their massive estate and businesses. Julie claimed Jeremy had openly detailed a plan to cycle to the farm at night to avoid being seen, enter through a window, and frame his sister, using her mental illness as the perfect cover. She also mentioned he planned to call his own home from the farm to establish a fake alibi.Despite the strong case against Jeremy, several factors suggest his potential innocence and highlight gross police incompetence. The crime scene was horribly compromised from the start, with officers failing to secure evidence, destroying notes, and allowing the house to be thoroughly cleaned. Some experts pointed out a lack of lividity and uncoagulated blood on Sheila's body when police entered, raising the hypothesis that she might have still been alive during the hours the police waited outside the house. Furthermore, in 2015, a police emergency log surfaced indicating that Neville might have actually called 999 that night to report his daughter's rampage, which would lend major credibility to Jeremy's initial story. There were also arguments that the DNA in the silencer might have belonged to a mix of Neville and June, rather than Sheila, meaning Sheila theoretically could have removed the silencer before shooting herself.Ultimately, the jury voted 10-2 to convict Jeremy Bamber on October 28, 1986. He was sentenced to life imprisonment without the possibility of early release, though he maintains his innocence to this day amid ongoing debates regarding the deeply flawed investigation. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss].
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