Sunday, January 29, 2012

Daniel Caffell Six Years Old : Bullet Wounds To The Head.


During autopsy, which was performed on 8th August 1985, Pathologist, Peter Venezis, recovered four bullets, PV/29 , PV/34 , PV/35 , and PV/36 ...

Since, Daniel was shot five times, and Daniel had no exit wounds, so there must have been one bullet, which was not recovered by the Pathologist...

He was shot five times, but only four bullets, were recovered, during autopsy, on 8th August 1985...

Pathologist, Peter Venezis, can only confirm that four bullets were recovered during autopsy on 8th August 1985 - a bullet is missing, or unaccounted for, which if you add to the twenty five bullets which form part and parcel of the batch of crime scene ammunition, produces a total of 26 bullets, not 25...
Source : Mike Tesko (Unreliable)

Nicholas Caffell Aged Six Years: Bullet Wounds To The Head.

During autopsy, which was performed on 8th August 1985, Pathologist, Peter Venezis, recovered two bullets, PV/30 and PV/31 ...

Since, Nicholas was shot three times, and Nicholas had one exit wound, there must have been one bullet, which was found at the scene (DRH/36) - a loose bullet found in the children's bedroom...


Source : Mike Tesko (unreliable)

Daniel and Nicholas

The boys were found in their beds, shot through the head. They appeared to have been shot while in bed. Daniel had been shot five times, four times with the gun held within one foot of his head, and once from over two feet away. Nicholas was shot three times, all contact or close-proximity shots.[39]

Friday, January 20, 2012

Jeremy #Bamber - Guilty As Charged ?- You Decide

For the purposes of a prosecution, the decision concerning what account of events to accept is one to be decided, once and for all, by a magistrate or jury.

If the case later winds up in a higher court, it will generally be so that a point of law can be decided. Only in certain circumstances can a dispute over the facts form the basis for an appeal.

But the imagination of anyone with an interest in criminal law is easily captured by infamous past cases, particular those where someone has been convicted of serious offences against the person, but doubts have emerged as to their guilt.
Jeremy Bamber is one of 39 prisoners in British jails serving sentences that will keep them behind bars for the whole of their natural lives. He is the only one who protests his innocence.

Might Bamber really have served half his life in jail for a crime he did not commit?

_______________
Tuesday 6 August 1985, and the south Essex coast was cool for the time of year. Temperatures overnight dipped to 11 degrees and there were brief rain showers.

At approximately 03:30 the next morning, an officer at Chelmsford police station answered the phone to a young man identifying himself as Jeremy Bamber of Head Street, Goldhanger. The caller had dialled the station directly, instead of being patched through after ringing 999.

Bamber told PC Michael West that a few minutes earlier he’d been woken by the sound of his phone ringing. It was his father, calling from the family farm in Tolleshunt D’Arcy. “Please come over, Jeremy” Nevill Bamber had urged his adopted son, “your sister’s gone crazy and she’s got the gun”.

Sheila was Jeremy’s 28-year-old sister and the divorced mother of twin boys, custody of whom was principally in the hands of their father. She had been adopted by the Bambers a few a years before Jeremy (himself adopted) was born, and the two were not related by blood. A former model, she had been diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic and spent time at St Andrew’s Hospital, Northampton.

Bamber wanted police to collect him on their way to White House Farm, but West urged him to make his own way there and rendezvous with officers who would be in attendance outside.

The constable then contacted Witham station, which was seven miles closer to Tolleshunt. At 03.35, patrol car CA7 was despatched from Witham. Although he lived just a few minutes drive from his parents’ property, Bamber was overtaken by the white Ford Sierra as it sped towards the village of Tolleshunt D’Arcy.

At 03.48 the three occupants – Sergeant Bews and PCs Myall and Saxby – reached Pages Lane, the private road leading to White House Farm. A few minutes later, Bamber arrived at the scene. The three officers were parked a short distance into the lane; Bamber pulled up behind them and left his silver Astra to speak with them. After identifying himself, he was asked to clarify what his father had managed to tell him before being abruptly cut off. The young man reiterated that Nevill, sounding very distressed, had asked him to come over at once because his sister Sheila had gone crazy and got hold of a gun. Sheila (whose married name of Caffell he couldn’t recall), was “a nutter” and recent psychiatric in-patient. As was to be expected, there were a number of guns on the farm, and Sheila was capable of handling them. Bamber told the officers that his mother June also lived at the house, and Sheila’s children, six year old Daniel and Nicholas, were staying on the farm.

Two adults and two children were therefore at the mercy of a mental patient wielding a firearm which she may or may not have discharged. The officers’ first step would be to approach with caution and make a visual assessment. Ideally, Nevill would now have control of the situation and would emerge from the farm house to greet them. The police could then decide whether Sheila needed medical assistance or should be taken into custody.

With Saxby remaining in the vehicle to monitor the radio, Bamber and the remaining officers walked down the lane together in the direction of the property. They stealthily approached the front door, at one point crouching behind a hedge in an effort to remain inconspicuous. It was nearing 04:00, but dawn would not break for another 90 minutes. At the right side of the house on the first floor was Jeremy’s parents’ bedroom. Lights were blazing here and in several other rooms.

Suddenly, there seemed to be movement upstairs. The trio retreated and a decision was made to summon the Tactical Firearms Group. As the group waited next to the patrol car, armed support was an hour away and several decisions had yet to be weighed up.

Accounts of what happened in the hours that followed have been revisited many times in the intervening quarter century. At his trial Bamber didn’t challenge the police timeline or account of events, but when he later gained access to additional material recounting the officers’ experiences that morning, he identified several statements and pieces of information that he claims help exonerate him from responsibility for the murders.

It is common ground that the firearms team entered the farm house shortly after half past seven and reported that everybody was dead.

More than three hours prior to this, Jeremy Bamber and the officers were at an impasse, and faced seeing out what was left of the night in a frustrating wait.

An additional patrol car arrived from Chelmsford, and British Telecom were asked to perform a check against phone number 0621 860209 (there were multiple handsets at the farm but only one line). The operator reported that the phone was off the hook. Sending a signal to clear the engaged tone, she was able to listen in to sounds inside the property, and told the police that the only thing audible was the sound of a barking dog (the Bambers’ Shih Tzu Crispy was later found cowering under their bed). The line could be monitored continuously from this point.

A radio operator was recording details of transmissions made by the officers using their CBs, and this later served to provide a running accounts of events.

The Tactical Firearms Group arrived close to 05:00, and, giving the farm house itself a wide berth, everyone repositioned themselves inside a barn at the rear, which allowed them to scan the back of the property and prepare their next move. With the sun due to rise in barely half an hour, the logical thing for the armed response team to do was to bide their time.

Shortly before 05.25, a challenge was issued using a loudhailer to anyone inside the property.
The wireless operator pre-empted events and recorded “Firearms team are in conversation with a person inside the farm”. However, the call to persons inside met only with silence. The wireless operator updated the log at 05.29 – “From CA7 – Challenge to persons inside house met with no response”

Additional firearms officers arrived at 06.45 and were greeted by Sergeant Bews. Fresh on the scene, PC Woodcock from the Firearms Training Department was told by his colleagues that a siege was underway and a young woman with mental health issues was presumed either to have killed everyone or to be holding them hostage. Whatever had taken place, there had been no response from anyone in the farm at any time, and because of this the group were preparing to force entry into the property.

Inspector Montgomery and Police Sergeant Adams put together the raid team, consisting of PCs Collins, Delgado, Woodcock, Hall, Alexander-Smart and acting Sergeant Manners. The team, working from a plan of the building sketched by Jeremy, divided the property into “White”, “Green” and “Black” zones. Woodcock was nominated to break down the rear door using a sledgehammer. Collins and Delgado lined up on one side of the door. To their right was the kitchen window. Collins peered inside and reported seeing the body of a woman.

The door gave way when Woodcock pounded it several times with the sledgehammer. As the armed officer led the others into the property, he turned into the kitchen and saw the same person witnessed by Collins, obviously dead. In fact it was not a woman but 61-year old Nevill Bamber. A chair was on its side to the left of an Aga oven, and Nevill’s corpse was sat awkwardly on one edge of the backrest. He was slumped forward with arms at his side and his head fully inside a silver-topped bucket – in fact a coal scuttle. Blood had run thickly down the sides of this hod. The body was facing the window Collins had looked through, and all that was visible of Nevill’s head was a dishevelled shock of grey hair. This was why Collins had mistaken farmer Bamber for an old woman.

With Collins having stated over his police radio that he’d seen a woman in the kitchen, and Woodcock now reporting the body of a man, the wireless operator made the following entry at 07.37:

“one dead male and one dead female in kitchen”.

The error was insignificant in itself, but when Bamber obtained a copy of the log in 2005, he quickly sought out anything that could be represented as an inconsistency and manipulated to support his claim that he’d been framed for the crime....read more


http://crimeheartsandcoronets.blogspot.com/2010/11/jeremy-bamber-guilty-as-charged.html

Jeremy #Bamber:Video Starring Johnny Escobar



Uploaded by on 12 Jan 2012

The full length Jeremy Bamber Video starring Johnny Escobar.
Jeremy Nevill Bamber was convicted in England in 1986 of murdering five members of his adoptive family his father, mother, sister, and her six-year-old twin sons at his parents' home at White House Farm, Tolleshunt D'Arcy, Essex, in the early hours of 7 August 1985. He was sentenced to five life terms with a recommendation that he serve at least 25 years, and in 1994 was told he must spend the rest of his life in jail. Bamber has always protested his innocence, believed to be the only prisoner in the UK serving a whole-life tariff to do so. His extended family remain convinced of his guilt.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-OlvzCVrmc

Arrogant Siòn Jenkins - His Two Youngest Children Claim Jenkins Used Corporal Punishment - Something Jenkins Denies -On Tonight With Trevor McDonald







Body Language Analysis On The Interview With Trevor McDonald






Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Jeremy Bamber Loses Chance To Appeal

Jeremy Bamber murder appeal case
Jeremy Bamber, whose convictions for murdering five of his relatives more than 25 years ago will not be referred to the court of appeal. Photograph: Andrew Hunter/PA
 
Jeremy Bamber, who has spent 24 years in jail convicted of murdering five members of his family, a crime he has always denied, has lost his latest attempt to prove his innocence.

A panel from the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC) ruled it would not refer Bamber's case back to the court of appeal. His lawyers plan to appeal.

It was a bitter blow for Bamber, now 50, and his supporters, who believed they had uncovered new evidence that showed flaws in the crown's case.
In January last year Bamber's legal team submitted a lengthy dossier to the CCRC including a report from a photographic expert, which claimed that scratch marks allegedly made by a silencer attached to the rifle used to kill the family were made weeks after the deaths, contrary to evidence presented to the jury.

The dossier argues that Bamber's sister, Sheila, had killed their adoptive mother and father and her six-year old twin boys, before shooting herself.
Bamber told a member of his campaign team, who passed the comments on to the Guardian, that he was "totally stunned".

He said: "I will study the reasons the CCRC have given for not referring and will be speaking to my lawyer with a view to mounting a legal challenge to their decision. We have given the CCRC a mountain of evidence pointing to my innocence and they have rejected it.

"The truth is out, but I remain a prisoner. We are not going to stop fighting and I will be free one day."

Bamber was convicted of shooting June and Nevill Bamber, Sheila Caffell and her sons, Daniel and Nicholas, at their farmhouse in Tolleshunt D'Arcy, Essex, in August 1985. He was given a whole life tariff after being convicted of the murders in October 1986. He has twice lost appeals against conviction, and an appeal against the whole life term.

The former Conservative MP Andrew Hunter, who took up Bamber's case in parliament and acts as a spokesman for him, said he was "profoundly disappointed and very greatly surprised".

"I think the CCRC will come in for some very negative criticism for this decision. There have been so many disappointments over the years that we were not taking anything for granted ... but we really did hope this time it would be different. We have the evidence to acquit Jeremy. It's a disastrous decision."

Bamber said the CCRC's decision was "all the more perverse" given the commission's refusal to grant more time for new forensic evidence to be presented. This, he said, could prove that his sister died while he was already outside the house talking to police.

The CCRC said it had sent Bamber and his legal team an 89-page document detailing the commission's analysis of the case and the reasons for the decision.

The commission said this expressed its "provisional conclusions on all the major points and arguments raised by Mr Bamber and his team during this and earlier reviews in relation to the safety of his 1985 murder convictions".

The CCRC said Bamber and his team had been given an extra three months to respond, "given the lengthy and highly complex nature of the case".

Essex police said it had co-operated with the CCRC and had no further comment to make at this time.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/feb/11/jeremy-bamber-loses-chance-appeal

Thursday, January 12, 2012

#Bamber : Memory Of Murder - Another Time Another Place - A Son Stands Charged With The Murder Of His Father And Attempted Murder Of His Mother











#Bamber Supporter Pleads To Son Of Ex Firearms Team Member Julia Jeapes To 'Tell the Truth' (Not A Very Smart Move IMO)

Hi Ben

I am writing to you to ask for your help.

I am Mark I used to work as a IFA,Tax adviser and now am a qualified airline pilot and flight instructor. I also give my time to helping Jeremy Bamber prove his innocence which is why I am writing to you.

Your Mother Julia Jeapes was a member of a firearms team that was called to White House farm on the morning of 7 August 1985.She spotted a gun it the window of the farmhouse and her report led to the raid on the farmhouse starting.

It appears that a error was made by the raid team by not checking if all the victims of the shooting inside the farm were actually dead or not.
Shelia who had shot her parents was alive and managed to escape upstairs and shoot herself a second time using the gun your mother spotted in the window.

As your mother was a part of this close knit group it is inconceivable that she is not aware of the mistake and the decision of senior officers not to report the earlier finding of Shelia in the kitchen,which she played no part in.

Julia made a statement back in 1995 which I believe gives Jeremy Bamber a alibi this statement is now held under pii and Essex Police are refusing to release it.

In fact most of the evidence to what happened inside the farm has either been withheld or destroyed or even denied that it exists by Essex Police over the last 25 years,it is also my understanding Julia has been given immunity from prosecution when she told the truth at one of the reviews of the case.

This immunity does not include her family finding out the facts.

Jeremy's Bambers case is very important as the decisions by Essex police in using pii to cover up what happened inside the farm threaten the very society we live in.
Democracy is based on people knowing the truth,knowing the truth is based on freedom of information and pii has been used here to cover up mistakes and lies.


So I ask you simply to ask you mother to tell the truth now and help put this right,so the world we live in can learn from its mistakes and become better one for the future.


I find it very poignant that Julia has 2 sons about the same age Jeremy was when he was sentenced 25 years ago,would she allow this to happen to you?




Read more:



http://miscarriageofjustice.proboards.com/index.cgi?action=display&board=bamberforum&thread=207&page=15#5245#ixzz1jF2uyEqI

#Bamber : Maria Blogs Why She Believes Jeremy Bamber Is Innocent

I’ve known Jeremy for a comparatively short time when you consider that he has been in prison for over 26 years, in fact I was still in school when the tragedy at White House Farm occurred. I had read about the case and seen it on the news, I never gave it a second thought really and so I never questioned the case at all.....read more
http://www.jeremybambertestimony.co.uk/maria