UK UK - Muriel McKay, 55, ‘kidnapped from her Wimbledon home’ 29 Dec 1969

Police are preparing to survey remote farmland in the search for the remains of Muriel McKay who vanished after being kidnapped and held to ransom 53 years ago.

A team of murder squad detectives met the landowner this week at the site where one of her abductors has suddenly confessed to burying her body.

The officers are exploring the possibility of scanning a small area beneath a dung heap behind a barn.

The family had already employed a ground-penetrating radar specialist who scanned the site from neighbouring land a few metres away and said the results showed ground disturbance up to four feet deep.
Until now the landowner banker Ian Marsh has rejected the family's request to scan from much closer, but said he would co-operate if the police asked him.

The move follows a sympathetic letter to Muriel's family from Scotland Yard's commissioner Dame Cressida Dick.

In response to a plea for help from Muriel's daughter, Dianne McKay, the head of the Metropolitan Police wrote: "Please may I begin by offering my profound sympathies for the pain that your family still experience.

"I cannot imagine the anguish you must feel to have lost your mother in these circumstances. This is made worse, of course, that all these years you have not been able to properly say goodbye."

"I want to reassure you that my investigation team are exploring every opportunity available to us.

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I know that a member of my team has recently met with you and undertaken to keep you updated. I have also asked him to update me as he progresses to the next stage."

And in a hand-written personal sign-off, Dame Cressida wrote: "Yours sincerely and with every good wish."

Dianne McKay, 81, said: "This was a big and welcome surprise from the Commissioner, who I know is under a lot of pressure on other things at the moment.

"It seems she is very sympathetic to our needs and if she is taking such a personal interest it must mean that the police investigation is moving forward. I'm very grateful for her letter."

Mrs McKay was kidnapped from her Wimbledon home in December 1969 by two brothers who mistook her for the then wife of media tycoon Rupert Murdoch. Muriel was the wife of Murdoch's deputy, Alick McKay.

Arthur and Nizamodeen Hosein held her at their rundown farm in Stocking Pelham, Hertfordshire, while they contacted her family and demanded a £1m ransom.

After a bungled police operation, the brothers were arrested and convicted of Muriel's murder, but her body was never found and her captors would not reveal what had happened to her.

But last year the surviving brother, Nizamodeen, 30 years after his prison release, finally told the family's lawyer that Muriel had died of a heart attack and that he had buried her close to the farmhouse.

Mr Marsh, the current owner of the farm, had confronted Dianne and her lawyer as they walked a footpath through the farm two weeks ago and told them to leave.

In a statement, his spokeswoman told Sky News: "Mr Marsh is in regular conversation with the Metropolitan Police over this matter and is fully cooperating with their investigation.

"He very much sympathises with the family and hope they can find closure over this tragedy. He now asks for privacy while the police complete their investigation."

Dianne McKay said: "We just want to find my mother and say goodbye to her and we really believe she is where Nizamodeen has indicated. It's her birthday on 4 February and it would be lovely if the police can move swiftly to recover her remains."

Muriel McKay: Police set to search farmland for remains of woman kidnapped and held to ransom 53 years ago
 
Muriel McKay: Digging begins at farm in case of woman who was murdered 53 years ago


Digging has started at a farm where police believe the remains of a woman kidnapped and held to ransom 53 years ago could be buried.

Murder detectives have been investigating the site in Hertfordshire, where one of Muriel McKay's abductors has confessed to burying her body.


Since February, officers have been carrying out visits to the farm near Royston, and now work has begun in an effort to find answers.

Detective Chief Inspector Mark Cranwell said: "We are very grateful to the landowners for allowing us to carry out this work and have been keeping Muriel's family fully informed.

"While two men were previously convicted of murder, the family have lived for more than 50 years without knowing where Muriel's remains lie.

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"At this stage we don't know how long the dig will take or what we will find but it would be an enormous relief and sense of closure for everyone if Muriel's remains were discovered."
 

Police have been urged to reopen the case of Muriel McKay, who was murdered 53 years ago, after new information was supposedly uncovered.
Arthur Hosein and his brother Nizamodeen Hosein had been subsequently charged with her murder after they kidnapped her in 1969, with her body having not yet been discovered.

Despite the body not being found, the Hosein brothers were convicted in one of the first murder trials without this evidence, however, they denied any involvement and refused to say what they had done with Mrs McKay.
But, information appears to suggest that Arthur Hosein had told his solicitor that Muriel’s body was buried at Jaywick Sands near Clacton, Essex.

According to Sky News, the letter read: "I have received information that the body of Mrs McKay, who was the alleged victim in this case, was buried at Jaywick Sands, a fact which I have communicated to the local police.
 
Will her remains be finally found,?

Now Nizamodeen Hosein – known as Nizam – one of two men convicted in 1970 of her kidnap and death, has put his name to an astonishing legal document fully admitting his involvement for the first time.

The nine-page affidavit – a legally binding document witnessed by solicitors which has been seen by The Mail on Sunday – sets out in painstaking detail the events of the night of December 29, 1969, when Mrs McKay, wife of News International executive Alick McKay, was ambushed on the doorstep of her home in Wimbledon, South-West London.


 
Nothing new.


The Metropolitan Police said: 'We most recently met some members of Muriel's family in May 2023 and continue to keep in contact with them.

'An extensive search for Muriel's remains was conducted in March 2022 at a site in Hertfordshire, unfortunately it concluded unsuccessfully. We continue to review any opportunities to recover Muriel's body and return her to her family.'



 
If asked by the police to give access to our land because they have compelling evidence of the whereabouts of the remains of Mrs McKay we will consent to giving the police full access to our land, no warrants will be required.

 
March 9, 2024
By Louise Parry & Lewis AdamsBBC News, in Trinidad

A man jailed for the killing of Muriel McKay has told the BBC he is willing to come back to England and show her family where her body was buried.
 


The family of Muriel McKay say they will travel back to Trinidad to thank her killer if her body is found, as they wait to hear whether police will carry out a further search.


Metropolitan Police detectives went to the Caribbean in March to question Nizamodeen Hosein, one of two brothers convicted of murdering Mrs McKay at a Hertfordshire farm.

Mrs McKay was kidnapped for ransom in 1969 after being mistaken for the then-wife of Rupert Murdoch and was traced to Stocking Farm near Bishop’s Stortford, although her body was never found.
 

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