Germany Louise Kerton, 24, travelled from UK to Germany/Belgium/England, 30 July 2001

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Teesside

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Father hopes to reopen case of British woman who disappeared 20 years ago

Twenty years since the disappearance of Louise Kerton, who travelled to Germany to holiday with her boyfriend’s family and disappeared, her father is looking for fresh leads.

Phil Kerton is hoping publicity to mark the anniversary might trigger memories or encourage police in Germany, the UK or Belgium – which she is supposed to have travelled through via rail and sea – to reopen the case.

“We’d just like to know what happened. Maybe somebody remembers something. I’ve kept the same mobile phone number in the hope she might one day call, however remote that possibility is,” he said.

Louise, 24, failed to turn up following a five-week break with the family of her boyfriend, Peter Simon, in the village of Strassfeld, near Bonn, where she had gone after failing her nursing exams.

Simon’s mother, Ramana, said she had dropped Louise off at Aachen train station on 30 July 2001, from where she planned to take a train to the Belgian port of Ostend, and from there a catamaran to Dover.

However, no witnesses have ever been found who saw Louise at any stage of the journey. There is speculation as to whether she ever got on the train.

A popular German podcast that concentrates on cold cases took up the cause last year, prompting renewed interest in the disappearance in Germany.

Simon, who is half German, and who shared a home with Kerton in Broadstairs, Kent, had travelled two days ahead of his fiancee from Germany to the UK to pick up some building materials the family had ordered. He went to Dover port on the evening of 30 July when she was scheduled to arrive.

Kerton’s sister, Francesca, whom Simon subsequently telephoned, said he reacted strangely when she didn’t turn up.

Phil Kerton recalled: “He cried, and said she must be dead, whereupon my daughter, Francesca, said, ‘Why don’t you consider the possibility she might turn up on the next ferry?’”. Another sister, Angela, said in the following days Simon told her that Louise’s ghost had appeared to him.

At his home in New Ash Green near Sevenoaks, Phil Kerton, now 76 and a retired manager for Blue Circle cement, is surrounded by memories of Louise. Alongside photographs of her with siblings are her ceramics: plates, houses and a totem pole that he jokes is so heavy it’s hard to move when he cleans.

1174.jpg

Louise Kerton was last seen in Germany in July 2001. Photograph: Phil Kerton/PA
“She was the artistic one,” he said. “Her teachers always said she was a puzzle: so attentive and interested, but she found it hard to present her work, which they said was always a mess.” She was diagnosed with dyslexia, and found art to be an effective way of expressing herself.

She had been born prematurely at 27 weeks, Kerton said. “She spent eight to 10 weeks in an incubator and we weren’t allowed to touch her – back then that was the rule. Nowadays they encourage the contact.” She had regular hospital checkups until she was four. “She was very small for her calendar age and very special to us,” he said.

When his daughter vanished, he and his wife, Kath, put up missing person posters around the ports and stations of Dover, Ostend and Aachen, retracing the route Louise was supposed to have taken. The case generated considerable publicity at the time, not least because Louise had been at the same school as Lucie Blackman, the 21-year-old flight attendant who was murdered in Japan in 2000 and with whom Louise was apparently friendly; and, separately, also later attended the same school as Clare Tiltman, who was stabbed to death in 1993 at the age of 16, but whose killer was only convicted in 2014.

“We had talked about these cases a lot. She grew up very aware of them, and of the distress they caused their families,” said Kerton.

In the initial weeks after Louise’s disappearance, police in Kent, Belgium and Germany were slow to act, in Kerton’s opinion. Louise was over 18, and Kerton believes that from the officials’ point of view there was no reason to think anything suspicious might have happened to her: it was more likely she had sought a new life.

“But we knew our daughter. She was a loving, caring person, close to her family and friends, who always remembered birthdays, who called us regularly. But she seemed to have vanished into thin air,” Kerton said.

Police did take an interest in Peter Simon’s older brother, Michael, who had once been acquitted for murder in the UK. Her father said Louise had a calming influence on Michael, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia.

Kent police said the inquiry into the disappearance was not their responsibility and to contact German police; police in Aachen said they passed the case on to state police but that it is not an active investigation.

Bob Moffat, a former superintendent with Scotland Yard, whom the Kertons hired as a private detective in late 2001, said two decades on the case “remains one big mystery”.

Moffat believes it was his presence and that of Dai Davies, a former head of royal protection whom the Kertons also hired, that put the pressure on German authorities to search the Simons’ house, as well as nearby gravel pits, though it took them until September 2002 to do so. Nothing was found.

The Simons have always insisted that no member of their family had anything to do with Louise’s disappearance.

Moffat has retained his interest in the case, and although he said he believes, based on more than 50 years of experience in murder investigations, that Louise is most probably dead, he has kept all his files in the hope that one day the case can be solved.

Moffat and the Kertons have repeatedly criticised the Simon family for failing to cooperate with police, and have highlighted what they consider to be inconsistencies and unanswered questions in their accounts. The Simons have since moved out of their home in Strassfeld. Peter Simon is rumoured to be living in Switzerland.

Kath died of stomach cancer 10 years ago without ever learning what happened to her daughter.

“We live in hope of one day learning the truth,” said Kerton. He contacts the police whenever he hears of potential new information, such as last summer when Christian Brückner was named by German authorities as a main suspect in the Madeleine McCann case.

“I said to them to please take a look, due to the range of cases he may have been involved in,” he said.

He still has the handwritten letter Louise wrote to her parents dated 20 July 2001, 10 days before her scheduled return to the UK, which was their last message from her. In it, she writes: “I’m keeping well. Having a lovely time in Germany. It’s very green here, the weather is nice. Don’t worry about me.”

He remains puzzled by what he referred to as its brevity and neatness.

“Her letters were almost always long, with lots of things written in the margins, and, due to her dyslexia, lots of crossings out and improvements,” he said.

TIMELINE post for this case (thanks to @Mandalas for her excellent work!)
 
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Hi @Teesside ! Thanks for setting up this thread - I have just read about the case for the first time in today's news.

Let's hope some renewed publicity will attract new leads and insights into Louise's disappearance. Is this the first and only WS thread for LK? I couldn't find anything else. Going to do a little reading up on the case background.
 
Hi @Teesside ! Thanks for setting up this thread - I have just read about the case for the first time in today's news.

Let's hope some renewed publicity will attract new leads and insights into Louise's disappearance. Is this the first and only WS thread for LK? I couldn't find anything else. Going to do a little reading up on the case background.

Yes hopefully the new publicity might help find out her fate
 
Louise was born in Sheffield, extremely premature at just 27 weeks.

The family moved to New Ash Green near Sevenoaks when Louise was young, and she stayed very close to her parents and siblings.

At 19, she was at a pool in Gravesend with a friend when she met Peter Simon.

Despite a 14-year age difference that shocked her parents, the pair hit it off and soon began seeing each other.

Louise's parents liked Peter, and he spent Christmas with the family.

"Then out of the blue, Louise decided to up sticks and go to college in Thanet to do art A-levels," said Phil.

In Broadstairs, Louise rented one of several rooms leased out by Peter's mother, Ramana Simon, who Phil describes as a matriarch with several sons.

"She was very concerned about people, and quite in a sense naive," he said. "She was very trusting of what people told her."

Louise decided to stop studying the arts, and she and Peter got engaged.

"She worked as a waitress in the odd restaurant, then she saw scholarships were being offered to study nursing," said her dad.

Her caring nature gave her a natural aptitude for nursing, which she studied at Canterbury Christ Church University.

[...]

But out of the blue, in 2001, Louise received the devastating news that she was unlikely to pass the course.

"She was very, very upset," said her dad.

The term ended, and as Louise anxiously awaited her results, her mother-in-law to be invited her to spend summer at a house she had bought in Strassfeld, near Bonn, in Germany.

[...]

He recalls her being excited about the trip, and buying a new phone that would allow her to text from abroad.

But Louise never messaged her family, and police later found the phone had only been used for one test call, made the day she bought it.

A devastating mystery that remains unsolved to this day
 
2003 article -

A new appeal has been made on the BBC's Crimewatch programme to help trace a missing Kent nurse.

Crimewatch showed a reconstruction of Miss Kerton's last movements filmed by a German equivalent of the show.

Sophie Woodforde, of the National Missing Persons Helpline, said the appeal in Germany, broadcast last December, had not produced much information.

She said Miss Kerton's family had received a letter from her around that time but doubted its authenticity.

"She doesn't mention that she's coming home and they feel that perhaps the letter was written under duress," Ms Woodforde said.

"They don't feel it was the way she would normally communicate with them."

BBC NEWS | UK | England | Kent | Fresh appeal for missing nurse
 
Another 2003 article -


The 24-year-old, who is dyslexic, may have been depressed after failing her nursing exams - but Mr Kerton said he did not believe this was enough to explain her disappearance.

He said: "It was totally unexpected and totally out of character.

"She left saying she would be back and had made various plans of things she would do in the future."

[...]

Mr Kerton said he believed the German police had lost valuable time in the early stages of the investigation.

"We spent a lot of the first year trying to get the authorities to take this seriously and having trouble getting the information into the hands of the people who needed it," he said.

"It's like trying to get a mountain moving - there's a great inertia you cannot overcome.

"It's not necessarily because there's anything terrible with the system but because you don't know where to push.

"It makes you very angry and it's very frustrating."

BBC NEWS | UK | England | Kent | Hopes fade for missing Louise
 
2006 article

Ross Miller, from Missing Persons Helpline, said the Kertons just needed to find out what happened.

Louise's father Philip said he avoided certain towns and cities because of the memories they brought back.

"Canterbury and Broadstairs are two places. Aachen is a beautiful city but it has too many sad memories for me now."

Kent Police have also appointed a new senior investigative officer to work with German officials to try to find out what happened to Louise.

BBC NEWS | UK | England | Kent | Fresh appeal for missing Louise
 
Father hopes to reopen case of British woman who disappeared 20 years ago
1965.jpg

Phil Kerton and wife Kathleen, hold up a poster of their missing daughter at the Ostende train station in Belgium while trying to retrace her steps in 2001. Photograph: Peter Maenhoudt/AP
Kate Connolly in Berlin
Sat 31 Jul 2021
''Twenty years since the disappearance of Louise Kerton, who travelled to Germany to holiday with her boyfriend’s family and disappeared, her father is looking for fresh leads.

Phil Kerton is hoping publicity to mark the anniversary might trigger memories or encourage police in Germany, the UK or Belgium – which she is supposed to have travelled through via rail and sea – to reopen the case.

“We’d just like to know what happened. Maybe somebody remembers something. I’ve kept the same mobile phone number in the hope she might one day call, however remote that possibility is,” he said.''
 
Father makes fresh appeal over 20-year mystery of missing British nurse Louise Kerton
''Louise’s case regained the German public’s attention after true crime podcast Akte Rhineland – translated to Rhineland File – reported on her disappearance in March last year.

The podcast suggests that she may have been unhappy in her relationship. It also reported that Strassfeld villagers said that Louise – who had failed part of her nursing course before travelling to Germany – had seemed depressed.

The podcast also mentions that Mr Simon’s older brother Michael, who had lived next to the couple with his mother, had been charged and then acquitted of the murder of a 79-year-old woman in the UK in 1993.

Their mother Ramana left the UK to live in Germany after Michael was acquitted. Detectives in Kent and Germany have said that they had no reason to believe Michael was involved with Louise’s disappearance.

The Simon family have always insisted that they did not have anything to do with Louise going missing. They have since moved out of their home in Strassfeld, which was searched by German police in 2002.''

July 31 2021
 
A devastating mystery that remains unsolved to this day

Bit more from the local rag:

'Her dad Phil Kerton, now 76, had been on holiday with his wife, Kath, and their youngest daughter when Louise went missing.

They landed in Gatwick happy and refreshed after a week in sunny Tenerife.

But what happened next was the beginning of every parent's worst nightmare - the first whispers of a devastating and maddening mystery that remains unsolved to this day.

As Phil's phone connected to the UK mobile network, dozens of panicked voicemail messages began flooding in from his eldest children.

"They were saying 'we've heard Louise has failed to arrive back in England. We think she's missing and we've decided to go to the police'," he recalls'

'At 19, she was at a pool in Gravesend with a friend when she met Peter Simon.

Despite a 14-year age difference that shocked her parents, the pair hit it off and soon began seeing each other.

Louise's parents liked Peter, and he spent Christmas with the family.'

"Then out of the blue, Louise decided to up sticks and go to college in Thanet to do art A-levels," said Phil.

"So off she went, much to our concern."

In Broadstairs, Louise rented one of several rooms leased out by Peter's mother, Ramana Simon, who Phil describes as a matriarch with several sons.'

Louise decided to stop studying the arts, and she and Peter got engaged.

"She worked as a waitress in the odd restaurant, then she saw scholarships were being offered to study nursing," said her dad.

'Her caring nature gave her a natural aptitude for nursing, which she studied at Canterbury Christ Church University.'

'But out of the blue, in 2001, Louise received the devastating news that she was unlikely to pass the course.

"She was very, very upset," said her dad.'

'The term ended, and as Louise anxiously awaited her results, her mother-in-law to be invited her to spend summer at a house she had bought in Strassfeld, near Bonn, in Germany.'

'He recalls her being excited about the trip, and buying a new phone that would allow her to text from abroad.

But Louise never messaged her family, and police later found the phone had only been used for one test call, made the day she bought it.'

'In late July, Peter returned to Broadstairs to deal with an issue at the family's house.

Anxious to return home in time for her nursing results, Louise apparently decided to embark upon the 400km journey herself soon after - although Phil says she disliked travelling alone.

'Mrs Simon is the last person known to have seen her.

She is said to have dropped Louise off at Aachen railway station, on the morning of July 30, 2001.

From there, the 24-year-old was to catch a train to Ostend in Belgium, before getting a ferry to Kent.

But Mrs Simon did not see if Louise boarded the train.

When Louise failed to arrive in the UK, Peter took a taxi to Dover.

He is said to have grown tearful when he saw she was not on the boat from Ostend, begging people to check for her.'

I think these futher details are very, very concerning. I wonder who the last independent witness to see Louise was.
 
From December 2002

Camera clue to vanished student


'Kerton, a British student who vanished more than a year ago in Germany, could provide detectives with vital new clues to her disappearance.'

'This includes a series of photographs developed from film left in Louise's camera which police discovered at her boyfriend's home in Germany.'

'But it is unclear who took the pictures and investigators said there was no reason for them to have been taken with Louise's camera. They made a television appeal for the people in the photographs to contact them.'

'German police originally treated Louise's disappearance as routine after they received unconfirmed reports that she was living in a hostel for the homeless in Aachen.'

'They (German police) were drawing on a dossier of information supplied by two former senior British detectives hired by Louise's father Phil at a cost of nearly £30,000.

The dossier challenged the account that Mrs Simon gave to police of Louise's movements on the day she went missing.'

'He (Mr Kerton) has complained that important witnesses have not been properly questioned. These include Peter Simon's brother Michael who suffers from schizophrenia and was acquitted of murdering a 79-year-old woman in Broadstairs, Kent, in 1993.

"Her fiancé's family said we should keep her disappearance quiet at first in case she turned up," said Mr Kerton, a businessman.

"But they get very aggressive when I did go to the police. Those directly involved in this case have behaved very bizarrely."

He added that Louise had talked about splitting up with her boyfriend, whom she met at an ice rink when she was 16, shortly before announcing her engagement.'

Slightly different account of how they met here.
 
Grieving father releases unseen pictures of his daughter 18 years after she vanished aged 24 | Daily Mail Online

'The 24-year-old was supposed to board a train at Aachen Station on July 30 and then go via the Belgian port of Ostend to return to the flat she and Mr Simon shared in Broadstairs, Kent.

But Louse never made it home, with some assuming she had an accident, and others suggesting she could have fallen victim to French serial killer Michel Fourniret, nicknamed the Ogre of Ardennes.

He was jailed for life for raping and murdering nine girls between 1987 and 2001 and is suspected of killing more.'

Private investigator Bob Moffat - a former senior homicide detective - was drafted in in late 2001 by Mr Kerton to look at the case and visited Germany.

He says he is now throwing open his files in the hope that any extra information will help solve the case.

In his opinion, there are several lines of inquiry that should be re-investigated.

Mr Moffat said: 'It is 18 years this year since Louise disappeared and I would very much love some closure for her family.

'It has always been a case that stayed with me and I kept all the files because I have always felt that one day it will be solved.'

Mr Moffat and his colleague Dai Davies, a former head of royal protection, travelled to Germany to look into Ms Kerton's last movements in November 2001.

There, they found several things that struck them, including that there had hardly been any sightings of Louise in Strassfeld despite the fact she had told friends she was keen to see the local sights.

The Simon family never cooperated with them, refusing to even open the door let alone answer questions.

Statements reveal that Peter Simon telephoned Louise's family home when he discovered she was missing and during a rambling conversation told her sister that she had a bad character and had been sleeping around.

A disabled woman who lived with the Simons in Germany was never questioned.

There was no CCTV of Peter's mother Ramana dropping Louise at Aachen Station, which she said was because she hadn't pulled into the car park. '
 
Father of missing nurse appeals to fiance's family

'Michael Simon, now 42, who lived next door to Peter and Louise in Broadstairs until six months ago, was arrested in February 1993 after 79-year-old Josephine Bridges was bludgeoned to death with a champagne bottle on the seafront.'

'The fingerprints of the introverted bachelor were found on the bottle but a jury at Maidstone Crown Court acquitted him of the killing after hearing how he would often pick up bright objects and put them down again. He also differed considerably from an eyewitness's description of the killer.

Shortly after the verdict, Mrs Simon, who is a nurse, said she was planning to sue Kent Constabulary for compensation. The force said yesterday that it never received any claim.'

Apparently this is why they would not cooperate. Interesting future mother in law was a nurse.
 
Missing nurse leaves families divided and police baffled

'By the next morning, the slim figure of Miss Kerton, dressed in a long black skirt and a white blouse, had still not appeared. Her distraught fiancé, Peter Simon, 38, reported her missing and fled to London.'

Miss Kerton left Britain at the end of June carrying just £78 – barely enough to last her holiday..'

38....that is a big age gap. So he was 30 when they met, she was 16.
 
There's a couple of articles in the Independent clearly written a month after Louise's disappearance, in August 2001, from the information contained in them, but they have 2014 at the top. The trial of Louise's boyfriend's brother took place in 1993 for example, and the article says eight years ago, which would have been correct in 2001.

Strangely the first article gives Louise's boyfriend's age as 28 (and this was also stated in another news article at the time) but he was in fact 38 years old in 2001. I wonder who was the source of that incorrect information and if someone wanted to close the 14 year age gap.

I think it's a very odd fact that Louise's boyfriend travelled to England two days ahead of her.

---

The father of a missing student nurse pleaded with her fiancé's family yesterday to provide any further clues to her last movements after a fruitless 16-day search.

Phil Kerton, 56, has travelled to Germany where Louise, his 24-year-old daughter, disappeared on 30 July. He spoke of his fear that the "reluctance" of the family of Peter Simon, her fiancé, to deal with the investigating authorities was hampering efforts to trace Ms Kerton.

He was speaking after the disclosure that [MS], the schizophrenic older brother of Ms Kerton's fiancé, had been tried and acquitted of the murder of a pensioner in Broadstairs, Kent, eight years ago. The ordeal, during which Michael Simon was held at a high-security prison and his family was ordered out of its Broadstairs home for a police search, is said to have left the family suspicious of authority. [...]

[Louise] vanished while travelling from Aachen railway station in north-east Germany via the Belgian port of Ostende to the home she shared in Broadstairs with her fiancé, a care worker aged 28. He had been waiting at Dover's Hoverspeed terminal to meet her. [...]

[MS], now 42, who lived next door to Peter and Louise in Broadstairs until six months ago, was arrested in February 1993 after 79-year-old Josephine Bridges was bludgeoned to death with a champagne bottle on the seafront.

The fingerprints of the introverted bachelor were found on the bottle but a jury at Maidstone Crown Court acquitted him of the killing after hearing how he would often pick up bright objects and put them down again. He also differed considerably from an eyewitness's description of the killer.

Shortly after the verdict, Mrs Simon, who is a nurse, said she was planning to sue Kent Constabulary for compensation. The force said yesterday that it never received any claim. [...]

Father of missing nurse appeals to fiance's family

----

When Louise Kerton walked up the steep ramp to platform eight at Aachen train station at around midday on 30 July, there was little reason to think she was going anywhere other than home to Kent.

The quiet 24-year-old student nurse from Broadstairs was not fond of travelling. [...]

By the next morning, the slim figure of Miss Kerton, dressed in a long black skirt and a white blouse, had still not appeared. Her distraught fiancé, Peter Simon, 38, reported her missing and fled to London. [...]

Nearly three weeks of fruitless searching later, she is at the centre of a maelstrom of rumour and fear that has divided two families and left police in three countries baffled.

She had been left, according to her future mother-in-law Ramana Simon, 65, at the ornate terminus in Aachen to catch the 12.04pm train to Ostend. [...]

Miss Kerton left Britain at the end of June carrying just £78 – barely enough to last her holiday, let alone another 18 days in a busy city. [...]

...her six-year relationship with Peter Simon and his idiosyncratic family could be a factor, according to the Kertons.

Peter left his mother's home to return to Kent two days before Miss Kerton after they had spent five weeks in Germany. Their marriage was planned for 2003 and there was talk of a move to the Continent to live with Mrs Simon, a German. The couple had met in 1995 while ice skating in Broadstairs where, until six months ago, they lived next door to Peter's schizophrenic elder brother, Michael, 42, and Mrs Simon.

Mrs Simon returned in February with Michael to the hamlet of Strassfeld, near Bonn. The reason was to start a new life following Michael's acquittal in 1993 for the murder of 79-year-old Josephine Bridges in Broadstairs. [...]

Mrs Simon, who has been the focus of pleas from the Kertons to be more co-operative with police, said yesterday: "We are all very upset. I looked after Louise like a daughter, fed her, did her washing. I would hate to see any harm come to her." [...]

Within hours of reporting her missing, Peter, a care worker, was said to have "disappeared" to London for two days before emerging to give details to Kent Police

He was then quoted in the British press yesterday as saying that Miss Kerton, a devout Catholic, was promiscuous and had cheated on him. [...]

Missing nurse leaves families divided and police baffled
 

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