The interview time is 4.40pm and the date is Friday April 22, 2016.
The video interview is expected to last two hours.in the video interview, Stewart says Helen was last seen on April 11, 2016.
“I remember bits of it. Helen loaded my car with a large duvet and some boxes to be sent to the dump. “Then she was in her office for a while, I went back to bed. She went out in the car to get some milk but came back almost instantly. She was upset with something that had happened and she said she was never going to drive again.“I phoned up and rearranged my doctor’s appointment. Helen said ‘If possible, make it this afternoon and then you can take stuff to the solicitors at the same time’.“I dashed out because I was late. I realised I’d only taken half of the solicitors papers, so I rushed back, saw the other paperwork on the side.
“Then I went back to the solicitors and came home. Helen wasn’t here, then I thought she had gone to Broadstairs.“I remember thinking ‘she really has gone’.“I sent her a text. I woke up and I was in pain. I was sleeping quite a lot at this point. I know there’s a big chunk missing out of that [explanation].”“A note from Helen said ‘I’m going to Broadstairs. Don’t contact me in any way. Love you more, LB’.“The note was written on plain white A4 paper. I don’t remember the handwriting.”
Stewart also explained that on the day of Helen’s disappearance, he disposed of a blood stained
duvet which Ms Bailey had loaded into the car.“It had blood on it from this wound”, he said, pointing to his side.
The court has previously heard how ‘LB’ was a nickname Helen Bailey used. Stewart is asked to describe how Helen was at the point. “she came back in the car and said she was never driving again.”“She was frustrated with herself, there were no tears or anything, she was just upset with herself. Something had gone wrong and she wasn’t happy.”
“
When I woke up in my chair, in my study, I don’t remember anything different in the house. I’ve got this memory of saying goodbye to her. “I’m trying to remember back. [On April 11] I don’t remember driving anywhere, I don’t remember going to the dump, or the doctors. I do remember going up the stairs to the solicitors.
“I can’t remember the sequence of events at all. I went to the doctors, and I went to the solicitors. Maybe I did [went to] the dump. Maybe I did that the next day.“I honestly don’t remember, I’ve tried.” Stewart is now being asked about the dump.He said: “All I remember is carefully wrapping the duvet up and making sure it didn’t become unwrapped before carrying it up the steps [to the dump].
“Getting rid of boxes and packaging was a regular occurrence. I know the duvet goes in the general waste part of the dump, the one that’s not recyclable. I’ve taken three or four duvets there before.“I know it’s the first one straight in front of you as you pull in [to the dump].”
The court is still hearing tapes of Stewart’s police interview.
“I changed my doctor’s appointment to 3pm. You can check if you want. I do know the solicitors was last [on the day].“When I came back from the solicitors I remember thinking Helen went dog walking with her neighbour, with one of the neighbours. “I think I took all the stuff to the dump the next day, because when I came back I thought ‘Oh Helen’s back, because the gates are open and the gardener’s here.”
Stewart is asked what happened to the note that Helen allegedly left before her disappearance.“I thought I must have put the note in with the boxes and other bits and pieces. I couldn’t think where else it could’ve gone.”
“That evening, I did go watch my son play bowls. I remember coming back and we had a Chinese between us.”When asked if Helen is a private person, he says: “If something goes wrong she’s private.”When asked by police about his clothing on the day of Helen’s alleged disappearance, he said: “I don’t remember what I was wearing. No idea. If you’d asked me nearer the time….” “I remember being frustrated with Helen that she had gone off. I do remember that.“On the way back from bowls I picked a Chinese up, thinking Helen could have some if she was here [home], as well.“It was getting quite late, I did hope Helen would be back. Helen knew I was going to go there, we discussed it.“I don’t remember how I paid for the Chinese takeaway. “I do remember going round the house looking for Helen. I went to bed, thinking Helen hadn’t come back.“I remember being cross with myself for texting Helen, because she’d asked to be left alone. I didn’t get much sleep that night [due to my operation].”*
“The last time I saw Helen, for definite now, was when she asked me to change my doctor’s appointment if possible to the afternoon.“I don’t remember what [room of the house] we were in, that’s the honest answer.”Stewart said he couldn’t remember what Helen was wearing on the day of her disappearance. The note [Helen left] was handwriting, it wasn’t typed. I thought it was Helen’s. And she signed the note, no one else would have signed it like that.“LB is a nickname I had for Helen, my nickname is BB. It’s going back to when we first met. She was little bean and I was big bean.”
Stewart can be seen visibly emotional in the dock as the video of his interview is played to jurors. He can be seen wiping his eyes and looking tearful. “I don’t remember any of those drives [on the day Helen allegedly disappeared] and that worries me.“I haven’t suffered with memory loss before. I’m taking a lot of medication at the moment.“My main GP is in Bassingbourn. Stewart is asked about the text he sent Helen.“When I sent her a text that night [April 11] it was a ‘I’m still here’ kind of thing, I wanted to reassure her.“At 10.10pm, I sent her a text with ‘



’ like three kisses.”
“Are we done then? Because it’s getting late and I’m hungry” Stewart asks police half way through the two hour interview.
“Helen could be gone from 8am in the morning until 10pm at night, but I’d know where she was. She hasn’t gone missing before.”
Stewart is now being asked to describe Helen as a person, what makes her tick, what does she like doing.“When she’s into projects, she’s into it and that’s it. In her mind she has it all played out. “She was feeling good about the wedding. It was the venue mainly, we had a photographer. “The venue went wrong. The week before April 11, we looked at a venue hall. It was stunning, we thought it was beyond us in terms of money. It was beautiful, you just had to see it to believe it.“But when we were sat there, we found out that the only date we could get is if someone cancelled. “We planned to get married on September 23 (2016). We’d been engaged for a while but not everyone knew. “My mum and dad didn’t know - they knew we were engaged but they only found out we were getting married through interviews for Helen’s book.”Stewart says Helen was frustrated. “The day after we were told the September 23 was available, we found an article in the paper that the venue was going to take some furniture away.“The venue said they would replace some of it - but the chandeliers, the mirrors and the beds, they were special, you had to see it to believe it. “The venue was for the wedding and the reception.”
Stewart is asked to describe Helen’s usual day. “Her normal day is breakfast, go on Facebook, blogging, taking Boris for a walk, and that’s about it. It’s a fairly relaxed lifestyle at the moment.”
He is asked how Helen copes talking about grief and loss.“She was OK, her blog Planet Grief was just for her. Then she showed it to a couple of friends, who said it was good. “It wasn’t meant to be a blog. Then other people started to contribute.
“She knew she didn’t want to do children’s books anymore, and she didn’t want to do this sort of personal book [When Bad Things Happen in Good Bikinis]. “She was too honest, it [the book] was much, much too personal.”
Stewart is now asked about Helen’s worries in life.“That she couldn’t drive. She liked things planned, if my mum and dad just turned up she would get panicky.“She could talk to anyone at any level. The trouble is everyone ends up thinking they’re her best friend, but these were just people she’s met.”
Stewart is asked to tell police the names of Helen’s close friends. He is asked who out of her friends she would confide in, to which Stewart gives the name of Tracey Stratton.He is then asked about Helen’s family.
Stewart is asked about any confrontations Helen had in the family and so on.“The biggest confrontation we’ve had is with the neighbour soon after we moved in. “Helen has got cross with Oliver a few times, I can’t remember what happened to be honest.“The next day Oliver apologised though.”
He is asked about Helen’s mental and physical health.“She is very very anxious” he says, and goes to pick up a self help type book from the living room shelf, before handing this to police.“The self help book keeps Helen on track. She knows she gets over-anxious over little things.”
What is the trigger for Helen walking out that door? Police ask Stewart. He replies: “Too much has happened this year, we’ve got the wedding we’ve got me being ill, her dad being ill, my mum being ill, the car. “The conservatory is coming down. The planners drew it wrong, now we’ve decided to do it next year.“There’s a lot going on in Helen’s life, without doing any work this is. We are slowly doing the garden and then we want to decorate the upstairs.“She was getting more anxious, I said to her about going to the doctors and she said no.“Nothing like this has happened before.
“[If she went] Helen would take Boris the dog with her, I think she has taken a holdall type bag. One of the sets of keys is missing, it has four keys on.”
Police ask Stewart what places are special to Helen that she might visit. “London, anywhere near the Thames. She loves London. She loves Broadstairs, and also Northumberland, which is where she’s from.”
Police ask Stewart about Helen’s access to cash.“She’s got a savings account, we’ve got a joint account.“She thinks she doesn’t have enough money. She likes to know the money is there.”
Stewart said Helen had ‘at least two iPhones and two iPads’. “She is almost like a teenager, she loves social media”, he said
Stewart said there were no arguments between him and Helen on the day of her alleged disappearance, or in the days beforehand.He said there had never been any physical arguments between the two of them.
Is there anything that makes you suspect there could be a third party involved in Helen’s disappearance? Police ask Stewart. “Someone mentioned kidnapping, she has got enough money to be a target I guess, but not many people would know that.”
Police then ask about another interview.
That’s the end of the video interview.
bolds are only to break up the text.
http://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/incoming/helen-bailey-murder-trial-case-12475974
there's a
2nd video interview as well on May 4th, will see if I can find a separate link for that one.
Links to sons' testimony about the 11th and the preceding weekend are here
http://www.websleuths.com/forums/sh...yston-11-April-2016-4&p=13111429#post13111429