UK UK- Janet Brown, 51, research nurse, found nude, gagged, handcuffed & bludgeoned to death, @ home, Buckinghamshire,10 April '95, *DNA, new initiative*

  • #661
Carolanne Jackson had a safe, but she dealt in antique jewellery. She probably kept expensive jewellery in the safe and cash from buying and selling. Why would anyone expect a safe, holding valuable stuff or a lot of money, in Janet's house? Most burglars want to get out quickly and hanging around after murder is very odd.

(I just read extracts from Paul Britton's book. He referred to the front door as having a chain. I had speculated that if the patio glass was broken from the inside (and not used for entry to the house) the intruder might have walked in the door using a copied key. I suppose if you open a door with a key chain on, you could perhaps reach in and undo it, as the keychain is there so that the home owner can just open the door a little to see who is at the door and shut the door on that person if they are unwelcome:it may be possible to undo the chain if there is no one on the other side pushing the door shut. But this is all very odd.)
 
  • #662
Carolanne Jackson had a safe, but she dealt in antique jewellery. She probably kept expensive jewellery in the safe and cash from buying and selling. Why would anyone expect a safe, holding valuable stuff or a lot of money, in Janet's house? Most burglars want to get out quickly and hanging around after murder is very odd.

I’m not sold on the burglary theory but on a superficial level the Browns were a well off family living in a big house and the husband worked in Switzerland, if this was all you knew about them then you might assume they’d have something in there worth stealing, I guess. I think people did keep more cash around in the 90s and as the Browns had builders working on the property perhaps a burglar thought they might have cash to hand with which to pay them.

That’s interesting re the chain, I’ve never lived in a property with a chain but I’ve always wondered if it was possible to slip a hand through the door and remove one. I know Roxanne was supposed to be away until the next day but would Janet have left the chain off in case she came home early for some reason?
 
  • #663
I’m not sold on the burglary theory

The burglary theory makes the least sense to me. Burglars don't usually like robbing a house with someone inside, it's far to risky. And what happened to JB suggests torture and a sexual element, which was likely the primary motivation here. There are elements that seem personal about it, somehow, so I wonder whether the killer actually knew Janet in some way or she represented someone "special" to him.

Incidentally, I am signed up to "watch" this thread yet I never got any notifications that there had been new posts, the same with some other threads. Has anyone else experienced that?
 
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  • #664
The burglary theory makes the least sense to me. Burglars don't usually like robbing a house with someone inside, it's far to risky. And what happened to JB suggests torture and a sexual element, which was likely the primary motivation here. There are elements that seem personal about it, somehow, so I wonder whether the killer actually knew Janet in some way or she represented someone "special" to him.

Incidentally, I am signed up to "watch" this thread yet I never got any notifications that there had been new posts, the same with some other threads. Has anyone else experienced that?
Unsure, but answer might be found here.
 
  • #665
The burglary theory makes the least sense to me. Burglars don't usually like robbing a house with someone inside, it's far to risky. And what happened to JB suggests torture and a sexual element, which was likely the primary motivation here. There are elements that seem personal about it, somehow, so I wonder whether the killer actually knew Janet in some way or she represented someone "special" to him.

Incidentally, I am signed up to "watch" this thread yet I never got any notifications that there had been new posts, the same with some other threads. Has anyone else experienced that?

I agree re your theory, that would be the best interpretation of the evidence imo.

Though to labour the burglary point further, it’s true a burglar would normally want to burgle an empty house, but if they thought they’d need to find a safe (presumably with some sort of code) or a stash of cash or antiques then they might’ve thought they’d need the homeowner present. It’s not unheard of for occupants of homes being burgled to be tied up, tortured, etc.

AIUI in theory the Browns’ property could’ve been occupied by at least four people - Janet and her husband, Roxanne, and the brother, had he been home from university. But the intruder struck when Janet was alone and of the four she was surely the easiest to overpower. If she was upstairs getting ready for bed then she was also fairly vulnerable. Did the intruder just get lucky or was this actually a pretty well thought out crime, up until the minute they demanded something of Janet she couldn’t actually give them?
 
  • #666
Though to labour the burglary point further, it’s true a burglar would normally want to burgle an empty house, but if they thought they’d need to find a safe (presumably with some sort of code) or a stash of cash or antiques then they might’ve thought they’d need the homeowner present. It’s not unheard of for occupants of homes being burgled to be tied up, tortured, etc.

For that to be the case, would you not expect there to be more than one attacker? How would it play out if that were the case?

I think the murder is just too brutal for it to have been motivated primarily by robbery and if it was a hot prowl burglary where the attacker thought that Janet had knowledge of a safe or stash of valuables - it really seems she didn't, so either the intelligence the attacker had was wrong, or they were just there on spec, thinking that big house = stash/safe. It's quite a large risk to take. And a very violent outcome.

The handcuffs, which IIRC Janet's husband could not recall if they were something that were already present in the house (!) also point to some sort of sexual motive, something ritualistic almost. There was no evidence of sexual assault but the attacker could have wanted to and found he couldn't in the moment. Or he got off on the torture and humiliation.

If this was an offender who picked Janet at sort of random, did he not strike again? Was this murder enough for him or did something happen to stop him? The DNA profile not producing any hits in the police databases do point to this not being a repeat offender.
 
  • #667
I think the murder is just too brutal for it to have been motivated primarily by robbery and if it was a hot prowl burglary where the attacker thought that Janet had knowledge of a safe or stash of valuables - it really seems she didn't,
Could it be that it WAS a thief who grew more and more violent towards her because he wrongly felt she was withholding information? He was perhaps convinced she had a safe or stash of valuables and became angry when he felt he was being lied to?

It makes me think of the Alan Wood case where he was tortured for PIN numbers and eventually killed, possibly because they thought he was the manager of a local Sainsbury’s and had the keys, he didn’t. (mistaken identity).
 
  • #668
Could it be that it WAS a thief who grew more and more violent towards her because he wrongly felt she was withholding information? He was perhaps convinced she had a safe or stash of valuables and became angry when he felt he was being lied to?

It makes me think of the Alan Wood case where he was tortured for PIN numbers and eventually killed, possibly because they thought he was the manager of a local Sainsbury’s and had the keys, he didn’t. (mistaken identity).
Janet was wearing jewellery when found, although she had been in bed or at least preparing to go to bed. It is thought that the killer made her put it on. The pathologist (?) also thought that the killer had laid on top of Janet when she was wearing handcuffs, making marks on her back. Although Janet had been punched in the face, it wasn't said that she had been tortured. A closer parallel would be Carolanne Jackson, who did have a safe, but she was in the jewellery business and seems to have worked from home, so a killer who knew that would suspect that she would have valuables at home.
 
  • #669
Although Janet had been punched in the face, it wasn't said that she had been tortured.

The way Janet's head was taped suggests psychological torture to me. She would have slowly suffocated to death, even if she hadn't been bludgeoned.

The only other explanation I can really think of is that he taped her head and face to try and minimise blood splatter, which would also involve psychological torture as Janet realises what he's about to do.
 
  • #670
The way Janet's head was taped suggests psychological torture to me. She would have slowly suffocated to death, even if she hadn't been bludgeoned.

The only other explanation I can really think of is that he taped her head and face to try and minimise blood splatter, which would also involve psychological torture as Janet realises what he's about to do.
Do you think the intruder did this to Janet to get information, such as the whereabouts of a safe, or simply because he was a sadist/pervert?

Possibly he wore a mask and if Janet had provided details of a safe he would have just robbed the safe and simply left Janet tied up. But he seems to have stayed in the house for a long time after killing her. Why would he do that? Not much point in searching for a safe if the home owner has said there isn't one and, even if you find one, you don't have a combination or key. It would be a disaster for a criminal to be risk being convicted of murder after invading a house just in the hope that there might be a safe. The searching might have taken place before the murder, but the police seem to think he stayed in the house for some time after the murder.
 
  • #671
Do you think the intruder did this to Janet to get information, such as the whereabouts of a safe, or simply because he was a sadist/pervert?

I think the latter option is probably the most likely, although I don't think we should rule anything out. You'd think the police would have said if there was a safe, or large amounts of cash to pay builders etc, but they often hold all sorts of things back for tactical reasons.

Talking of safes, do we really believe that the police were unable to open Carolanne Jackson's safe? I find this difficult to believe myself. The police usually have expert contacts (security experts and retired crooks) to help in such situations.
 
  • #672
Thames Valley Police have taken around 1,000 DNA swabs in the past six years. That's around 3 swabs a week, which isn't really good enough IMO, although to be fair there may be financial or political reasons, as is often the case with historical crimes.
 
  • #673
I think they must have got the safe open. The safe manufacturer might have been able to help too. Maybe the army would do a small controlled explosion to help out and because they have to train. But the police might have just said it wasn't necessary for the investigation and that it was the family's problem.

I realise that the police don't provide a running commentary on investigations and also don't disclose things for good reasons, but in the case of Janet Brown I wonder if they have made any progress. As things are going, they will reach the point where the assumption will be that the killer is dead and there won't be much point in continuing. In the case of Carolanne Jackson, as far as we know, the police have nothing to go on and have given up. They might do a review occasionally, but we hear nothing.

I can see that men who had lived in Radnage at the relevant time would agree to be swabbed out of concern to help and they would know that if they didn't agree they would be the object of scrutiny. But what about Chinnor and Stokenchurch? Would police attempt to swab men there and trace those who had moved away before the police got the DNA? People said in this thread that criminals tend to operate close to home. But that isn't always the case and surely the police have swabbed all men who lived in Radnage at the time, having traced those who moved away. How far can police spread the net of DNA testing?
 
  • #674
The burglary theory makes the least sense to me. Burglars don't usually like robbing a house with someone inside, it's far to risky. And what happened to JB suggests torture and a sexual element, which was likely the primary motivation here. There are elements that seem personal about it, somehow, so I wonder whether the killer actually knew Janet in some way or she represented someone "special" to him.

Incidentally, I am signed up to "watch" this thread yet I never got any notifications that there had been new posts, the same with some other threads. Has anyone else experienced that?
Just catching up as I too didn’t get notifications
 
  • #675
It seems police are now looking at the Janet Brown case through a slightly different lens than even a year ago. The renewed attention in 2025 hasn’t produced a dramatic new clue, but it has shifted the investigative angle in a noticeable way.

The unmatched DNA profile is now shaping everything. After eliminating more than a thousand men and still finding no database match, investigators appear to be moving away from the idea of a known local offender and toward someone who lived in the area in 1995 but later left, possibly emigrated. The fact that new tips have come in from as far as Australia fits that direction. It’s no longer just about Radnage; it’s about people who passed through that community and then disappeared from the region entirely.
At the same time, the 30‑year appeal from Janet’s daughter has pushed police to focus more on dormant memories and old suspicions. They seem to believe the answer won’t come from forensic databases but from someone who remembers a man acting strangely at the time, a local man, a tradesman, someone on the periphery of Janet’s life who never drew attention back then.
There’s also a renewed willingness to consider the link to the Carolanne Jackson murder. The similarities between the two cases ( the control, the violence, the lack of theft or sexual motive) are now being treated less as coincidence and more as a potential pattern. That shifts the angle toward a serial offender with a narrow victim type rather than a one‑off explosion of violence.

So the overall direction has tightened: police seem to be looking for a man who was local at the time, low‑profile, grievance‑driven, and mobile, that is someone who blended in, avoided police contact, and may have left the UK before dna collection. The case hasn’t cracked open, but the investigative focus is clearly drifting toward people who were once nearby and are now far away.
Detectives are likely sitting over a map of 1995 Radnage, not searching for mysterious outsiders but for the ordinary names that slipped out of the village after the murder. And they can track those disappearances with clinical precision. Electoral rolls show exactly who lived on each street and when they vanished from it. NHS and GP records mark the moment someone deregistered locally and reappeared somewhere else. Passport and emigration data identify those who left the country entirely. Tax and employment histories fill in the rest, showing who changed jobs abruptly, who stopped paying UK tax, and who rebuilt their life far from Buckinghamshire.
 
  • #676
I did wonder when I read, some time ago, that the police got a tip from Australia. The person in Australia might be from Radnage and had important knowledge about someone now in Australia, but it could just be that someone, who moved to Australia, simply told the police about remembering something from the time of the murder, or that they had suspicions about someone in the Radnage area.

British police love an all expenses paid trip overseas, so maybe they will head down under.

All this rather presupposes that the killer was a Radnage man. As Radnage is a small place, with expensive housing, locals probably get tradesmen etc in from further afield. If a tradesman or someone else from High Wycombe, or Aylesbury, developed a fascination with Janet and/or Roxanne, he won't be found by DNA testing ex Radnage men.
 
  • #677
A student comes to mind, or someone who worked on one of several films/tv shows taped in and around Buckinghamshire circa 1995, fwiw, speculation, imo.

 
  • #678
A student comes to mind

It's possible: it was during the Easter vacation. No lectures the next morning. If it was a student, he might even have been from overseas and have returned overseas.

I hope that the police aren't just relying on DNA. Only a tiny number of murders are solved by DNA.
 
  • #679
It's possible: it was during the Easter vacation. No lectures the next morning. If it was a student, he might even have been from overseas and have returned overseas.

Janet's son was a university student. I'm not sure if and when he was planning to return home that Easter, but obviously he wasn't back by the Monday evening.
 
  • #680
In a recently solved US cold case, a woman, 50 years old, who had been brutally beaten to death and bizarrely put into a shower, but not SA.
Turned out to everyone's astonishment, the culprit was an ex boyfriend (living a very 'respectable' post murder life) of the woman's daughter, from years ago when she was only 15!
There was no known animosity between the ex and the daughter or mother.
speculation.
''The case went cold until Sept. 2022 when investigators began looking into possible DNA connections via familial genetic testing. A family tree created using the DNA found at the scene ultimately led investigators to Gligor, who dated Lauren Preer when they were both 15 and was a family friend.
“Never in a million years did we think that one of our people could hurt my mom like that,” Lauren told NBC 4 about her mother’s killer.''
Jun 20, 2024
''Preer’s daughter, Lauren Preer, told WTTG-TV that Gligor was an ex-boyfriend from her teenage years. Lauren said she and Gligor grew up in the same neighborhood and dated when she was 15.

Lauren also said she ran into Gligor last year at a restaurant, saying, “I’ve spoken to him. He didn’t seem weird, and how you could look someone in the eye and know that you committed this crime and act like nothing happened is pretty unreal.”
 

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