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His eye colour matches the e-fit.Besides
SW seems to have lighter coloured eyes and hair.
He doesn't look like a man from e-fit (in Melanie's case) to me.
JMO
Black moved around the country because of his job.It was Robert Black's modus operandi, wasn't it, to commit a murder in one part of the country and drive the body in his van to another part of the country to dispose of it. If Steve Wright had a van then we probably shouldn't just be thinking about murders in East Anglia.
One retired detective, Chris Cushnahan, dismissed criticism of the investigation in 2009 … 'There was no reason to see him. At the time there were thousands of lines of inquiry. There was no evidence to suggest we should have followed it up.'
I agreeThe case against Adrian Bradshaw was pathetic, it’s insane to me that it made it to court. He spent almost a year of his life in prison awaiting trial. Thank goodness the jury had the sense to return a not guilty verdict.
Some interesting info in this article I’d not seen before. The woman who Wright attempted to attack the night prior to Victoria’s murder gave police a partial registration number, which apparently matched around 12,000 people. That’s quite a chunky number of potential suspects but it could’ve been narrowed down geographically, especially when - according to the Mail - Wright was living only half a mile from Victoria!
Absolute nonsense and more evidence police in this country would rather cover their own backsides, than admit they screwed up then do the actual work.
It does seem odd to confess to a murder when he never admitted to anything previously. I don't know how all these processes work though it was interesting watching the recent '24 Hours In Police Custody' on Carson Grimes, where they were talking about if he went to court then he could lose his place in a 'cushy' jail and be thrown back in the prison system. Could this be the case with Wright? He certainly looks like he is living well and there is no chance he is ever being released. Perhaps he just don't want the hassle of going to court each day and is happy with the routine and any privileges he currently has?Give it a few weeks, and Wright will suddenly retract his "guilty" plea, and say he coerced by the police and authorities to confess to a crime he didn't commit.
It all seems far too easy, and psychopathic serial killers like Wright don't tend to give up their secrets so willingly.
I think this story is set to take another dramatic turn at some point.
I may be wrong, but watch this space.
I spotted that gem as well. Suffolk Police did have computers in 1999. It wasn't like the Yorkshire Ripper enquiry where they had to wade through rooms full of paperwork. There might well have been 12,000 vehicles with that partial registration, but they must also have had a description of the vehicle, which would have narrowed it down, and how many would have been registered to addresses within half a mile of the abduction site! It really is basic level detective work.The case against Adrian Bradshaw was pathetic, it’s insane to me that it made it to court. He spent almost a year of his life in prison awaiting trial. Thank goodness the jury had the sense to return a not guilty verdict.
Some interesting info in this article I’d not seen before. The woman who Wright attempted to attack the night prior to Victoria’s murder gave police a partial registration number, which apparently matched around 12,000 people. That’s quite a chunky number of potential suspects but it could’ve been narrowed down geographically, especially when - according to the Mail - Wright was living only half a mile from Victoria!
Absolute nonsense and more evidence police in this country would rather cover their own backsides, than admit they screwed up then do the actual work.
What did Wright actually confess to? Apart from pleading guilty?
Give it a few weeks, and Wright will suddenly retract his "guilty" plea, and say he coerced by the police and authorities to confess to a crime he didn't commit.
It all seems far too easy, and psychopathic serial killers like Wright don't tend to give up their secrets so willingly.
I think this story is set to take another dramatic turn at some point.
I may be wrong, but watch this space.
If Vicky is found on 19 September, then presumably the 7 October footage is SW revisiting the scene. He could be looking for something, or leaving something there.
The 18 October footage might well be a police surveillance team. If they set up CCTV on 19 September, then once they realised someone had been caught on CCTV on 7 October wouldn't they have staked out the site?
I've just seen that apparently Emily Doherty gave the police a partial registration number the night before. If the police had acted a little more quickly then things would've been very different.
Outside court, Det Supt Roy Lambert, who led the inquiry, was sure of his investigation.
Speaking after the jury returned its not guilty verdict, he told reporters he was “very disappointed“ and added: “I believe I know who murdered Vicky Hall.”
It's the first time I've heard of the Nunn case, and I must say that I tend to agree with you after having reviewed some of the data relating to the case.Surely they must have considered a link between the previous night’s abduction attempt but it seems they developed tunnel vision regarding Bradshaw.
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Victoria Hall: The final moments of Steve Wright's first victim
The mystery of the teenager's murderer is finally solved by serial killer Wright's admission.www.bbc.co.uk
Later, Lambert “secured the conviction of Kevin Nunn, who was found guilty of murdering his ex-girlfriend Dawn Walker, in February 2005”.
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Leading detective to retire
ONE of Suffolk police's leading detectives is set to retire after 39 years with the force.Detective superintendent Roy Lambert, who is heading the…www.ipswichstar.co.uk
Nunn’s case is deeply troubling, imo.
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Kevin Nunn has spent 20 years in prison for a horrifying murder. Was he wrongly convicted?
In a case full of surprising scenarios, the time and place of the murder were never established, and Nunn was found guilty despite a lack of forensic evidence. He is still maintaining his innocence, but will he ever be freed?www.theguardian.com