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  • Hi Cobalt,

    Yes, you’d have thought that this incident, which we know definitely occurred, would have provided the police with a good focal point for jogging memories. Asking if anyone saw the incident would have been an obvious step and perhaps it happened but there is just no record of it? Again the issue of men and women not wanting partners to know where they were probably came into play to some extent but might we have expected someone at least to come forward? Not everyone there was married. I wonder if the location of the machine might have limited the amount of people that might have witnessed the scene? If it was located up a corner or somewhere that you would only see on the way to the loo or the cloakroom?

    If Jeannie was the worse for wear that night and although we can’t prove it I personally wouldn’t dismiss it, might this have affected her ability to ID Bible John? A few drinks before and a bottle sneaked in would have done the trick to get someone from merry to drunk and I’m betting that some blokes sneaked something in to perhaps loosen the inhibitions of their dance partners, so perhaps Castlemilk was carrying something? We know that people aren’t always good at identifying faces. I don’t know but I certainly don’t want to dismiss Jeannie just because the spectre of drink has been raised.
    Regards

    Sir Herlock Sholmes.

    “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

    Comment


    • Originally posted by cobalt View Post
      To clarify: We now have two completely contradictory accounts of the McInnes ID parade.

      According to Stoddart (1980) a man from Stonehouse was traced to Harthill (McInnes we have to assume) and an ID parade took place around 5pm on the Sunday. {Where?} Jeannie Langford failed to pick anyone out.

      Yet cold case detectives announced in an article in The Times newspaper (2022) that McInnes avoided an ID parade, was hidden away from sight in Hamilton while his two co-workers were put on parade in Partick and naturally enough were not identified by Jeannie Langford. On being shown a photo of McInnes, admittedly many years later, she said she had never seen him before.{I appreciate that last part is ambiguous.}

      So it remains unclear whether McInnes was ever put on an ID parade before Jeannie, never mind the other half a dozen witnesses that might have clarified matters.

      There was no reason for high ranking detectives to swoop on Stonehouse unless they were intending to seize clothing from the suspect - something they could have delegated to local police anyhow.{Was this ever done?} McInnes should have been driven to Partick and processed there.
      Frustrating isn’t the word.

      It’s impossible to envision such high ranking officers swarming over to Stonehouse on the ‘off chance’ or for some piece of bog standard police work that uniform could easily have accomplished. The problem is that it’s difficult to avoid the impression that, at some point or other, something dodgy went on.
      Regards

      Sir Herlock Sholmes.

      “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

      Comment


      • The exact wording from the cold case reported in The Times is:

        ''The original inquiry team said that she {Jeannie} had failed to pick anyone out, but it has now been established that McInnes was never included in an identity parade for her or for any other potentially important witnesses.''

        I'm not sure how much faith to place in the wording in bold type. It seems there is no record of such an ID parade taking place but that is not quite the same thing as one never having taken place. The detectives working on the cold case acknowledged that paperwork was missing from the files, so I don't know how they could have 'established' what is claimed.

        So far as I can gather two of the pieces of information that indicate McInnes was questioned in Hamilton on the Sunday (the police arriving at a relative's house, the Moyle's advertising card link) actually originate from his cousin Jimmy McInnes, the very man suspected of 'weeding' the files. Although I think there is paperwork to support the high ranking detectives heading off to Stonehouse.

        Detectives like Muncie, Goodall, Dalglish and Beattie basked in their media image as crime busters so it's inconceivable they would have covered for a serial killer on the grounds of some personal friendship. Yet the failure to subject McInnes to an ID parade in front of a number of witnesses meant that he was never properly eliminated at the time, hence the later attempts at a DNA match.

        Comment


        • I’ve got a small grey hardback notepad that I’ve used in the past to make notes on the podcast along with any other thoughts or points that I’ve come across in books (after which I tend to gather the relevant stuff on my tablet) Looking back to one of the pages concerning the cold case detectives and the idea that Jeannie hadn’t actually seen McInnes on an ID parade I see that I’ve written in underlined capitols HOW DO THEY KNOW THIS?
          Regards

          Sir Herlock Sholmes.

          “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

          Comment


          • I had a coffee yesterday (well tea actually) with some old work colleagues, and we were talking about our memories of working with John Templeton in the Mitchell Library.

            My old boss told me that on the back of the Jill Bavin-Mizzi book on the case, the police turned up at the Mitchell Library and swabbed for DNA the locker that was used by John Templeton.

            Damned interesting!​

            Comment


            • Originally posted by barnflatwyngarde View Post
              I had a coffee yesterday (well tea actually) with some old work colleagues, and we were talking about our memories of working with John Templeton in the Mitchell Library.

              My old boss told me that on the back of the Jill Bavin-Mizzi book on the case, the police turned up at the Mitchell Library and swabbed for DNA the locker that was used by John Templeton.

              Damned interesting!​
              That is interesting Barn. How long since he’d used it?
              Regards

              Sir Herlock Sholmes.

              “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

              Comment


              • Originally posted by barnflatwyngarde View Post
                I had a coffee yesterday (well tea actually) with some old work colleagues, and we were talking about our memories of working with John Templeton in the Mitchell Library.

                My old boss told me that on the back of the Jill Bavin-Mizzi book on the case, the police turned up at the Mitchell Library and swabbed for DNA the locker that was used by John Templeton.

                Damned interesting!​
                Fascinating, Barn!

                Thanks for that intriguing tidbit!

                Presumably that same locker would have been used by hundreds of people in the intervening years though?

                Don't get me wrong, it's worth a throw of the dice but I'm not sure how credible any findings would be after so long.

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Ms Diddles View Post

                  Fascinating, Barn!

                  Thanks for that intriguing tidbit!

                  Presumably that same locker would have been used by hundreds of people in the intervening years though?

                  Don't get me wrong, it's worth a throw of the dice but I'm not sure how credible any findings would be after so long.
                  Hey Ms D!

                  Apparently the locker was reassigned to another attendant who was transferred to the community libraries, and it doesn't appear that the locker was reassigned after that.
                  So it appears that from the Police's point of view it was was worth a shot, but the intriguing thing to my mind is what was the catalyst for this move.

                  I suppose that it could have been nothing more than reacting to the points made in Jill Bavin-Mizzi's book. However if police reacted to every point made in the many true crime books published each year, they would have little time to do anything else.

                  We know that John Templeton was interviewed by police regarding the murders.

                  Is it possible that they had another look at the notes of that interview and found, or reinterpreted something from the interview that they thought was worth investigating further?

                  Re Herlock's query as to when Templeton left the Libraries Department, I don't know.

                  Templeton died aged 69 or 70 in 2015, so if he retired at the "normal" age of 65, it means that he would have left the department round about 2010.

                  The Templeton aspect of the case is interesting, and he does tick some of the boxes that we "think" we know about Bible John, however everything in Audrey Gillan's excellent podcast does point to a Lanarkshire connection.




                  Comment


                  • The police activity at the library locker has all the hallmarks of covering their backs. They could hardly have expected to find any usable DNA inside a locker (presumably metal?) after at least 14 years. But to impress the public, boost newspaper sales and increase sales of a real crime book it might be possible to exhume Templeton's body before discovering no firm conclusions can be reached. That will cost the public a pretty penny or two and leave a cloud over surviving family members but maybe inspire another suspect, so the process can be repeated again.

                    Bavin-Mizzi claims that BJ went out with the intent to kill so how does she square this belief with him giving his real name to Jeannie? And if she thinks the 1967 photo of Templeton (snazzy looking Glesca guy with slight sideburns, on the pull) resembles the iconic 1969 Bible John portrait (staid, shortish hair, rather aloof looking individual) then she was not around in the late 1960s. Her cultural compass is not up to the task.

                    What would be interesting to discover is why Templeton was questioned by police at the time.

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by barnflatwyngarde View Post

                      Hey Ms D!

                      Apparently the locker was reassigned to another attendant who was transferred to the community libraries, and it doesn't appear that the locker was reassigned after that.
                      So it appears that from the Police's point of view it was was worth a shot, but the intriguing thing to my mind is what was the catalyst for this move.

                      I suppose that it could have been nothing more than reacting to the points made in Jill Bavin-Mizzi's book. However if police reacted to every point made in the many true crime books published each year, they would have little time to do anything else.

                      We know that John Templeton was interviewed by police regarding the murders.

                      Is it possible that they had another look at the notes of that interview and found, or reinterpreted something from the interview that they thought was worth investigating further?

                      Re Herlock's query as to when Templeton left the Libraries Department, I don't know.

                      Templeton died aged 69 or 70 in 2015, so if he retired at the "normal" age of 65, it means that he would have left the department round about 2010.

                      The Templeton aspect of the case is interesting, and he does tick some of the boxes that we "think" we know about Bible John, however everything in Audrey Gillan's excellent podcast does point to a Lanarkshire connection.



                      I’ve already got the book listed for a re-read Barn. The thing that comes back to me, possibly more than anything, is this issue of the Moylan’s card which appears to have been the catalyst for McInnes’ entry into the case. I considered whether he was just a chat up merchant who happened to have given Helen Puttock his card at some point? The card wouldn’t have had his name on it but it would have triggered a visit to the shop. So what if it was Templeton after all and he was with Helen in the taxi but some time prior to that evening McInnes had tried chatting her up and gave her a card which the police found at the scene? Maybe the card that ‘John’ flashed at her in the club was something unconnected?

                      Certainly wouldn’t have been his library card though Barn.
                      Regards

                      Sir Herlock Sholmes.

                      “A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by cobalt View Post
                        The police activity at the library locker has all the hallmarks of covering their backs. They could hardly have expected to find any usable DNA inside a locker (presumably metal?) after at least 14 years. But to impress the public, boost newspaper sales and increase sales of a real crime book it might be possible to exhume Templeton's body before discovering no firm conclusions can be reached. That will cost the public a pretty penny or two and leave a cloud over surviving family members but maybe inspire another suspect, so the process can be repeated again.

                        Bavin-Mizzi claims that BJ went out with the intent to kill so how does she square this belief with him giving his real name to Jeannie? And if she thinks the 1967 photo of Templeton (snazzy looking Glesca guy with slight sideburns, on the pull) resembles the iconic 1969 Bible John portrait (staid, shortish hair, rather aloof looking individual) then she was not around in the late 1960s. Her cultural compass is not up to the task.

                        What would be interesting to discover is why Templeton was questioned by police at the time.
                        Hi cobalt,
                        John Templeton's wife June, understood that the 2 police officers turned up to interview him at home for two specific reasons.
                        The first was that he matched the name given by the killer to Helen Puttock and her sister Jeannie.
                        The second was that he had lived in the Scotstoun area but had had moved before Helen Puttock's murder.

                        Re the comment on the comparison between the photo of Templeton, I can't agree with you on this particular point.

                        Lennox Paterson's portrait/photofit of the killer, to my eyes, does look very similar.

                        Scruffs weren't allowed into the Barrowland, and while i'm not sure if there was a formal dress code, there are plenty of photos and videos of the period showing smart young men in suits, shirts and ties.

                        Comment

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