Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Valerie Storie's 3 part story as published in 'Today' magazine, June 1962

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Natalie Severn
    replied
    Originally posted by Graham View Post
    The thing about the DNA is that the Hanratty family pushed hard for it, but when the initial results suggested that James was in fact guilty, they and their legal advisors shouted "Contamination!"
    Graham
    Can we try and get this straight Graham: In 1997 when the Home Office were on the point of agreeing to re-open the case and send it to the CCRC and then the appeal courts, the Hanratty family did ask for the pieces of cloth to be examined for DNA but those earlier results were 'inconclusive'.
    In 2002 on the eve of the appeal it was the prosecution who demanded Hanratty's body be exhumed and the 42 year old fragments should be re-tested by a new form of testing called LCN DNA [which unfortunately destroys all DNA evidence in the process of testing ] and has which in addition has since been found to be 'contamination prone' -and in the extreme- as seen in a number of cases where the results have since been thrown out of court by various judges because such LCN DNA tests have been found to be profoundly unreliable/and 'not fit for purpose' because of their extreme propensity to contamination and wrongly formed conclusions.
    Even back in 2002 the contamination was acknowledged but it wasn't until a few years later that the full scale of such potential dangers was realised .
    Secondly Graham I do think Moste has a point about the armed forces.Only an ex soldier for example or a person trained in military matters such as one who had been for National Service, would have been deemed capable of carrying out an execution-which is what it now looks like to me to have been the case -otherwise why have a pocketful of bullets? Now Charles France knew every nook and cranny of the Rehearsal Club having worked there for quite some time and he also knew where all the guns were kept and who all the Soho Mafia were who frequented that Rehearsal club after hours and Solomon's Gym which was 2 minutes across the road and where even the Kray's were known to hang out.So he was more equipped with such knowledge than anyone else on the scene to be looking out for a competent hitman . James Hanratty would not have been anyone that anybody serious and getting paid for doing a hit job would have considered suitable.
    Finally how on earth do you conclude Sherrard was happy about the LCN DNA tests? He was profoundly skeptical as his autobiography reveals viz " Who would have thought the police would have kept on ice Valerie Storie's knickers for 31 years.....and the handkerchief that wrapped the gun ........" Michael Sherrard 2009.
    Last edited by Natalie Severn; 10-28-2015, 06:16 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Dupplin Muir
    replied
    I think you're missing the point here Graham. Finding Hanratty's DNA should have been assumed, given the way the evidence was handled and stored. If Alphon had been on trial instead I'd have expected to find his DNA there, whether he was guilty or not. What I believe the Hanratty family was hoping for was to find someone else's DNA, though this didn't happen - unless the DNA attributed to MG came from the rapist (and as the paper I posted showed, it is possible for a rapist to leave no DNA at all).

    Had the court been truly impartial it would have discounted Hanratty's DNA, because by admitting it they basically implied that all the safety measures used today to prevent contamination are a waste of time, since you can throw evidence into a box willy-nilly and there'll be no contamination at all - oh, unless said contamination would aid the prosecution case.

    Leave a comment:


  • Graham
    replied
    Hi Moste,

    I haven't read Harriman's book, but I did see a rather unflattering critique of it.

    The thing about the DNA is that the Hanratty family pushed hard for it, but when the initial results suggested that James was in fact guilty, they and their legal advisors shouted "Contamination!", which then led to the exhumation of James' remains ( distasteful in the extreme to any surviving family) on Government edict. I'm no expert on DNA analysis, but the results as carried out about 13 years ago proved to the satisfaction of the Appeal Court that he was in fact the A6 killer and rapist. Sorry, but that's a fact - I'm sure at the time that LCN DNA was accepted by most countries with the capability of carrying out DNA analysis. Also, remember that the first ever murder-case solved by DNA analysis was in the Uk (the murder, if memory serves, of two girls somewhere in Leicestershire). Certainly, Sherrard accepted the results. It's a bit of a two-headed sword, but what was done was done and can never be repeated.

    Not sure I understand your comment about suicide, the Mob, barracks, etc. Are you suggesting that the A6 killer was a member of the armed forces? How so?

    And I can't help you re: the old RAC boxes!

    Cheers,

    Graham

    Leave a comment:


  • moste
    replied
    Originally posted by Natalie Severn View Post
    Hi again Graham and thanks for your reply. But all I was pointing out was that there are / have been , very high ranking police officers who held and still hold the belief that Hanratty was innocent and some of these officers have had comprehensive sight of all the files that are available. The DNA tests however seemed to overwhelmingly prove Hanratty's guilt---except that now we know something about LCN DNA tests that was not known in 2002 viz that it just takes one tiny speck to multiply into a monstrous rash of replica specks ..[to greatly simplify the description of the complex scientific process !] ... with the potential of distorting results overwhelmingly as has happened in several high profile cases since.

    Regarding your above statement that whoever did it other than Alphon or Hanratty must have led a charmed life......well not if they committed suicide or were helped 'disappear' by the Soho crime mafia of 1962.
    best regards Nats
    I think it was Rob Harriman that pointed out in his book, 'DNA The Travesty'. The system used in the Hanratty case, Low Copy Number, is prone to being too sensitive, attracts contaminants too easily, and is only accepted as a method of dna testing by the Netherlands, New Zealand, and you guessed it UK.(The rest of the world apparently have little or no faith in the thing) Interesting that they took the trouble to exhume Hanratty for his samples and yet the sample from Ms. Storie's underwear was destroyed in the testing technique. what a pity!
    As for the true perpetrator living a charmed life, as well as suicide,or being collared by the mob. How about, 'he headed back to barracks, cleaned and put away his weapon, then hit the sack. Reveille at 6.30 am.'
    Hey, does anyone know whether the old RAC boxes that were all over Britain up until the 60's,had an illuminated window, showing their location, and were readable from about 100 yards? (If my memory serves I believe this was the case.)
    Last edited by moste; 10-26-2015, 11:35 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Natalie Severn
    replied
    Originally posted by Graham View Post
    Hi Julie,

    Yet no names have ever been mentioned apart from Hanratty and Alphon. If it wasn't either of them, then whoever it was must have led a charmed life ever since.

    Graham
    Hi again Graham and thanks for your reply. But all I was pointing out was that there are / have been , very high ranking police officers who held and still hold the belief that Hanratty was innocent and some of these officers have had comprehensive sight of all the files that are available. The DNA tests however seemed to overwhelmingly prove Hanratty's guilt---except that now we know something about LCN DNA tests that was not known in 2002 viz that it just takes one tiny speck to multiply into a monstrous rash of replica specks ..[to greatly simplify the description of the complex scientific process !] ... with the potential of distorting results overwhelmingly as has happened in several high profile cases since.

    Regarding your above statement that whoever did it other than Alphon or Hanratty must have led a charmed life......well not if they committed suicide or were helped 'disappear' by the Soho crime mafia of 1962.
    best regards Nats
    Last edited by Natalie Severn; 10-26-2015, 12:46 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Graham
    replied
    So you keep saying, Nats, but I'm still not convinced and I doubt if I ever will be unless and until some new, rock-soild evidence comes to light.

    Out of interest, originally (and I'm talking a long time ago) I thought that there might be a chance that JH was innocent, but over the years I've become satisfied that he did it, in view of the fact that no solid evidence that he was innocent has ever been produced.

    And if Matthews' report proves his innocence, why hasn't it been published? I think the answer to that question is simple: it doesn't prove his innocence.

    Graham

    Leave a comment:


  • Natalie Severn
    replied
    Originally posted by Graham View Post
    Hi Julie,

    the basic problem with your scenario (and others) is that you're really asking If it wasn't either of them, then whoever it was must have led a charmed life ever since. The police tend not to forget unsolved murders, and I am confident that if they thought that the A6 Case hasn't been solved, they'd still be looking at it as a cold-case crime.
    Graham
    Sorry to contradict you Graham but
    1] neither the lead Scotland Yard Detective Roger Matthews ,[a graduate of Cambridge University so nobody's fool ] appointed to carry out the Home Office Investigation and Report on the A6 crime in 1996 with a team of 20 Scotland Yard detectives and full access to every file available
    or
    2] Baden Skitt , Assistant Chief Commissioner of Police at Scotland Yard [previously a Chief constable ] who studied the report and led the CCRC in 1997 for the 2002 appea lScotland Yard detectives believed James Hanratty had anything to do with the A6 murder and was therefore completely innocent of the crime .
    Not only that certainly Roger Matthews to this day -[and almost certainly too Baden Skitt ]- maintained after the appeal judgment that something must not have been right over the LCN DNA tests.
    Moreover Graham since then there have been a number of cases -ie since the 2002 appeal verdict ,that depended on LCN DNA testing that judges have had to chuck out of court the most famous being the LCN DNA tests used to convict Sean Hoey of the Omagh bombing in 2007 and discovered to be completely faulty and thrown out of court by the judge who deemed them completely useless in that case .
    Last edited by Natalie Severn; 10-26-2015, 05:22 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Limehouse
    replied
    Originally posted by Graham View Post
    Hi Julie,

    the basic problem with your scenario (and others) is that you're really asking questions only Valerie can answer, and I would say that the likelihood of that happening is close to zero. More than once on these boards a poster has stated that he or she doesn't believe that either Hanratty or Alphon was the killer, and that he or she 'thinks he or she knows' (to paraphrase Pierre from another thread) who it was. Yet no names have ever been mentioned apart from Hanratty and Alphon. If it wasn't either of them, then whoever it was must have led a charmed life ever since. The police tend not to forget unsolved murders, and I am confident that if they thought that the A6 Case hasn't been solved, they'd still be looking at it as a cold-case crime. None us was in the jury-room in Bedford, so we'll never know the extent and depth of the deliberations, but the jury was satisfied that the prosecution had made a case for the guilt of Hanratty. Speaking purely personally, it will take new and rock-solid evidence to convince me that Hanratty wasn't the A6 killer, and in all honesty, after all these years, I would be amazed if such evidence will ever be manifested. Not that I want to see an end to this debate, of course I don't, but we've been going round in circles on these boards for a good many years now, and I really haven't seen anything concrete to shift me from my belief that Hanratty dun it.

    Regards,

    Graham
    Hi Graham,

    I can't argue with your logic and I almost envy your total conviction that JH was the man responsible for this terrible crime. I wish I could achieve that degree of peace-of-mind but I just cannot.

    Leave a comment:


  • Graham
    replied
    Hi Julie,

    the basic problem with your scenario (and others) is that you're really asking questions only Valerie can answer, and I would say that the likelihood of that happening is close to zero. More than once on these boards a poster has stated that he or she doesn't believe that either Hanratty or Alphon was the killer, and that he or she 'thinks he or she knows' (to paraphrase Pierre from another thread) who it was. Yet no names have ever been mentioned apart from Hanratty and Alphon. If it wasn't either of them, then whoever it was must have led a charmed life ever since. The police tend not to forget unsolved murders, and I am confident that if they thought that the A6 Case hasn't been solved, they'd still be looking at it as a cold-case crime. None us was in the jury-room in Bedford, so we'll never know the extent and depth of the deliberations, but the jury was satisfied that the prosecution had made a case for the guilt of Hanratty. Speaking purely personally, it will take new and rock-solid evidence to convince me that Hanratty wasn't the A6 killer, and in all honesty, after all these years, I would be amazed if such evidence will ever be manifested. Not that I want to see an end to this debate, of course I don't, but we've been going round in circles on these boards for a good many years now, and I really haven't seen anything concrete to shift me from my belief that Hanratty dun it.

    Regards,

    Graham

    Leave a comment:


  • Limehouse
    replied
    Originally posted by Pcdunn View Post
    Hi, again., and thanks!

    Well, he'd have to be a stranger to VS, so hiring a local tough would be possible, but dangerous. The brother-in-law may be the go-between in getting the kidnapping set up. Maybe he didn't remind the guy to go unloaded? Or had another reason for wanting MG dead?

    Anyway, I based my idea on the victim's story in the magazine, with her talk of truly loving him, and that making the affair "all right". Now learning from other posts that VS was allowed other liaisons, as was MG, I'm not so sure she was as "clingy" as it seemed to me at first.

    I think there was probably a ghost-writer involved in her story, one who made sure a certain portrait of VS emerged, as an innocent young small-town woman ("girl" in the usage of the day) caught up in emotions and circumstances beyond her control.

    What were the penalties of the time for carrying a loaded firearm, by the way?
    Well, to be fair, if there is one thing that Valerie was, it's innocent. Falling in love with a married man isn't a crime. Having other liaisons isn't a crime and it was not so then either.

    However, I do feel there is much more to this story than has ever been revealed and that is perhaps why there is so much speculation.

    Kind regards,

    Julie

    Leave a comment:


  • Pcdunn
    replied
    Not a friend doing a favor?

    Originally posted by Limehouse View Post
    Hi PC, welcome to the A6 thread.

    Your scenario is one that has crossed my mind in the past. However, I am not so sure who would be willing to do that sort of thing as a favour to a colleague or friend, given the risk they were taking in being caught with a gun and ammunition. Also, would someone hired under those circumstances need so such ammunition? Or any at all?

    Kind regards,

    Julie
    Hi, again., and thanks!

    Well, he'd have to be a stranger to VS, so hiring a local tough would be possible, but dangerous. The brother-in-law may be the go-between in getting the kidnapping set up. Maybe he didn't remind the guy to go unloaded? Or had another reason for wanting MG dead?

    Anyway, I based my idea on the victim's story in the magazine, with her talk of truly loving him, and that making the affair "all right". Now learning from other posts that VS was allowed other liaisons, as was MG, I'm not so sure she was as "clingy" as it seemed to me at first.

    I think there was probably a ghost-writer involved in her story, one who made sure a certain portrait of VS emerged, as an innocent young small-town woman ("girl" in the usage of the day) caught up in emotions and circumstances beyond her control.

    What were the penalties of the time for carrying a loaded firearm, by the way?

    Leave a comment:


  • Limehouse
    replied
    Originally posted by moste View Post
    Hi Julie. I did mention the other day,"I wonder how thorough the detectives were when interviewing all of the colleagues at Road Research Labs," alluding also to this chap from work, that Val took into her confidence, took, to her favourite spot in that special quiet world of hers, took, to where else one may wonder.
    However, Valerie was supposedly in the corn field with Mike, on the Sunday the 20th, before the tragedy.(that's why the corn field would have been already flattened down , if the statement about where the journey began on the 22nd was in fact a red herring.) Of course we may still be looking at an angry colleague. Angry colleague though would probably be the understatement of the century if he was in fact responsible for the evenings carnage.
    Hi Moste,

    Just checked my 'Woffinden' and you are right, VS and MG spent most of that Sunday together. However, it still doesn't completely rule out the 'colleague' theory. If VS spent time with this colleague whenever Mike was out of the picture for short periods he may have got very worked up and would have known the most likely place to find then that Tuesday night as Mike picked VS up from their workplace.

    I do realise this theory is a very big long shot, and the biggest problem with it is why Vs did not identify this person as her attacker. I do have some ideas about that but would like to see if any debate emerges from others and take it from there.

    Kind regards,

    julie

    Leave a comment:


  • Limehouse
    replied
    Originally posted by Pcdunn View Post
    Hello, Limehouse:

    Interesting. But that would mean she knew their captor, if it was "a male colleague", wouldn't it? So she deliberately picked someone else? (definitely controversial!)

    I'll add to the controversial ideas, going the other way. VS seems in the articles to be very attached to MG, perhaps clinging. Did he really want to break up with her? Did he arrange for the frightening event to happen, so she'd want no more late night rallies? I'm thinking of him telling her at the gas station, "don't worry, everything will be all right", and basically going along with everything the abductor wanted.
    Perhaps it was sort of planned-- except for the ending.
    Hi PC, welcome to the A6 thread.

    Your scenario is one that has crossed my mind in the past. However, I am not so sure who would be willing to do that sort of thing as a favour to a colleague or friend, given the risk they were taking in being caught with a gun and ammunition. Also, would someone hired under those circumstances need so such ammunition? Or any at all?

    Kind regards,

    Julie

    Leave a comment:


  • Limehouse
    replied
    Originally posted by Ed James View Post
    Hi Limehouse
    First , I welcome your speculation - a bit like brainstorming upon which others can positively build. I recognise that some may see this as disrespectful to Valerie who is undoubtedly a strong , determined and courageous woman. However , I don't think we should artificially close down debate.

    It is documented that both Valerie and Mike G had other 'relationships' during their 4 year affair and I believe that Valerie had said she doubted that they would form a permanent relationship with Mike free from Janet.

    But I can't build easily on the idea of colleague as abductor , since the location and discovery of the murder weapon and cartridges would seem to point away from this theory. But I do faintly recall previous suggestions (regarded by some as distasteful) on the A6 threads about the timing of and responsibility for the semen deposits. I am reminded of this by a recent you tube film I posted where a courting couple were separated by a gunman and raped the girl. The DNA results /interpretation where revisited and revised when the rape victim
    Hi Ed,

    I recognise that we should be sensitive to VS's feelings. The event changed her life for ever and she lost the man she loved deeply and for whom she had sacrificed a great deal. However, in the articles she is very candid about the relationship with Mike and it is not so disrespectful to speculate that she may have had (and was entitled to have) other liaisons.

    The issue of the gun on the bus is, slightly, problematic in this theory but as for the cartridge cases, I believe they were planted to provide a firmer suspect in the form of Alphon when, almost immediately, he was cleared and the police had to switch their attention because how else could the cartridge cases be explained?

    I realise this is a long shot, but at least it provides a credible motive. Is it any more ridiculous that the idea of a London cat burglar creeping around cornfields looking for a couple in a car on whom to practise hold-ups?

    Kind regards,

    Julie

    Leave a comment:


  • moste
    replied
    Originally posted by Ed James View Post
    Sorry sent by accident prematurely

    The DNA results /interpretation were reviewed and revisited, as the result of a miscarriage of justice case, when the rape victim revealed several years later that she had been intimate that day with another lover.

    atb

    Ed
    Very interesting documentary, and I wonder given human failings, how many similar stories there are out there.

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X