This is moot, and I don't even necessarily say I believe it, but I have an alternative theory regarding Julie Mugford.
In his closing speech for the accused, Geoffrey Rivlin, Q.C., told the jury that they had to decide if Jeremy Bamber was an actor or Julie Mugford was an actress.
But why shouldn't it be both?
Why not Jeremy the actor and Julie the actress, operating in concert?
It can be explained this way:
1. Jeremy did it.
2. Julie was his accomplice to some extent.
3. Jeremy and Julie were in cahoots.
4. Jeremy and Julie recognised that the arrest of one or both of them was inevitable.
5. Julie gleaned this from her contact with the relatives, who tried to turn her against Jeremy.
6. Jeremy and Julie decided on a cunning scheme: Julie would be seen to co-operate with the police.
7. Her story would be deliberately exaggerated/over-blown and would involve a hitman.
8. The aim would be to discredit Julie's evidence, thereby nullifying any suspicion of Jeremy.
9. It got out of hand. Julie realised she had to turn on Jeremy to save herself.
10. Jeremy is convicted. The Crown use PII to protect Julie from exposure.
11. Julie relies on the comfort letter from the Assistant DPP, resting on estoppel, and whatever other assurances and comforts the authorities have provided to her in secret.
12. Jeremy could not - and cannot - expose her for obvious reasons.
Facts that potentially lend weight to this:
(i). The 9.50 p.m. phone call.
(ii). Julie mentions the 9.50 p.m. phone call in her very first witness statement but Jeremy doesn't. Initially, there is nothing suspicious about this, but then Jeremy is cagey about it and his account of it doesn't tally with Julie's, yet you would expect it to prior to her going to the police.
(iii). The 3 a.m. phone call. I don't believe it can be explained. It's even possible that the phone call never took place.
(iv). Jeremy's second call to Julie at 5.40 a.m.
(v). The decision of Essex Police to convey Julie from London to Goldhanger.
(vi). June's bicycle, lent to Julie.
(vii). Julie's lengthy and rather unusual sojourn at police headquarters, and her 31 statements, or whatever number it was.
(viii). The hitman allegation, which in retrospect is fantastical and laughable, and easily discredited.
(ix). The failure of the DPP to disclose to the defence the nature of Julie's arrangements with the Crown and all her evidence.
(x). The defence strategy at trial, which on reflection seems a bit Manichean. Even if Julie was lying barefacedly, realistically I would expect the defence to accept some of Julie's story and argue that she was merely exaggerating and/or had misconstrued things; instead he denied it altogether and (in the words of Drake J.) painted Julie as a "brazen liar".
(xi). The continuing failure to disclose the matters in (ix) above, I assume some of it under the auspices Public Interest Immunity. This is despite there being no hitman or organised crime element involved, despite Julie having had no serious or organised criminal associations, and despite the fact the prisoner is on a whole life tariff as a double child murderer with no active criminal associations.
(xii). Julie moves abroad.
(xiii). Jeremy is put on a whole life order, despite not being a predatory killer or terrorist. Admittedly, he is a mass murderer and double child killer, but there are comparable (even worse) offenders who are not subject to a whole life order.