More to the point, upon learning that Sheila had in fact been shot twice, Ann Eaton and the relatives recalled how Stan Jones and Mick Clark had told them at Jeremy's cottage within an hour of them having viewed Sheila's and Junes bodies both laid on top of the bed, with the rifle on the bed in-between the bodies, and a Bible on top of Sheila's chest! More importantly that Sheila had only been shot once by the time Jones and Clark had visited the main bedroom at around 9.05am on that crucial first morning...
Armed with the knowledge that the relatives had been misled and deceived by the police regarding the total number of shots which had been fired, and the total number of shots each victim including Sheila had received the relatives sat down together and realised that Sheila had not killed herself and that Jeremy could not have shot Sheila dead by way of inflicting the second shot which effectively ended her life!
The relatives discussed the possibility of Sheila and Jeremy planning on killing the adoptive parents to get their hands on Neville and June Bambers estates! But when it boiled down to Sheila having had anything whatsoever to do with the killing of her own two children, the relatives could not bring themselves to believing such an awful thing...
It was around this time, that relatives found out about the contents of the timed police radio messages which were passed between the scene and police headquarters, about Sheila's and Neville Bambers bodies being found downstairs in the kitchen (7.35am, 7.37am, 7.38am, 7.42am and 7.45am), and that only three other bodies had been found upstairs by 8.10am..
All in all, the relatives had more than a strong suspicion that the police had something to do with the killing of Sheila, with Jeremy being behind killing the other four victims, intending to pin the blame on his sister (who he had planned to keep alive)...
This was in the mindset of the relatives by the beginning of September 1985 - either way, the relatives had got it into their heads that Jeremy should be barred as a beneficiary at all costs! Without any action on their part Jeremy might stand to inherit not only from Neville Bambers estate, and June Bambers estate, but also the estate of Mabel Speakman!
The plan was for an approach to be made to the ACC Peter Simpson by Robert Woodwis Boutflour, with the intent on trying to get the police on board to prosecute Jeremy as the killer, in return for the relatives keeping their silence regarding what they knew by that stage. In particular, that Sheila Caffell was not shot dead until after Stan Jones and Mick Clark had viewed Sheila's body laid out on the bed with a solitary non fatal neck wound, and they had left the scene, and gone straight to Jeremy's cottage to recount the then known facts - the facts being at that time, and on that occasion, that despite Dr Craig pronouncing Sheila as being dead on the far side of the bed at 8.44am, the simple truth in the matter was that she couldn't have been dead, when Craig had pronounced her as being dead! Sheila had been alive at that time, barely alive, but alive!
She was still alive with Jones and Clark visited the main bedroom, and viewed Sheila laid out on top of the bed, she had still only got that solitary bullet entry wound to her neck, the rifle which would fire the second fatal bullet that finished Sheila off, was resting on the bed in-between the bodies of June and Sheila!
Robert Boutflour told Simpson a few home truths...
He told him...
"Without any action on their part Jeremy might stand to inherit not only from Neville Bamber's estate, and June Bamber's estate, but also the estate of Mabel Speakman!
The plan was for an approach to be made to the ACC Peter Simpson by Robert Woodwis Boutflour, with the intent on trying to get the police on board to prosecute Jeremy as the killer, in return for the relatives keeping their silence regarding what they knew by that stage." Great post Mike. People should take seriously the strong possibility that the relatives and the police all knew that Bamber was innocent from within days of the killings.
It is often claimed that Stan Jones suspected Jeremy before the second investigation was started and before ACC Peter Simpson had replaced Taff Jones with Mike Ainsley after complaints made by the relatives concerning Taff Jones's handling the case . But that does not make logical sense given that Stan Jones saw Sheila on the bed on the morning after the killings with only one bullet wound and without the blood leaking from the sides of her mouth. Stan Jones knew that Jeremy was innocent from that very day.
When later that day he heard about the incident which occurred after he left, in which Sheila was shot a second time, he could not possibly have had any doubts that Sheila had not been dead since before 03:00am. The photographs of Sheila on the floor with wet blood trails which Jones had not seen on his first visit to the farm would have made the truth obvious to him and to all the other cops immediately involved.
Furthermore common sense dictates ACC Peter Simpson would have demanded to know the nature of the incident which had occurred. Whether Sheila had shot herself after Jones had seen seen her on the bed, or whether the police had shot her, it would have been the number one priority for Simpson to cover up the incident.
The key to understanding the basic dynamics of the case is in recognizing how significant it was for Simpson that the relatives had been told about the position of Sheila's body before the second wound was inflicted.When Robert Boutflour went to Simpson to make his complaints about Taff Jones handling of the case, Simpson would surely have been very worried.
What if Boutflour had asked Simpson for an explanation of why his daughter Ann Eaton had been told that Sheila had been found on the bed with a bible on her chest? What if the relatives started going around telling people that the police had told them that Sheila had been found on the bed with a bible on her chest? Simpson could foresee trouble ahead.
The fact that Simpson responded to Robert Boutflour's complaint by immediately complying with the latter's wishes shows that it was for him of the utmost importance to guarantee the silence of the relatives. ACC Simpson immediately removed DCI Taff Jones from his position as head of the investigation and gave instructions to Det Chief Superintendent Mike Ainsley to start a new investigation with Jeremy as the prime suspect.
But it was all completely fake. Simpson, Ainsley and their stooge Stan Jones were all aware from the very beginning that Sheila had committed the murders and that Bamber was innocent. It was all play acting on their part.
All the senior investigative officers would have known the real truth. I would go further and suggest that the relatives also knew from a very early stage that Jeremy was innocent. The fact that they signed fraudulent witness statements and gave false evidence according to instructions given to them by the police does not of itself prove they knew Jeremy was innocent. But some of the lies they were told to tell and which they recognized as lies would indicate that the police knew that Sheila was the killer and that she had been shot when Jeremy was outside with the police.
For example. Anthony Pargeter denied that his rifle had been present at the farm at the time of the murders. Another rifle being found downstairs is mentioned in police records.
Pargeter would not have lied unless he had been told to lie by the police. If Sheila had shot herself downstairs with Pargeter's bolt action rifle and the police wanted to cover up the incident, it would be important to get Pargeter to officially deny that his rifle had been there. Pargeter would not have lied without trying to figure out why he had been told to lie. It seems unrealistic that the relatives would have followed such instructions blindly without figuring out that the police had their own motives for covering up what really happened.
But their greed was the determining factor. They could pretend to believe that Bamber was guilty even if they saw through what the police were doing. Indeed a friendly cop may have explained the whole plan. Refusing to take that possibility seriously suggests a very poor knowledge of history. Any historian will tell you that such conspiracies don't only take place novels.
The thought that the relatives actually figured out that the police were trying to cover up the fact that Sheila had been on the bed and had been shot after Jones and Clark had left may be just too appalling for some people.
But it is probably the truth. The alternative, that they were completely clueless while signing fraudulent witness statements to backdate the finding of the silencer by a whole month is more far fetched.