A detail often overlooked was that the twin boys who were murdered did not live at the farm. Because of their mother’s illness, they were being brought up by their father, who allowed them to visit their grandparents. A few days before the killings, Bamber visited Colin Caffell with the apparent aim of checking when the boys would be there. If they had not been killed, Jeremy Bamber would not have been the sole heir to the family fortune.
There is another rather creepy detail in Caffell’s book, that he later came to believe that Jeremy Bamber was studying him in the immediate aftermath of the murders to see how someone genuinely grief stricken behaved, in order to mimic him.
http://blogs.independent.co.uk/2011/01/30/the-strange-case-of-jeremy-bamber/
I feel deep sympathy for Colin Caffell, his feelings are so often neglected in all of the dissussions of the murders.
However, this one dimensional view and biased view of what happened does no one any service, Jerry.
Colin had separated from Sheila at the time of the murders. I've read that, during the journey to WHF just days before the murders, Sheila pleaded with Colin to take her back, but he refused because he had a lover and no longer wanted Sheila as his wife.
So, Sheila lost her husband and her children. This must have been a factor making Sheila's depression worse. Any woman in her situation would have been depressed by losing her husband and children and Sheila had already been depressed and mentally ill prior to this happening.
It would therefore be natural if Colin's account of what happened is somewhat coloured by guilt and denial.