About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 61. Chapters: British Virgin Islands murderers, British assassins, British mass murderers, British people convicted of murder, English murderers, Murderers from Northern Ireland, Scottish murderers, William Kidd, Henry Stuart, Lord Darnley, Richard Dadd, Jeremy Bamber, Kray twins, James Hanratty, Joe Meek, Leslie Grantham, Arthur William Hodge, Thomas Culpeper, Erika Chambers, Buck Ruxton, Mirza Tahir Hussain, Ingram Frizer, Sidney Harry Fox, Kevin Sweeney case, Kenneth Noye, Robert George Clements, Brian Blackwell, Krishna Maharaj, Henry Martin, Peter Chapman, Pierre Williams, Jimmy Moody, Edmund Walter Pook, Catherine Hayes, Satpal Ram, John Walker Turnbull, Arthur Hutchinson, James Inglis, John Cheney, Anthony John Allen, Roger de Kirkpatrick, Peter Chester, Thomas Colley, Norman Parker, Crumbles murders, Stephen McColl, George Eliot, Phillip Austin, Alfred Dancey. Excerpt: Jeremy Nevill Bamber (born 13 January 1961) was convicted in England in 1986 of murdering five members of his adoptive family-his father, mother, sister, and her six-year-old twin sons-at his parents' home at White House Farm, Tolleshunt D'Arcy, Essex, in the early hours of 7 August 1985. He was sentenced to five life terms with a recommendation that he serve at least 25 years, and in 1994 was told he must spend the rest of his life in jail. Bamber has protested his innocence over the years, believed to be the only prisoner in the UK serving a whole-life tariff to do so. His extended family remain convinced of his guilt. The Times wrote that the case had all the ingredients of a classic whodunit: a massacre in the English countryside, overbearing parents, an unstable daughter, a scheming son, a jilted girlfriend, and bungling police. The police at first believed Bamber's sister, Sheila Caffell-diagnosed with a schizoaffective disorder-had shot her family th...