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rynner2 What a Cad! Great Old One Joined: 13 Dec 2008 Total posts: 21362 Location: Under the moon Gender: Male |
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rynner2 What a Cad! Great Old One Joined: 13 Dec 2008 Total posts: 21362 Location: Under the moon Gender: Male |
Posted: 10-12-2012 08:15 Post subject: |
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Curiouser and curiouser...
Lord Lucan 'mystery man' witness statement uncovered
A written statement from Lord Lucan's sister suggesting another man was at his house around the time of the murder of the family nanny has been uncovered.
Lady Sarah Gibbs told police at the time the Lucans' young daughters talked about a "boyfriend" at the home, BBC Inside Out has learned.
The 7th Earl of Lucan vanished after the death of Sandra Rivett in 1974 and an inquest found that he murdered her.
His brother Hugh Bingham has called for the evidence to be looked at afresh.
In the statement from November 1974, Lady Sarah said her four-year-old niece Lady Camilla Bingham told of a mystery man who sometimes slept in "nanny's room and nanny sleeps with us" and sometimes slept in "mummy's - she's got a gigantic bed".
Lady Sarah, who died in 2001, said in the statement: "We were talking about home, that is 46 Lower Belgrave Street and Camilla said the boyfriend always stays upstairs while we have lunch until we ring the buzzer.
"I said to her 'What's his name?'. She said 'I don't know, he hasn't told me his name'.
"I said 'Where does he live?'. She said 'He lives in the house with us'."
When asked whether the man was the boyfriend of Lady Lucan or the nanny, Lady Sarah said: "I wouldn't know, I'm assuming she meant the nanny because Frances [10-year-old Lady Frances Bingham] referred to the boyfriend when I told her that the nanny was dead."
Lord Lucan claimed later in a letter that on the night of the murder he witnessed a man fighting with his estranged wife Lady Lucan in the basement of the family home but the man fled.
Speaking from his home in Johannesburg, South Africa, Mr Bingham told BBC Inside Out South East he was annoyed the witness statement was not presented at the 1975 inquest into Mrs Rivett's death.
The jury found that Lord Lucan had murdered the nanny.
Mr Bingham added: "It is certainly the first time that I've heard of a second man established in the house.
"I'm encouraged by the idea that there is a fresh source of evidence and that I feel wants to be given a fair hearing and this seems to me to be one way of achieving that.
"Let us hope that now with the way in which the evidence seems to be gathering, there is a chance that maybe the inquest result could be set aside.
"If that happened then the warrant of arrest would fall away and my brother's situation would be restored to the normal situation of a man innocent until proven guilty."
Neil Berriman, who discovered in 2004 that Mrs Rivett was his birth mother, has backed calls for the claims in the witness statement to be investigated.
He said: "As far as I'm concerned, he [Lord Lucan] murdered my mother - and if he never murdered my mother and if there is another murderer I need to get to the bottom of it."
Retired Det Sgt Graham Forsyth, who witnessed Lady Sarah's statement, told Inside Out he believed Mrs Rivett may have had a boyfriend who stayed over at the house.
He did not think the man was traced because the police believed Lord Lucan was the murderer "as was subsequently found at the inquest".
Lord Lucan's estranged wife Lady Lucan has not commented on the witness statement.
The new evidence came to light after BBC Inside Out South East was handed three boxes of notebooks, diaries, tapes and address books found by the daughter of the late Det Ch Insp David Gerring, a key detective in the Lucan case.
The documents also reveal that police believed Lucan may have visited a Scottish estate in the late 1970s and could have been in Mozambique up to 2002.
Lord Lucan, born Richard John Bingham in 1934, has not been seen since the day after Sandra Rivett was found murdered.
His car was later found abandoned in Newhaven, East Sussex.
The peer was officially declared dead by the High Court in 1999.
Since his disappearance at the age of 39 there have been more than 70 alleged sightings of him in countries across the world including South Africa, Australia, Ireland and the Netherlands.
Inside Out is broadcast on BBC One South East, South and London on Monday, 10 December at 19:30 GMT. It is also available nationwide on the BBC iPlayer for seven days thereafter.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-20646721 |
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rynner2 What a Cad! Great Old One Joined: 13 Dec 2008 Total posts: 21362 Location: Under the moon Gender: Male |
Posted: 27-09-2013 13:31 Post subject: |
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Lord Lucan plastic surgeon medical note auctioned
A medical card filled in by a plastic surgeon after Lord Lucan broke his nose in a speedboat accident has sold for £100.
Dr John Watson of Harley Street detailed the aristocrat's injuries and drew a sketch of his nose. It sold at Duke's Auctioneers, in Dorchester.
The 7th Earl of Lucan vanished in 1974 after his children's nanny was killed.
His cousin Victor Bingham said the notes could be valuable for any future investigations into his disappearance.
"If they ever find the body, that would be a very important clue to help identify him," he added.
The note, written in 1963, refers to Lord Lucan by his real name, Richard John Bingham, and his then age of 28.
It reads: "Struck nose on steering wheel of boat... profuse bleeding at time.
"Now - Laceration floor of nose Rv. Vestibule. Compound dislocated septum with fragment projecting into Rt vestibule.
"Nasal lanes appear intact."
The medical notes sold at the Dorset auctioneers for £100, plus a buyer's premium of 19.5% and VAT.
While it had a guide price of between £100 and £200, spokeswoman Amy Brennan was surprised it did not go for more.
She said: "There's so much interest in all things related to Lord Lucan.
"I thought it was exciting that if his body ever came to light it would be a fantastic way of identifying him if they x-rayed his nose. It could become really, really important.
"The fact that his surgeon kept the notes is also intriguing."
Nanny Sandra Rivett was found dead at the home of Lord Lucan's estranged wife in the Belgravia area of London in 1974.
Lady Lucan was also attacked but managed to escape.
Lord Lucan disappeared and his car was later found abandoned and soaked in blood in Newhaven, East Sussex.
A year later an inquest jury ruled that Lord Lucan killed Ms Rivett, whom many believe he mistook for his wife Veronica.
Lord Lucan was officially declared dead by the High Court in 1999.
Since his disappearance at the age of 39, there have been more than 70 reported sightings of him in countries across the world including South Africa, Australia, Ireland and the Netherlands.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-dorset-24283114 |
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