Morbid - Episode 479: World's End Murders
Episode Date: July 24, 2023On October 15, 1977, seventeen-year-olds Christine Eadie and Helen Scott met some friends at the World’s End Pub in Edinburgh’s Old Town neighborhood to celebrate their new jobs and what ...they assumed would be the start of their adult lives. The next day, Christine’s body was discovered by hikers near Gosford Bay, while Helen’s body was discovered in a cornfield several miles away. The Lothian and Borders Police mounted a massive investigation to identify and apprehend the killer but, despite their best efforts, evidence was sparse and by the following year the case had gone cold. The World’s End Murders, as they’d come to be known, became one of Scotland’s most notorious cold cases, until it was reactivated in 1997 in hopes that scientific and technological advances of the previous two decades could lead them to the girls’ killer.Thank you To the Fabulous Dave White for Research Assistance References:Amos, Ilona. 2019. Scots soil experts hit paydirt in old murder cases. February 28. Accessed March 17, 2023. https://www.scotsman.com/news/scots-soil-experts-hit-paydirt-old-murder-cases-2512052.BBC News. 2007. Victim 'strangled with stocking'. August 29. Accessed March 15, 2023. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/edinburgh_and_east/6968530.stm.—. 2007. World's End father gives evidence. August 30. Accessed March 15, 2023. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/edinburgh_and_east/6970429.stm.Brooks, Lib. 2014. "Serial killer guilty of World's End murders." The Guardian, November 15.Carrel, Severin. 2007. Trial of World's End murders suspect collapses. September 11. Accessed March 15, 2023. https://www.theguardian.com/uk/2007/sep/11/ukcrime.scotland\.Carrell, Severin. 2007. "Murder jury told of 'shifty' man." The Guardian, August 30.Edinburgh Evening News. 1999. "World's End killer probe is wound up." Edinburgh Evening News, March 25.Gibbons, Katie. 2014. "Accused saw murdered girls as OBJECTs, he tells World's." The Times, November 12.Howie, Michael, and John Robertson. 2007. "Thirty years ago he murdered two innocent young women." The Scotsman, September 11.Johnston, David, and Tom Wood. 2008. The World's End Murders: A Thirty-Year Quest for Justice. Edinburgh, Scotland: Birlinn Publishing .Leask, David. 2014. "Edinburgh World's End murder trial underway." The Herald, October 14.Leicester Mercury. 1977. "Douible murder hunt starts after teenage girls found dead." Leicester Mercury, October 17: 17.Macaskill, Mark. 2014. "World's End 'shows killers won't escape'." Sunday Times, November 16.Mega, Marcello. 1997. "Gangster linked to girls' murder." Sunday Times, March 23.Robertson, John. 2007. "World's End accused blames brother-in-law." The Scotsman, August 28.Rodrick, Vic, and Marcello Mega. 2014. "'One-in-billion chance DNA is not Sinclair's'." The Herald, October 25.The Herald. 2014. "Defendant touched 'most if not all' ligatures, says expert." The Herald, November 5.—. 2022. "My parents feared for me after World's End horror, says Ian." The Herald, October 17.—. 2014. Victim of World's End murder struggled as killer tied her up. October 21. Accessed March 15, 2023. https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/13185780.victim-worlds-end-murder-struggled-killer-tied/.The Times. 2007. "Wife of man accused in World's End murder trial agrees to speak." The Times, September 1.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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You're listening to a Movid Network podcast.
Guys, July 25th, the paperback of the Butcher in the Ren is
Kamanacha and this is a huge deal because paperbacks rule first of all and
second of all. Paperbacks are awesome. You can really shove them. They're easy to really shove them around.
You can shove them in your bag
and you can bring them everywhere.
She's motioning back pocket.
I don't know why, but that, you know,
I think it's pretty small.
So like, you could put it in your bag and I think,
you know, you got a big back pocket,
shove it right in there.
Put it wherever you want.
I don't care, just read it.
But read it first, preferably.
But do what you want because I don't care. Just read it. But read it first, preferably. But do what you want
because I support all of you. But the cool thing about this one, besides being able to put it wherever
you want is there's a sneak peek of this sequel. Whoa! The second book, the second butcher in the
rend book. There is a sneak peak chapter in the paperback edition,
which comes out July 25th, so go get it.
And then you can read a sneak peak chapter of the second one,
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but everyone else will be like,
I don't know what that chapter is,
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So right now, I'm one of the only people
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And now you can too.
Get on my level.
Get on Ashes level, July 25th, the paperback,
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I love you guys.
Books and literacy.
Ha-ha-ha.
Hey, Weirdos, I'm a and I'm a Lena and this is morb Eyes.com is what it is.
It is your bathed in a heavenly sunlight.
Aren't I always?
You always are.
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Yeah.
I am a confession and I don't have my SPF on today. Oh, I know. I forgot to put
a danger. This is disgusting of me. I forgot to put any face moisturizer on today.
Whoa, but I put my bod moisturizer on today, which is like very backwards. How do you function?
If I don't put face moisturizer on, I feel like I'm actually kind of oily right now to be
honest. Well, thanks. But I would feel like the I feel the dryness.
I feel like no, I did this morning.
I actually intended to steal some of yours when I'm here this morning.
And then it's your stuff.
Your stuff is my stuff theft.
And I would have reported it.
OK.
So I would have reported it. Don? So, I would have reported it.
Don't you dare tell me it's not, it's theft.
Oh, fuck, I much say that.
It's not, you used to be a weird fucking voodoo on me.
The universe was like, it is theft.
Well, maybe I'm just so glowy
because I've been a three-liter at least a day
water-girl-y lately.
Look at you.
I got a fake Stanley, so I think I'm better than everyone.
You got a what?
You know those cups that influencers carry around that look like this?
Oh, I didn't know it was like a thing.
Oh, wow.
Oh, excuse me.
Stanley is like overswept the nation.
I definitely, you know, that's just the name of the brand.
I honestly did not know that.
Yeah, it's like these cups, but not. I thought you were talking about like flat
Stanley. Remember when you used to send them around the world?
I do, but that's not where I was going with that. Yes, yes, your thoughts were valid, but no.
No, like these cups would handle. With the handle and like the skinnier bottom.
And like it looks a little bit different than this because this is on a
Tarjet brand. It's cute though. It's some reduced brand and I think it's just as good. It is. I mean it can you drink water out of it?
There you go. Good as a Stanley in my book. Good as a Stanley.
There you go, I always love.
I always make fun of Ash when she gets the clanky ones.
She does.
Because there was one time when we were in a meeting.
Oh my god, it was actually really fucking embarrassing.
We hadn't even started the meeting yet.
We literally clicked onto the Zoom and Ash bumped into her.
Her little canteen there. And it knocked onto the table with asht bumped into her, her little canteen there and knocked onto
the table with the loudest clang I've ever heard.
And not only that, it rolled across the table.
So when clang, clang, clang, clang, clang, and then it went boom onto the floor and then
went clang, clang, clang, clang, clang, clang.
It's like like it like echo sort of it's like
hung
Yep, that's
That's like a reverb
It's on it's it
It was like a level five on the Richter. So I'll never let it go
No, I'm not one to let anything go. It's funny when I bought this water bottle
I I literally thought to myself like it's gonna piss her off. And then I was like, look at my new water bottle.
Try to be a bitch.
And she was like, no, that's not a canteen.
No, what are you talking about?
It's not a big canteen jug.
I mean, it's got weird rules when it comes to water bottles.
I do, and don't fuck them up, everybody.
And don't fuck it.
Exactly.
Cross you right off the list.
That's who I am.
Yep, you know, yep.
But you know what we do have that we can all agree is great.
Oh my God, we have something actually really exciting to share with you guys.
Oh my old gods and the new.
Where are you, Adam over there?
We were traveling through different realms and then it got worse.
Sure.
She's having a minute over there. Because, guys, we got to partner with Goliath
and launch a fucking board game.
We have a fucking board game.
Morbid has a fucking board game.
This is the cool-ish shit.
Alert, alert, alert.
I alert, alert.
It's the lunar dial.
Yep.
I'm so fucking excited about it.
So you can pre-order it on Amazon on July 17th, which is super exciting
And super soon if you if you don't pre-order it, do you even love us?
Do you even love us? Are you even a weirdo? Do you even care about the moon?
Do you? What like do you what do you just want to tell the moon to fuck off?
That's what you want to tell the moon? You don't want to travel and collect full moons. You don't care about tads.
I don't understand why you would feel that way.
You collect like moon stones.
You collect moon stones and yeah,
like the, and those are the full moons,
which is so fucking cool.
It's very like high vibration.
You could have multiple moons,
like doesn't like Jupiter have multiple moons?
Yeah, Jupiter has many moons.
That's what I thought.
I think your kids are just asking us.
Yeah, just ask my kids. Jupiter. How many moons? Many moons. Yeah, Jupiter has many moons. That's what I thought. I think your kids are just asking. Yeah, just ask my kids.
Jupiter have many moons.
Many moons.
Yeah.
So yeah, fuckin' look out for the lunar dial, pre-order,
and July 17th, gather up your moons and your moon stones
and have a freaking ball send us pictures of you playing
or else you're fake.
And that's the that on that.
So next.
The vibe was a little off in this room earlier
and the vibe has changed.
Yeah, I saw three, three, three.
I'm holding my rainbow obsidian.
Yeah, and I'm drinking water.
I brought my ghost chalice up with me.
I wish I could tell you that was alive.
She's not joking.
My key found a ghost chalice.
It's a chalice.
It looks like a great fire.
Chalice with papa that I'm gonna drink from at all times.
Has John seen that yet?
He sure has.
What were his thoughts?
He literally said, what's that?
And I said, that's a chalice.
And he said, why though?
And I said, why not?
And he was like, too shy.
Yeah, honestly too shy. He let it go. Because he was like, whatever answer I get why not and he was like too shy. Yeah, I'll just let it he let it go because he was like I
whatever answer I get I'm not going to like it so he just
didn't ask any further. You know what I want to tell you?
No questions you're on her. You know what I want to tell you?
What I'm happy for you. Thank you. And you're happy that I'm
happy. I'm happy that you're happy. It's a great
chalice. We'll post a photo of it. You're so weird. I think
we're going to send one to Doug Bradley. I think we are.
Yeah, we're gonna send one to Doug Bradley
because he also loves ghosts.
Because Doug, you know, Brad Dougly.
But let's get into, you know,
this is all fun and games.
Let's get into the really awful thing
that we're gonna talk about.
Did you do that on purpose, fun and games?
I didn't, but glad it happened.
But it's one of those things.
Sorry, I was stalling.
Smile because it happened. So it's one of those things. Sorry, I was stalling. Smile because it happened.
So this case is called often referred to
as the worlds and murders,
which is very chilling sounding.
There's a place called world's end in Boston.
I think. There you go.
There's also one in Scotland.
It's like a weird island thing.
Oh, yeah, I mean, it's a,
do you know what that is?
I was gonna say, it sounds familiar.
Yeah, my friends went one time and I didn't go with them
because I was being a bitch,
but I thought they were being a bitch.
Yeah.
Cods are, odds are.
But anyways, is this the one in Scotland?
This is the one in Scotland.
Okay, that's probably cooler.
In the United States.
So back in October of 1977,
we're gonna be talking about two 17 year old victims,
Christine Edy and Helen Scott.
They had met some friends,
and we're gonna get into the whole story,
but at the time they had met some friends
at the World Ends pub in Edinburgh's Old Town neighborhood.
It was basically a normal night.
It was a normal night
but they were celebrating something kind of exciting in their lives.
And as closing time came around, their friends moved on to go to a party somewhere else.
And Christine and Helen started chatting with two men.
All right.
They ended up leaving that night and never being seen alive again.
Oh, no.
So let's talk about who Helen and Christina are. Helen Scott was born in 1960 to
parents Margaret and Morene Scott. She was the fourth child in the family and that included two
older half-sisters and a brother Kevin who was one year older or excuse me when you're younger.
After Helen was born the whole family moved to an Edinburgh suburb known as the Comiston District.
And Maureen was an engineer with British telecom,
and he ended up getting transferred there for work.
That's why they ended up moving.
And according to an author and former police officer
on this case, Tom Wood, he said, quote,
Helen was part of a close and loving family.
This was truly a family who loved each other.
Like this was a safe place.
This was a family who encouraged her in every way.
They wanted to nurture her big, bright personality that she had.
And they really instilled a self-confidence that allowed her
to really flourish in her early years in primary school
and become a really great young woman.
That's awesome.
This was truly one of those families that you're just like shit.
Like that, they love each other.
That's a happy house.
Like they take care of each other.
That's a safe house.
That's, they're doing it right.
And it was in the early mid 1960s
that Helen started attending high school.
And she did so at Edinburgh's Furhill High School,
I believe it's how you say it.
The school only had about a thousand students in the entire school.
And it was a largely working class section of Edinburgh.
And like most teenagers, this is when Helen started coming into her own.
She was finding what she was interested in.
She was really developing a love of fashion, clothing, you know, makeup, music, films,
like she was really establishing who she was at this point.
And despite being slightly underage at the time, she was 17 and the drinking age in Scotland is 18.
Yeah, she was there.
Um, they reached their mid to late teens, Helen and her friends had really no trouble getting into
the clubs and some of the pubs in Edinburgh, especially the less vigilant ones.
Yeah. getting into the clubs and some of the pubs in Edinburgh, especially the less vigilant ones.
And by their senior year, they were kind of regulars
at some of them, like the Spiders Web,
which was a pub in the city center.
Oh, cool. What a fun name for a pub.
Yeah, the Spiders.
They have a lot of cool names for pubs here.
And the pubs here just look cool.
They're all they do.
They're all they do.
These old streets, and they just look like a pub.
And they have history. You look in there and they're like, oh, that place is haunted as fuck. streets, and they just look like a pub. And like they have history.
Like you look in there and like,
oh, that place is haunted as fuck.
Yeah, and it's going.
And it's definitely not the same here, like historical was,
but in Boston, we have a few streets
that are super, super old, obviously.
And those, the places on those streets
are out there, like the cobblestone is still visible.
The one where we went to the other night.
Yeah, it just always has has a different vibe to it.
It's almost like you can feel the history.
Yeah, it just feels different.
Yeah.
But Helen was a great kid.
She just was.
She was a good kid.
She was a good teenager, a good young woman.
During her high school year, she got a solid reputation
as a very reliable and trustworthy babysitter
around her neighborhood.
Wow, good for her.
She was great with kids. And she often babysat around her neighborhood. Wow, good for her. She was great with kids.
Oh.
And she often babysat for her older half-sisters
to children.
And because she spent so much time around kids
and really, really enjoyed it, she had an interest
in pursuing a career in childcare.
Wow.
So she had officially made the decision
to start night classes, to start going down
that professional road in 1977.
Oh, that's awful.
Now, at the time, she had just gotten a new job
working at a kiltshop on Princess Street in Edinburgh's, like, main shopping district.
Princess Street?
Yeah.
A kiltshop on Princess Street.
Dreams.
So she was celebrating getting this new job when she went out on October 15th.
She had gone with her friend, Christine Edy, who had also just got a new job when she went out on October 15th. She had gone with her friend Christine Edy,
who had also just got a new job.
So they were like,
hell yeah, working girls.
Look at us.
Now, Christine Edy had also attended
for a Hill High School with Helen.
They met there in their first year
and they immediately became great friends.
I can see why.
Yeah, Christine was from a very similar background
and she had actually been raised
by her maternal grandmother in Collington, Maine's Green, Edinburgh. and see why. Yeah, Christine was from a very similar background and she had actually been raised
by her maternal grandmother in Collington, Maine's Green,
Edinburgh.
And it seemed like Christine was a very normal
and kind teenage girl.
And her grandmother did literally everything she could
to make sure that she had everything she needed.
And that included having a very stable
and very loving household and environment to live in.
Sounds like my were him all, right?
Christine was known to be very confident, very kind.
She was very outgoing, she was independent.
She could take care of herself.
Because again, her grandmother had instilled that in her.
Yeah.
She had taught and felt like she had given her
that strength to be confident.
They sound like a couple of bad beasts.
Right.
And she was ready to take life literally by the horns,
and her grandmother supported her every step of the way.
At the time of her death, she had moved into a new apartment
with some friends, actually, and was really enjoying the freedom
and independence that came along with it.
Now, upon graduating from Ferhelae School,
Christine took a job with the Department of Education
before getting a new job that up October as a typist
with a chartered accounting firm in Edinburgh.
Okay.
On the evening of October 15th,
she had agreed to join Helen
and a couple of other friends, some newer friends,
for a pub crawl to celebrate their new jobs.
Yeah, that's like so normal, you know.
Like, very normal.
I'm very nervous.
I'm like, hey, we're going out tonight. Want to come? Oh, yeah. Yeah.
Head out. This was like every other time they had gone
out. But this was just they just had something to
celebrate. Right. So October 15th, 1977, like we said, very
normal evening for them. Helen met her friend Jackie, Jackie
English at Jenner's store, which was a few doors down from the
shop she worked on at on Princess Street.
They were also really good friends since primary school, actually.
And this was something that they often did together.
So for a night of celebrating a new job, it felt a little more special.
So they got together first, and the two of them stopped at the Mount Royal Hotel for a drink.
And then around 8 p.m., they met Christine and their new friend, Tony Kiblin, at Wewindies,
which was a pub on the Royal Mile,
which is Edinburgh's like main street.
Main drag.
Yeah.
Now, they went to a few more pubs along the Royal Mile
and made their way to High Street in the Old Town District.
Now, shockingly, Old Town District
is the oldest part of Edinburgh.
Whoa! I know. That's insane. The name doesn't give away the lead. So it's old. So it is just a spiderweb of
streets and alleys and tall buildings. Like, you know, old streets are always wildly put together.
And there's not great lighting because of the old and Tom Woods says that there's a gloomy effect
because of this, which I think sounds great. Among the businesses that were in the old
town district at the time, were a number of the cities, what they described as more
gothic, darker drinking holes. Okay. Again, sounds awesome. Sounds right up your alley.
And this included what would be the girl's final destination for the evening,
which was the World's End pub on High Street.
Okay.
Again, sounds so fucking awesome.
I know.
So around 10 p.m.,
they arrived at the World's End pub
and they all took over a space near the back of the bar
next to a payphone.
It was busy there that evening.
So they had to stand and wait for a table to become
available. And apparently Christine and Helen got some whiskeys and apparently they were
kind of at each other a little more whiskeys they had. They kind of started. It was like
petty arguing. It wasn't like they were like fighting, you know, like teenage girl shit.
Like they were just annoying each other, I think. There's like shut up. Well, sometimes your best friend annoys you. Honestly, she's not your best friend if you don, like teenage girl shit, like they were just annoying each other, I think. There's like, shut up.
Well, sometimes your best friend annoys you.
Honestly, she's not your best friend if you don't like both be like, fuck off.
Exactly.
Now, apparently one of the biggest ones that they got into, like arguments they got
into was when Helen used the pay phone to call a boy she liked.
This boy was in cold stream.
And Christine made a comment about her having to call him on a pay phone
because he didn't have a real phone at home.
Helen found that comment pretty classist,
and she didn't like it because she likes this boy,
so she doesn't want to hear it.
Well, don't shit on your friends.
So she ended up storming out of the pub
because of it and said that she was done for the night.
She was like, fuck you, man.
Oh, I hate that this was their last night's fun together.
Well, don't worry, because apparently Jackie ran after her
and convinced her to stay for another drink.
And by the time she had convinced her to come back inside,
I guess the rest of the group had secured a little table
and they were joined with a couple of friends
that they'd run into at the bar as well.
And in statements that were given to police
and the following days, people at the world's end
that night told investigators that Helen and Christine were, quote, at the heart of the
crowd, engaged in animated conversations and were happy and smiling.
Okay.
So whatever they had been through in the beginning, they were at each other a little bit.
They got over it.
And they were just like, fuck it.
Very classic, best friend, Teenage Girl.
We've had a couple of whiskey's.
We're on each other.
We're at each other.
So it's a little bit.
And then we just go fuck it.
I'm sorry, you're sorry, let's have a good night.
So they were over.
Okay, good.
I'm glad that they got over it.
I know, because when I first read this,
I was like, I really don't want to tend this way.
It's like, I don't want to tend at all,
but I was like, I don't want you to have that,
that lasts like, you know, want you to have that, that last,
you know, bitterness with each other.
So some of the friends began drifting away from the table as the night went on, and finally
it ended up being back to the four core women that had started.
And it was nearing last call, and Jackie and Tony decided they had to go to the restroom,
and when they came back, they saw that Helen and Christine had been joined at the table by two men that they'd never seen before. Hate, hate, hate, love entirely.
Later when speaking to police, Jackie described one of the men as unremarkable, which I was like
sickburn. They usually are. And he said that one looked like he was in his late 20s, medium height, quite stocky, but he had piercing brown eyes.
She said he was dressed in basically, you know, 1970 style. He was wearing a brown and white
straight bell-bottom pants in a brown v-neck shirt and a jersey, you know, like very 70s.
And the other man was described as being pretty much the same height, same age as the first guy,
with short wavy hair, a thick mustache, and a fresh complexion.
Oh, I don't know what that means.
He was drinking three liters a day.
There you go.
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Now they said it appeared that the four were hitting it off.
Like they were laughing with each other having a nice conversation.
So Jackie and Tony went to the bar and chatted with some friends there because they were like,
we're a lot of them at the moment.
Yeah.
I think they seemed to be having fun.
These friends that they were chatting with at the bar
invited them to another party elsewhere.
So Jackie and Tony checked in with Christine and Helen
at the table and were like, hey, we got invited
to this other party, do you guys want to come with us?
And Christine said no thanks.
Helen either didn't answer or Jackie didn't hear it.
Oh, okay.
She didn't hear Helen answer.
Now, as she left the bar, Jackie said she turned around
and looked back at her friends who were just getting another round
of whiskey served to them by the two men.
Mm-hmm.
And she said she looked at them and then she turned back to Tony
and off they went to the party.
And that was the last time she saw them.
That's awful.
Now, later that night, just after the bars were closing,
apparently two police officers were
patrolling the high street area just on a normal patrol.
And they spotted two women and two men
leaving the world's end after last call.
As they left the building, the police officer
said that one of the girls tripped
and was actually helped to her feet by the other woman.
The officer said
they could hear the two girls kind of bickering a little bit about how they were going to get
home. And one of the men said, I'll give you a ride. So in their statement to investigators,
the patrol officer said that one of the girls sounded very uncomfortable with the idea
of getting in a car with a stranger. Yeah. But the other friend was convincing her
and telling her everything would be all right.
Oh, no.
Now, the light was low
and they weren't really close to these,
this group of people to get a really good look.
So they said they couldn't say for sure
that it was Helen and Christine and these two guys.
But it kind of sounds like that.
But they were pretty sure that was it.
And if it was, then these two were the last two people
to see Helen and Christine alive.
Okay.
Now on the morning of October 16th,
Maureen and Margaret Scott, Helen's parents were wrecked.
Helen had not returned home the night before
and she had never stayed out all night without telling them.
Margaret literally stayed up all night
just worrying about her and just fearing for the worst.
Oh no.
That same morning, Derek and Ruth Taylor just ran him couple left their home to drive to East
Lothian for a picnic on the beach in Long Nidry.
I believe it is.
Well my answer.
You know.
Afterwards they were planning to walk on the beach together.
Like a very cute afternoon.
So off they went, they enjoyed a nice lunch together
on the beach, and then they went into,
they went into their walk after that.
And after walking about a half an hour,
they reached a spot called Gawzford Beach around 2 p.m.
Derek looked ahead of them down the beach
and saw what he said he thought was a tailor's dummy,
lying by the high watermark.
It's never a dummy.
It's never a mannequin.
So they walked closer to it
and realized this was not a dummy.
It was a human being
and it ended up being the deceased body of Christine Edy.
Oh no.
She was lying bound and gagged on her back.
Oh my God.
The couple ran to God's Ferd House,
which was right on the way
and it was very close to them and called the police to report it.
A few hours later, John McKenzie was out walking his dog
through a field in Haddington, which was five or six miles
from God's Ferd Beach.
He also saw what he assumed was a tailor's dummy lying in the fields.
When he walked towards it, he too realized it was the dead body
of a human.
It was Helen Scott.
Oh.
Now Helen was separated.
And that's what's so, it's scary.
Helen's hands were tied behind her back
with what he thought was a cord.
And John reported he believed she was nude from the waist
down, but someone had placed a black woman's coat
across her torso and head.
Now, John McKenzie ran home to get his car, and he drove to the police station to report
everything.
It actually took a little time for them to make the full identifications for both the
women, but police very quickly noted that there were similarities between these two scenes.
It was first strange that two teenage girls were found at the same time, essentially, miles
apart in very similar positions.
Yeah.
But both girls had been bound at the wrist with an item of her their clothing and gagged
with their underwear.
Oh, God.
That's brutal.
They'd each been sexually assaulted, beaten, and strangled.
But had two, the difference between the two was the method of strangulation.
Each was unique.
Christine appeared to have been strangled manually, but Helen had, quote, an imprint
left by a stalking which had been tied around Helen's neck and four bruises left by fingers
under her jaw, and a row of horizontal scratches in front of
and behind her ear.
Something patterned, they said, was what made this happen.
Okay.
So the news began reporting it quickly.
And after hearing a report on the news about a body being found on the beach, Maureen
Scott called the police and reported his daughter missing.
He was told that they had no information on the identity,
but they would contact them as soon as they knew more. I can't imagine hanging up that phone.
Just having to wait for that phone call. And being like, is this my child? Is this my child on the
news? So he said later, Marine said later on, we learned there had been another person found and then we had a phone call from the police.
It's so awful.
And then their fear was confirmed.
One a few hours later, a police officer showed up
at their door carrying Helen's black coat.
Oh, God.
Maureen said they brought Helen's clothing
and they told us they assumed it was her
that they had found, but she had to be identified
by someone from the family.
No, thank you.
I can imagine having to do that.
It was Maureen who had her father had to go down
and identify her at the morgue.
As recent as last year, Detective Sergeant Douglas Kerr
talked about this case, he was on this case,
and he just talked about how much Helen's parents' reaction
affected him.
He talked about how much Helen's parents reaction affected him.
He talked about how he had unfortunately
delivered many death notices in his career to loved ones,
but he said, but this case has lived with me all my life.
I can still see the look of anguish and devastation
on the face of Mr. Scott as he looked
on the body of his beloved daughter.
About the case, he also later said,
this particular inquiry was unique in the fact
that these two lovely girls had been taken away,
tied up and brutally murdered and sexualized
and discarded like a bundle of rags.
It was a horrible crime.
It was something that in all my 37 years
in total in the police service,
I never came across at any other time.
Wow.
Now, identifying Christine Edie's body
was to be a bit more challenging for detectives
because she had moved into an apartment,
like I said a few months earlier.
So her absence wasn't like immediately discovered
and reported.
Right.
She would eventually be identified
by her mother, Margaret Craig.
Oh, wow.
Who'd last seen her daughter the day before she went out
with the friends at the World's End Pub.
Oh, okay.
But they didn't live together so there wasn't an immediate like she's not coming home.
So there autopsy showed that they had been brutalized.
Whoever did this was an animal.
They had died of forms of asphyxiation with injuries showing that they had been throttled
and choked with ligatures around their necks.
According to the courier and advertiser paper,
Dr. Robert Nagel, who completed the autopsies,
testified later that Christine had pinpoint hemorrhages,
abrasions, scratches, a ligature track around the neck,
bruising to her mouth and pressure marks on her upper thighs.
Her cause of death was noted as a sphixia due to strangulation
with a ligature and by gagging
of the mouth.
Wow.
They were gagged with their underwear.
So she is fixated by being gagged with her own underwear.
That's so, so horrific.
And Helen's injuries were much the same, but also she had an injury that was due to a shoe
stomping on the left side of her head.
Oh my God.
And both young women had been sexually assaulted.
Oh no, I knew you were gonna say that.
Yep.
So the horrific discovery of Christine and Helen's body
sent shock waves through this small community.
I bet.
Because it was just outside of Edinburgh.
Again, the high school was like a thousand people.
Like this is a small place.
Yeah.
And it actually happened only a few days after another woman had been found murdered in
Fall Kirk.
She was discovered in bushes with a bag over her head.
What?
And everyone was pointing out that the murders seemed similar to the unsolved Bible John
murders that had happened in Glasgow.
Oh, shit.
Yeah, that was only a few years earlier.
Right.
And many locals were thinking another serial killer was around.
Can you imagine just coming off of that?
And now this happens.
Right.
And it's unsolved at this point.
Now, the deputy chief constable Tom Woods
told the Guardian, because of the nature of the victims,
complete innocence, and because of the nature of their death,
and because there were two of them,
it was a shocking, shocking crime.
The sort of thing didn't happen here.
The police force was not equipped for a double homicide or a serial killer.
Oh no.
So the investigation into both murders became under the control of detective superintendent
George McPherson.
He quickly placed a commanding officer in East Lothian and another in Edinburgh, and investigators
were now going to retrace
Christine and Helen's movements the night before at World's End. So they began interviewing
as many patrons of the World's End as they could, just in an effort to track down leads,
eliminate potential suspects, anything they could get. Based on their interviews,
the investigators were able to make like a big map of the pub's interior,
and they used time logs and people's memory
to place each patron in their positions at the bar that night,
which is like, they really went for it.
Yeah, I was gonna say that was smart.
Detectives quickly learned that after Jackie and Tony had left
the world's end, Christine and Helen were joined by two men
who they were also seen leaving with a little after 11pm.
You know, the descriptions that were given to them
by patrons at the world's end and Jackie and Tony,
they matched.
Oh, pretty well.
So they were like, these are the same guys.
Right.
And apparently they were seen leaving
in a dark colored car near Gossford Beach,
a little before 3.30 AM, the day of the murder,
the same description. Oh. So they day of the murder, the same description.
Oh. So they were assuming these were all the same guys. At the very least, it was a wild coincidence.
Right. So the fact that the girls have been seen with two men was enough to at least entertain
the idea that there were more than one killer here. But evidence of this is there's more
compelling evidence of this in the case. Well, the different methods of strangulation.
Exactly. For one, they had been taken and killed around the same time with the same-ish methodology,
but they were found miles apart. So each was killed like we just said with a different method of
strangulation. And then the strongest bit of evidence for the two killer theory was the knots used
to bind the girl's hands. Oh.
Christine's hands were bound with a reef knot, something sailors use, I guess.
Oh, okay.
And Helen's hands were bound with a figure eight binding.
Also a forensic scientist, Roger I.
Later told a jury that the knots also showed different dominant hands.
Oh, wow.
The lefty and a righty.
That's so interesting that you can tell that just from looking at her. Isn't that. Interesting. Yeah. Like it must be the way one thing goes over another. Yeah.
You do it with that hand. Right. Wow. Interesting. Yeah. Similar differences were found in the
ligatures around Christine and Helen's necks. Christine's killer definitely had a familiarity
with knots and Helen's killer, not super familiar. Okay.
So Dr. Roger Ide, who we just talked about, he was 72,
and a forensic scientist, he was also an expert on knots.
Hell yeah.
He testified also to the fact that Christine had very likely
fought hard not to be tied up.
And it appeared that Helen was likely unconscious
when she was tied up or threatened into staying still.
Right.
Christine's wrists had been bound with tights,
like her own tights.
And one hand was tied and bound first,
and then the other, making it look like handcuffs.
Okay.
And they said this indicated to them
that she was fighting back and made it very hard
for them to bind her.
And like tie them together together.
Yeah.
And Helen's were tied very close together and that figure eight things.
So that her hands were clearly together.
They believed she was probably unconscious, especially because she had a shoe mark to the side of her head
that she'd stomped.
Right.
Now the investigation started out strong
with nearly 80 full-time officers tracking down a ton of information by witnesses,
the general public, just anybody they could talk to.
Tom would say there was a genuine mood of public outrage, fanned by an active and imaginative
media.
There was a sense that this crime, above all others, was beyond belief.
It was the stuff of American cop fiction, not reality.
Yeah. Now, there was a lot of pressure as well to solve American cop fiction, not reality. Yeah.
Now, there was a lot of pressure as well
to solve this crime as often happens in these.
Mm-hmm.
So detectives worked really hard to rule out
Helen and Christine's male friends first,
but they also had to rule out the suspects
from the world's end pub as well.
Right.
Suddenly, it occurred to investigators
that despite the slight differences
in the description of the men seen with the two girls, all were pretty consistent with describing them as
being well dressed and having short hair.
This was different.
Tom Woods was quoted as saying, in the late 70s, this was not typical for young men.
No, not at all.
Long hair and straggly moustaches were still the rage.
So this fact led detectives to wonder whether the suspects might be soldiers stationed at
the military garrison and nearby Edinburgh castle.
And one of them is good at knots.
Exactly.
So a ton of time and energy was put into interviewing all the soldiers that fit that criteria.
But unfortunately, it turned up nothing.
Well, that was the thing because because one had longer wavy hair.
Yeah, a little bit longer, yeah.
Now, while detectives in East Lothian,
East Lothian, I can't say that.
It's hard to say.
I keep saying East Lothian,
because your brain is getting ready to take it to Lothian.
Yeah.
East Lothian and Edinburgh
worked around the clock to interview witnesses
and get leads.
And crime scene technicians were also trying to find something
from the evidence they collected at Post The Scenes,
just something to spark something in someone.
Like anything.
And at the time, the Lothian and Borders police had neither
the resources or the experts, really, the skills
to properly analyze the evidence.
So experts were being borrowed from the neighboring Strathclyde
police. Okay. Um, the mo at that point, the most significant piece of forensic evidence that
they got from either scene was Seaman, found on Helen Scott's coat. Oh, this would be great
in the events later. Yeah. But was just catalogued in 1977.
But hey, they got it.
Good for them for cataloguing.
They knew eventually this could be helpful.
Right.
Now at the time detectives were hoping someone saw something.
Somebody had to have seen something.
But the only real descriptions they were getting
was just the men in their clothing, right?
Which again, we're unusual.
So there was that.
A small team of officers were dispatched at,
after they checked out like the military garrison, they went to the fashion districts in and around
Edinburgh with descriptions and artist renderings of what they were wearing hoping that they could find
somewhere where these men bought those clothes. Right. Unfortunately, they weren't really getting
anything. By mid 1978, what had begun as a very strong investigation, and they were going full force,
it was kind of eroding into a colder and colder case.
Losing steam.
Frustrated by any lack of progress, and without literally anywhere to take this case, George
McPherson, the superintendent, made the decision to shelve the case that may.
That name sounds so familiar.
It does.
He made the decision to redirect the resources
of the department.
But as a cold case, it was gonna remain open,
but the investigation would still be ongoing,
but until a new leader piece of evidence came along,
they kind of just shut it down.
Because they can't have that many people on it.
When it's not getting the contract.
They just redirected the resources.
So in 1988, 10 years after the murder set a cure,
holy shit.
Still hadn't found who did it.
Nothing.
The case had been actually shifted
to the Dalkeese Criminal Investigation Division.
I think from what we could find,
it looks like it was just like,
because they had to get it off their stuff.
Like the reason for that was nothing more than just,
we had a clean house.
So here you go, it's your thing.
Yeah.
Maybe they had more like resources to be.
And they ended up being contacted by an inmate
at Soughton Prison in Edinburgh.
And this inmate said that his cellmate had confessed
to the killing of Christine and Helen.
Okay.
So the supposed confessing killer, inmates said that his cellmate had confessed to the killing of Christine and Helen.
So the supposed confessing killer actually apparently seemed to have knowledge of the
crimes that had been released to the public, including how the bodies had been positioned.
So it gave a little credibility.
But when questioned, the man denied ever having confessed and they didn't really have any
evidence to connect him to the crime. So it was just dropped.
Okay.
He was like, I didn't confess to that.
Honestly, okay.
So I kind of come back later.
I feel like that happens in a lot of these cases
and they just never touch upon it again.
Like it's just like this inmate said that he did it
and then he's like, nah, I didn't do that.
And then he had information that we never released.
I'm like, why did he know that?
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So additional claims kept coming in through the late 1980s
and early 1990s, actually.
Oh, no.
It's gonna last that long.
Including a lot of women who called in and claimed their husbands ran out on them
just after the murders happened.
And they thought that they were the ones.
Wow.
And none of those were lead.
Damn, it's really upsetting that that many women thought that their husband was capable of that.
Right.
But another possibly promising lead came in early 1997.
And this happened, so that's 27 years later.
1977 is when this happened.
Holy shit.
So this is when a bunch of underworld type figures were interviewed by the times.
Like gangster kind of figures, like underworlds, you love them.
I say gangster.
But that's it. that's what they are.
I know, but it's just like,
it doesn't feel right coming from you.
But look, I love it.
Because they're not like that you call the,
like a mob type thing would be gangsters.
Oh no, I even when you just say gangster
and you're supposed to, it's just funny, I don't know.
I was like, I don't understand.
I didn't want you to say gangsta.
Well, no, because it wouldn't make sense.
No, that's a yeah.
But it's just funny.
But, you know, so these underworld gangsters
were interviewed by the Times and claimed
that the killer was actually an underworld figure known
to be like a sexual monster.
Yikes.
Yeah.
According to...
And I'll just cut that in for 20 years.
Like, what the fuck?
I'm in wrong with you. They're underworld gremlins for themselves. I know. So, according to one they're underworld grumels. I know. I know. So according to one of the informants the killer is quote a pure beast
a few years ago he abducted the wife of a friend of mine and the beast kept her prisoner for a month
He raped her repeatedly through that time. Yeah
So a police source confirmed that the man in question was indeed a person of interest
at the time of the murders, actually.
Oh, sure.
And he said he had been in the frame because he was a thoroughly monstrous man at the time.
He was also known to frequent the world's end.
Oh, unfortunately, it ended up being a dead end.
It wasn't him.
Are you kidding me?
And later they would confirm through DNA that it wasn't him.
Did they check into the guy? I hope they took care of it. Yeah.
Like I was like, does he currently still have a prisoner? Because it's like, with this one,
you're like, yeah, that's awesome. That it's not him, I guess, but like,
that sucks that he exists. He's still a problem. Right.
Like he's a big old problem. So I hope they took care of that. But while the median, the public
were focused on theorizing
about underworld gangsters and deadbeat husbands,
police in Dalkeese started getting more familiar
with the science of DNA at this time.
We're in the 90s.
So we mentioned earlier that among the few pieces
of evidence collected during the first investigation,
there was semen discovered on Helen Scott's clothing.
Unfortunately, in 1977, like we said, not of little use,
but very smart of them to catalog it.
By 1997, advances in science and technology
had made it possible to not only identify a person
with certainty using their biological materials,
but it also made it possible to use those samples
to prove or disprove their involvement in a crime.
What?
In 1988, a DNA profile was created from the semen sample.
But at the time, all they could get was the killer's blood type.
But they were moving in the right direction.
Okay.
Now a decade later in the 90s,
there was more to be found from that sample,
and more was found from that sample.
During this time, police and Dalkeeth were eager to compare the new,
now more complete DNA sequence in that semen
to the DNA of men in the world's end on the night of the murders.
So the DNA profile was compared to over 200 samples taken from male patrons
in the pub that night.
Not one was a match.
What?
They also found no matches in the hundreds of swabs taken from known predators living in the
area at the time.
It wasn't even hitting on any of the 1200 suspects flagged in the police national computer.
Are you shitting me right now?
Yeah.
This was so frustrating, but luckily it wasn't for nothing
because during this whole process,
they were able to use the DNA
to discover that while Helen and Christine
were likely killed by two men,
one of those men sexually assaulted both girls.
So there was likely two killers,
but one man raped both of those girls.
Oh, yeah.
Which was new information and shocking information.
Yeah.
So after 18 months of backbending work trying to get this DNA to
Nab their killer, they really weren't closer to finding him.
This is solved, right?
It is.
Okay.
At a press conference held in March 1999, we're nearing the 2000s right now.
Dahlkeath, Superintendent John McGowan told reporters,
I'm disappointed for the families that we have not solved these murders.
It's a mystery and it remains a mystery.
I hope one day that another detective will solve it.
McGowan didn't know at the time, but investigators
would not have to wait for another detective to solve this case.
Now, in the spring of 2001, a man named Angus Sinclair went on trial for the 1978 rape and murder
of a 17-year-old girl named Mally Gallicor in Glasgow.
Sinclair had a long criminal history and a data back to the late 1950s.
Damn. Beginning with, like, you know,
a whole invasion, house breaking charges,
and his early teens.
And he escalated to sexual violence and child murder
before he even entered his 20s.
Holy shit.
Yep.
What's his name?
Angus and Claire.
Yep. When he was 16 years old,
he lured his neighbor, Catherine Rehill,
who was only seven years old, into a
stairwell where he sexually assaulted and strangled her to death.
Oh my God.
He then called an ambulance and told them a wee girl has fallen down the stairs.
Called an ambulance.
Oh, he's a scary looking motherfucker.
He was only given 10 years for that and served six.
What?
At the time, a psychiatrist who he was being forced to see
had this to say about him.
When he was 16 years old, I do not think
that any form of psychotherapy is likely
to benefit his condition.
And he will constitute a danger from now onwards.
He is obsessed by sex and given the minimum of opportunity, he will repeat these offenses.
And they release him anyway.
What the f-?
So they were just like, yeah.
This psychiatrist literally said, therapy won't help him.
If you let him out, he will 100% repeat these offenses.
And the justice system said,
what a moat, I guess we'll see.
And then he was like, yep.
And he did the same exact thing.
The therapist not like take the time
to, first of all, have to sit there
and talk with these people and study these people
and then write a report like that,
must just feel so slapped in the face
when the legal system's like,
yes, sorry, we're all,
because they're probably gonna fuck around and find out, I guess.
And the psychiatrist is probably like, yeah, fuck me, right?
Like, I just had a degree.
I just sat with this person for hours and hours on end.
And they're probably like, why did you ask me to do this
in the first place?
Like, you just gave me nightmares and fucked
with my mental health for no fucking reason
to totally disregard
my feelings on this. And also, nothing. Now that person knows me. Like, yeah. And like,
no other act played a role in their sentence somehow. Yeah. So after serving that joke of a sentence,
he was out, got married to a wife Sarah. Might I just say he has the yellowest fingernails I've
ever seen in my life. He's fucking heinous. So where he's dead now?
Die, bitch.
He also had a son.
Oh, yeah.
Now, he was thought to have also murdered.
Francis Barker, 37,
Hilda McCauley, 36, Agnes Cooney, 23,
and Anna Kenney, 20 years old,
all in similar ways to Helen and Christine.
They just weren't able to prove it.
They were all left with ligatures of their own clothing,
just like Christine and Helen.
And it was all around the same time.
And after Helen and Christine's murders,
he was identified by a witness in the rape and murder of 17-year-old Mary Gallagher.
Right.
Now, after this, he suddenly started raping,
because after he got a close call with Mary Gallacher,
he suddenly started raping and assaulting children
all over the area.
It's like he decided like I'm getting too close
to getting caught with teenage girls,
so I'm just gonna do it with children now.
Oh my God, this guy's fucking horrible.
In fact, later in 1982, when he was finally caught for the rape charges,
he said the amount of rapes he had committed was probably in the hundreds. Jesus,
crazy. What the fuck happened to this guy? He was sentenced to life in prison in 1982 when he got
caught for the rapes. Oh, wow. So he was in prison when they found out. Yeah. So he was known to
police in Edinburgh at the time of Christine and Helen's murders in 1977 when he was not in prison, obviously.
And he was, but he was never considered a suspect.
That's interesting.
I wonder why.
It's wild.
In fact, despite his having provided a DNA sample in 1999 when he was arrested for the Gallagher
murder.
You're shitting me.
It wasn't until 2004 that his profile was flagged as being a match. Why did it take
for the unknown DNA in the semen found in the world's end? How does that happen? It must
have just like an oversight. Yeah. I have no idea. I'm not sure it takes forever.
But in the beginning, I'm sure it took a lot longer. But by the time Dalkeeth detectives made the
match with Angus Sinclair for the seamen found on the coast.
So now we know he's the one who raped both those girls.
Yeah.
Angus Sinclair had been tried and convicted at this point for the Gallic or murder and
was serving a life sentence at Peterhead Prison.
And that's where he had been serving since he was convicted for three rapes in the 1990s.
So this man was just, he was just, his cup overflow with prison sentences.
With nasty.
Chillingly, through their investigation, detectives began to see Sinclair developing many,
like they watched through his history where he developed a lot of the elements
that became evident in the ED and Scott murders.
Like sexual assaults committed with a partner, which he did beginning at an early age.
And his method of strangulation and abuse
was also present in the Gallagher murder.
And was it really honing these skills?
Right, and was it the same partner the whole time?
So it was definitely this guy for at least a couple of them.
Okay, and we'll talk about who he is.
I was gonna say who the fuck is this guy
that like has no conscious whatsoever.
So they didn't want to tip Sinclair off to their investigation
or alert the public to the suspect
before they were ready to really nail him.
So Dalkeeth detectives worked very quietly.
But many journalists and crime reporters had contacts
with and law enforcement by May of 2004.
And so the tabloids started reporting
that Sinclair was the top suspect in the world's end killings.
So hoping to get ahead of them, police held a press conference in Edinburgh that month,
and they told reporters that they had been alerted to Sinclair through the science of DNA,
and were looking at his possible connection to at least seven unsolved murders in the
area.
Though they didn't at that time reveal any of the names of the victims.
Like it was pretty obvious who they were talking about.
Yeah. Following that press conference,
journalists from a ton of Scottish and British news outlets,
a lot of them tabloids, put the pieces together and concluded
that Sinclair was definitely one of the two men who had killed Christine
Edie and Helen Scott.
So the other big task was now finding
the identity of the second suspect.
They had a DNA profile, but nothing to compare it to.
So they looked to Sinclair and they just built the case
around him, looking to his friends,
his family, his associates,
anybody around him to be like, who's this person?
He obviously knows them.
Yeah.
Of course, it was tough because Sinclair
had spent a lot of time in prison since the early 80s.
So there was a little bit of a gap in his social life.
And after working closely with friends,
ex-scientists, detectives discovered that the second
seamen sample had, quote, come from the same paternal line
as the five brothers of Sarah Hamilton, Angus
Sinclair's wife.
So his brother-in-law?
Mm-hmm.
What?
Now, like I said, they're claiming that Angus was the one who raped both girls, but they
do believe that this other suspect had something to do with it because they were able to find
DNA from him.
Right.
From that point, it was simply a matter of probability
because they have narrowed it down with familiar DNA.
Of the five Hamilton brothers, only one Gordon Hamilton
was unaccounted for.
His fucking brother-in-law.
That's so twisted.
Nearly certain that their second suspect
was Gordon Hamilton, his wife's brother.
Detectives were pretty disappointed because they found out that Gordon Hamilton had died in 1996.
I hope it was really fucking awful for him. So he was never going to be held accountable for this crime.
Wow, that's really, really fucking mission-
I should agree. But as much as that sucked, investigators needed to confirm
his DNA was a match for the profile they had,
which was a little difficult.
Hamilton's body had been cremated.
Of course.
So they could not exume him.
Yeah, I wonder why that was,
as fucking was.
Yeah, exactly.
So detectives determined a personal possession
would be probably the next best thing they could get.
Unfortunately, they quickly found that Gordon Hamilton was a very difficult man to pin down,
and even his family members didn't really have any of his possessions or items that really
could give them a biological sample.
They would want them.
After months of dead ends, Edinburgh detectives had to get kind of creative, so they located
a house Hamilton had worked on many years earlier. And after getting permission to do a thorough search of the house from the homeowners,
investigators found a small section of like this, some kind of stripping in the house,
that contained a trace of Hamilton's DNA.
Oh, shit.
And despite the relatively small size of the sample,
they were able to successfully match the sample to the DNA
that they collected in 1977.
Proving conclusively that Gordon Hamilton was the second killer in the world's end case.
Even though he was dead, they did look into his background because they were like, what
the fuck?
And they discovered he was raised in a pretty large Scottish family where the father was
very domineering and very violent.
The children all came out of the home with addiction
struggles, a lot of criminal tendencies, a product of
their environment.
Yeah.
So of course, only a couple of his siblings were even
willing to talk to police.
Right.
Angus's wife Sarah and a younger brother were really the
only ones that were willing to talk to them.
And it was through the younger brother that
investigators learned Gordon had begun his
criminal careers with Angus Sinclair, which included acts of violence and theft occurring
before and after the ED and Scott murders.
What's crazy is this was apparently a surprise to some people who knew them?
Like they were like, wow, I didn't see that for them.
Like Scott and yeah, like they were like, wow, they were violent, that's crazy.
And it's like they were the most violent.
Right, sorry, I didn't mean Scott.
Yeah, it's wild.
But together, they were brutally violent.
They had not only committed the rape and murder of Edie Scott,
but also a home invasion robbery the year prior,
where they robbed and viciously beat a man and his daughter,
as well as their landlord.
Holy shit. What the fuck were they doing?
Monsters. Were they like on shit?
No, they were just, they're just our people.
They just are shit.
By the time Detective sat down to interview Angus and Claire in October of 2004,
they had assembled a pretty vivid picture of his personal and criminal history as well as that of Gordon Hamilton.
Yeah.
In addition to the murders of Christine Edian Hellen Scott,
they were now even more convinced that he was involved
in the unsolved murders of Anna Kenney,
Matilda McColley, and Agnes Cooney.
And as well as tons of other assaults.
I bet.
So Sinclair denied any connection to Gordon Hamilton or the murdered girls just spent
the interview sessions trying to intimidate or like like assert dominance over the interview
or kind of thing.
Dude, you're in prison for the rest of your life.
Shut up and tell us what happened.
Yeah.
And when he couldn't intimidate them, he quote, according to Tom Wood, he used all sorts
of tricks to exasperate interviewing officials to the point
where they lost any chance of obtaining meaningful progress.
What a douchebag.
He was a steel trap. You wouldn't say anything.
Angus and Clare had spent nearly three decades in a long-term, very serious relationship
with the justice system.
Yeah.
And he was essentially a professional criminal by the time investigators got to him in 2004.
Right.
So of course, detectives were unsuccessful in getting any useful information, or even so
much as a hint of emotion from him about it.
Fortunately, they felt they had more than enough physical evidence to get a conviction.
And on January 26, 2006, Angus Sinclair was indicted for the murders of Christine Edy and Helen
Scott.
Good. I'm glad he had to face the justice system even because like you know when they're
in prison, sometimes you're like, are they gonna try it or?
Oh, no, they did. And he entered no plea.
I didn't even know that was an option.
Yeah. You just said, no, thank you.
The trial of Angus Sinclair for the murder of Christine and Helen began at the high court
in Edinburgh on August 27, 2007.
Wow.
Sinclair, of course.
He said he was innocent, maintained his innocence,
and lodged a special defense
in criminating his brother-in-law, Gordon Hamilton.
I thought you guys had no connection.
Yeah, all of a sudden, he knows.
The special defense said that if any sexual relations took place,
they did so with consent.
Fuck right off.
So he was just trying to explain
away the seamen found at the seamen.
He was like, we had sex, consensually.
Crazy that you're in here, though,
for a rape and murder.
Yeah, that's weird.
And I love that he was like,
if there's any DNA found or any ame found there,
just know that it was consensual.
It's like, oh, so you don't even know,
you're just like, I'm just covering my bases here.
Now among the witnesses heard in the first few days
of the trial was Helen's father, who
told the jury of being informed of his daughter's death
in Jackie Thompson, who recounted the girl's night out
that ended with her leaving her two friends at the bar,
apparently in the company of Sinclair and Hamilton.
Also on the witness, Stan was John Rafferty,
who was one of the police officers who'd seen Christine and Helen
with the two suspects outside the world's end.
According to Rafferty's testimony,
he'd been helping Christine off the ground after she'd fallen
when he noticed a shifty man watching him.
He said, I assumed he was with the girls.
So this was another police officer.
And he told the jury, he wasn't making any kind of eye contact.
He was looking away from me.
You get the impression when you're a police officer
that some people don't like police officers.
And the way this chap was looking at me,
he didn't like police officers.
Yeah, but.
Now also on the stand with Sinclair's now former wife, Sarah.
I was hoping you were gonna say that
because you kept saying wife and I was like, she legally separated.
And she was like, bye bitch.
Good.
And she told the jury she married her husband in 1970
and they had a pretty decent marriage.
She didn't have a lot of like,
she was like, I wasn't abused, it wasn't like,
I did not expect you to say that.
She was like, that's why she was like this
really fuck me up.
As soon as you brought her up in my head,
I was like, oh my God, I can't imagine
what that poor woman went through.
According to her, that's why she was so shocked.
Right.
Because she was like, this wasn't like,
oh, I could see him doing this.
But that's the thing that happens.
Like, like BTK's wife and daughter, like what?
It's plenty of them.
It's so sad.
And it's so scary to think that that's how they walk a month.
They can just shape shift.
So scary.
At will.
But she also told the jury that her husband
and brother, Jordan, would often go on weekend fishing
trips in the couple's Toyota high ace,
and I think it's a caravanette, which I've never seen.
It's like a caravan, but like a little.
But a net.
But that was believed to be the vehicle
that the girls were transported in. Oh, wow.
But that vehicle had since been sold and scrapped. Oh, imagine that. Now, the investigators found
what they believed were fibers from the care of Anatopolstery on Helen Scott's coat. They didn't
have it to match, but they could at least make an assumption. Right. But without an interior
to match it to, it was pretty circumstantial if even
that.
Now the trial was moving along as expected, and the prosecutor, Alan McKay, gave his
closing remarks, and it was all thrown into turmoil on the 10th day.
The judge halted the proceedings and suddenly dismissed the charges, citing insufficient evidence.
I'm sorry.
What?
In his statement, Judge Lord Clark said,
there was no forensic evidence to link the accused
to the items used to kill the girls.
I'm not satisfied that the evidence relied on by the crown
can overcome that absence of crucial evidence.
Like what about the seamen though?
Yep.
But remember, he's claiming we had consensual sex.
They're saying there's already convicted of rape and murder, the decision outraged to the
families, investigators, prosecutors.
The prosecutors really thought they had a strong case because they did.
I was just going to say because they fucking did.
But because the jury was barred from several key pieces of evidence, including Sinclair's DNA
on the ligature used to kill both women,
the only remaining evidence was the semen
and Sinclair claimed they had a consensual sexual encounter.
That does not prove I killed her,
except that your DNA is on the ligature.
They even brought up, and this is like pretty graphic,
but I think it's
important to show you how fucked up this is, because they found evidence in the autopsy of trauma.
Yeah.
Sexual trauma. Absolutely, I'm sure. And they had the fucking nerve in this trial to be like,
well, can you really say that that's rape or could it just be from, oh, they use the rough,
the rough defense thing? Literally anybody that uses that defense.
Yeah, go fuck yourself, truly. Like, honestly, from the that uses that defense, go fuck yourself.
Yeah, truly.
Like, honestly, from the bottom of my heart, go fuck yourself.
Truly.
But yeah, so they barred a lot of evidence. The only one allowed was the one that's
in Claire was claiming consensual. You can't prove that I killed her with that.
I'm unfortunately at its core. Yeah, you can't prove that she that he killed her with
with that piece of evidence. If we're looking at it in a legal pin-pointed thing.
But it's like, yeah.
Then why are we barring the evidence
that shows that he killed her?
That's the thing.
That's the thing.
That's the thing we're relying on one piece of evidence
when we have several pieces of evidence.
The piece of evidence in that says he was there
at the very least and that something occurred.
What the fuck?
Barring the piece of evidence
that clearly shows he killed her.
But I'm like, what did you even have to gain
from dismissing this case if anything?
It's like an outrage.
It's an outrage.
And by dismissing the charges against Sinclair,
the judge basically ensured
that double jeopardy laws protected him
from ever being held responsible
for the deaths of Christine, Edie, and Helen Scott.
Fuck this, Judge.
So the decision by Judge Lord Clark
to return a verdict of no case to answer
outraged literally everybody.
Yeah.
But then everybody started blaming each other
for the decision.
Police officers were blaming the prosecutor,
the public blamed the police.
And it just no y'all.
Everybody's blaming each other. I'm like, blame that, fucker. That's the judge. prosecutor, the public blame the police. And just no y'all, everybody's blaming each other.
I'm like, blame that fucker.
That's the judge.
He made the final call.
But you guys all worked up there.
Because you guys all worked together
to get that evidence, to get it into trial.
He's the mother fucker that says what goes
and what doesn't go.
Fuck him.
It's like, you all did your job.
He didn't do his.
I'm like, do you have a daughter, sir?
Like, can you imagine if they do you have a cousin? Do you have a woman that you love in your life? Yep. Can you imagine?
So following the decision by the judge, a spokesperson for the Lothian and Borders police
released a statement to the press and said, there have been numerous reviews of the brutal murders
of Christine E.D. and Helen Scott over the past 30 years, and we have always taken very careful
steps to review all the evidence was there have been kept since the bodies were found
on October 16, 1977.
We put together a thorough and detailed case for the Crown Office to take to trial, and
today's announcement is disappointing.
To say the least.
The prosecutor's office responded with their own statement, essentially claiming
that the DNA evidence that links Sinclair to the ligatures was not collected or analyzed
by forensic experts from the prosecutor's office, and therefore a decision was made to
exclude it from the evidence presented to the jury.
Fuck that.
They said the crown considered that there was sufficient evidence to indict Sinclair for
the appalling murders of Helen Scott and Christine E.D.
There's no doubt that he was involved in events which preceded the deaths of these young
women.
The purpose of the prosecution was to establish whether he was criminally involved.
In all trials, the prosecutor has a duty continually to consider and review the available evidence,
with a view to deciding how best to proceed with the trial.
Low copy, low probability DNA evidence found on articles of underwear,
which have been used to bind the victims, was not led by the crown.
Laying aside the evidence, which was consistent with sexual contact with the victims,
with consensual contact with the victims,
the crown was of the view that there was sufficient evidence on which to base a prosecution. Further, given the basis upon which the judge approached the evidence which was led,
we do not consider that this evidence relating as it did to items of underwear worn by the deceased
would have persuaded the judge that there was sufficiency.
So they're basically like, yeah, sure.
Now, after 30 years of investigation, dedication, grief, horror, nightmares, the family of Helen
Scott and Christine Edy were just robbed of justice when the trial judged just dismiss the
charges.
Yeah.
While the decision was heart shattering for anyone directly involved in the case, it also
brought up a lot more questions like Like, housing Claire's very obvious guilt
could be circumvented by a legal technicality
and pro-prosecutorial performance.
Like, what?
Like, it is obvious to literally anybody
that he is guilty.
Yeah.
But because of that tiny little loophole,
we're just gonna say say fuck it, whatever.
They don't even feel like it's like the prosecutor's office.
The prosecutor's office is false.
That just feels like the judge was like, no, sorry.
It was, it was loopholes and it was like little fuckups.
That's what it's essentially.
And I'm like, dude, what do you have to gain?
Number one, this guy's in prison forever anyways.
You're not fucking saving his life, but Because of this, let me hear it.
The then cabinet secretary for justice, Kenny McCaskill,
sent the case against Sinclair to the Scottish Law Commission for review.
Let's go Scottish Law Commission.
Oh yeah.
After years of review and analysis,
the Commission produced tons of reports that directly influenced the Double
Jeopardy Act passed by Scottish Parliament in 2011.
Among other things, this act allowed for the retrial of acquitted persons under certain
circumstances, particularly those relating to decisions made in bad faiths and questions
of mishandled evidence.
Yeah, that one was made in bad fucking faith. I love that it's like made in bad faiths and questions of mishandled evidence. Yeah, that one was made in bad faith.
Made in bad faith. They were like, you fucked up.
So following the passage of the Double Jeopardy Act of
2011, the crown instructed Lothian and Borders Police to
reopen the world's end murder case. Fuck yeah.
As if the evidence they had collected for three decades
wasn't enough, detectives discovered additional evidence
that challenged Sinclair's alibi in the previous shot.
Troubles it.
Including soil samples that placed Angus Sinclair
at the sites of both murders.
To soil samples.
That's too much.
I love that they were like,
if Siemens samples don't work for you,
let's get some fucking soil samples.
We'll use the fucking Earth. Maybe I'll get some air samples.
Yeah, I will get all the elements against you.
Fucking go, girl.
So this, with the DNA found on the ligatures around the necks of Christine and Helen,
the soil disproved Angus and Claire's claim that he was fishing at the time of the death.
Yeah, go fuck yourself. They're soiling your shoes.
And was nowhere near any murder scene.
Based on this new evidence,
in now a much stronger case,
the crown was granted permission
to retry the case against Angus Sinclair.
I'm doing my gacha dance.
So the second trial of Angus Sinclair
began October 13, 2014.
Oh my God.
At the high court in Livingston.
At this time,
Sinclair pleaded not guilty to two counts of murder. According to the
defense submitted by declare, it's in Claire, he was fishing on the banks of the
River 4th, somewhere near Cawkenzi power station. When both McGurls were
murdered by his brother-in-law, Gordon Hamilton. Doubt it. As he'd done in the
last trial, he again claimed that he'd had consensual sex
with both girls.
Fuck right off the bat.
Yeah, right.
This time, the prosecutor, Frank Mahalind,
he built a stronger case against Sinclair
that very different from the first trial
included the damning DNA evidence
that implicated Sinclair in both murders.
The jury was also shown very graphic photographs
taken at the time the bodies were discovered
and were given tours of both crime scenes
and heard testimony from the experts and witnesses
that it testified in the first trial, too.
Wow.
And since it was seven years later after the first trial,
everyone's understanding of DNA was a little more robust.
Definitely.
In his testimony, forensic scientists Martin Fairley the first trial, everyone's understanding of DNA was a little more robust. Definitely.
In his testimony, forensic scientists Martin Fairley told the jury that there was a one-in-a-billion
chance DNA on the coat could have come from anyone other than the accused, Angus Sinclair.
One-in-a-billion.
That'll sell it.
Similarly, forensic scientists Geraldine Davidson, like good for you, Geraldine, forensic scientists,
let's go, girl.
Explain the process used to test the samples found
on the bindings of both young women
as being, quote, beyond anything you would normally do
in a normal DNA test.
So she was like, we went above and beyond, man.
Yeah.
According to her, the findings provide
extremely strong support for the view
that Gordon Hamilton and or Angus Sinclair
were involved in restraining and strangling
both Helen Scott and Christine Edy rather than an unknown and undetective individual. In our
opinion, the findings are fitting with our range of expectations. Had Gordon Hamilton
and Angus and Claire been in contact with most, if not all, of the ligatures examined in
this case. Wow. On the final day of testimony, Angus Sinclair took the stand to testify
in his own defense.
Like a little bitch.
Sinclair told the jury that he and Hamilton
had met the girls at the World's End pub,
and after last call, the four drove to Sinclair,
include Sinclair's Toyota,
Kim, whatever it is, caravanette,
to Hollywood Park,
where he had consensual sex with both girls.
Doubt it.
Then he left both young women with Hamilton and he wanted to go fishing.
Really?
You just went fishing in the middle of the fucking night.
We are decades later and you can't come up with something better than that.
Gone Fishing.
On cross-examination, the prosecutor challenged this version of events saying, two 17-year-old
girls taken somewhere they didn't want to go in the dark, in the back of a van with two strange men with sex on
the mind.
They must have been terrified.
Absolutely.
You didn't care that they wanted to go home.
And in response to him, Sinclair said, no, I just wanted to have sex.
Ew, go fuck yourself, dude.
He's a fucking demon.
He's filthy.
Yeah, he's literally filthy.
He's really filthy. That's a perfect word for it. He is a fucking demon. He's filthy. Yeah, he's literally filthy. He's filthy. That's a perfect word for him.
He's a filthy fuck.
Oh, otherwise he stuck to that previous story.
He pinned the murders on his brother-in-law who is dead and can't face the charges.
And just that's it.
On November 14, 2014, the jury deliberated for less than two hours and came back with a
verdict of guilty.
Hell yeah.
And sentence Angus and Claire to life in prison with a verdict of guilty. Hell yeah. And sentence Angus and Claire to life
in prison with a minimum of 37 years. And he was already in there for life. If you'd hold me
anything else, I would quite literally fucking riot. Yeah. It was a big relief to everybody.
It was a big relief to the family members of Edian Scott, the detectives, and a statement
for to the press former former deputy chief constable
of the Lothian and Borders' belief, Tom Woods, said,
When it happened in 1977, it was like the turning of a page.
They looked like young women in their photographs, but really, they were little more than children.
The nature of the crime and the brutality of their deaths meant that a real shock ran through
Scotland. People still remember it and have it as a point of reference. As each generation came up, they became infected with the determination to
see this through. The officers who have devoted themselves to the case will see this as a debt
repaid. You know what makes me so sad? Her grandma went to her grave and never got to see justice.
I hope wherever she is, she knows that. I hope she knows.
Her granddaughter was like, what happened?
She knows at least like, you know,
like, Justice was Justice.
So Angus and Claire was the first person
to be retried and convicted
with after the passage of the Double Jeopardy Act.
And Frank Mahullen told reporters
the day after Sinclair's conviction,
I can assure the public that there is now
no longer such a thing as a closed case in Scotland.
I love it.
Just because a murder took place many years ago,
it is no less important in the eyes of the prosecution service
than one that took place last week.
Good.
It was also the longest sentence handed out
by a Scottish court at that time.
Wow.
In early 2019, Angus Sinc Claire suffered a bunch of strokes.
He ended up being bedridden and incontinent until his deaths on March 11th of that year.
Oh baby, I am dancing in these streets.
Yup.
Fuck you, Angus.
Fuck that guy.
At the time of his death, he was serving life sentences for the murders of Christine Edy,
Helen Scott, and Mary Galliker.
But police still suspect him of those other murders.
Oh, absolutely.
Now, Helen's father, Maureen, did,
he did pass away in 2015.
So he did, he was able to see a lot of this happen.
Right.
And he was 85.
He was 85.
But the year before his death in 2014,
he said, how anybody could do that to another human being.
I sit at nights and I think, well, just what did she go through?
How did she suffer?
I mean, it's frightening.
I just remember Helena, she was, and keep wondering where she would have been today.
Would she have been married?
Would she have had a family?
Would I have had grandchildren?
Where'd she be living?
That's so awful.
I hate that he had to spend the rest of his life thinking things like that.
But I'm so glad they finally got,
I mean, when you got to the part where they did it,
I was like, is this how this is gonna end?
And she gave me Teresita Bassa and this.
I could not,
because I mean, these families,
and the detectives and investigators
on the case, they all deserve to have this fucking
wrapped up in a bow at the end.
And I hate that it took that long.
I know.
Because for those families and those detectives,
because it really affected a lot of them.
They were all talking about like this killed us.
Everybody involved in it.
They all had to sit through it for decades
and just have frustration and brick wall
and watch that asshole get off the first time.
And those the first people that put it together to spend that long doing that and then to get like
like slapped in the face essentially. But luckily it does eventually have justice in the end.
Thank goodness. And what a, what a, what a, what a like awesome way to get justice to with the,
the double jeopardy. I know. That's the thing.
It's so theatrical.
The way that it all came together.
I love that it all came together that way.
Me too.
It was like Christine and Helen were working things.
Yeah.
They were making a happen.
Hell yeah.
I mean, they made should happen.
Like, hell yeah.
On this plane.
Exactly.
Wow.
Yeah.
That was wild.
So, I think there was a few other cases mentioned in this case that Angus and Claire was
So, so sad to be a part of and it's definitely a part of and I'm gonna look into those and see if we can do another
episode
Talking about those ones because I want to make sure I can find some information about them
But I think they I was interested to see what those were about. Yeah, definitely. Yeah. Wow. Yeah. Well, stay tuned for that hopefully, and we hope you keep listening.
And we hope you keep it weird. But not so weird that this. Yeah. Yes. Hey, Prime Members! You can listen to Morvid, Early, and Add Free on Amazon Music. Download
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