7YO Outsmarts Killer—Solves 32-Year Cold Case
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THE INTERROGATION ROOM: RACHAEL’S SECRET
This is 7 year old Rachael Watts. Just hours before this footage was recorded, Rachael was found wandering alone, by the side of the road, with her clothes missing, and covered in bruises. The woman on the right, is Rachael’s mom. She was told by police not to show any emotion, because it could cause Rachael to shut down. And they need her to talk.Notice how for the first time, Rachael is looking down, dangling her legs nervously. That’s because, she’s hiding something. Something she doesn’t want anyone to know.For the first time, Rachael’s mom is hearing the details of what happened to her daughter, which makes keeping calm incredibly difficult. Rachael, however, is too terrified to talk. And what she says next, is not the full story.Rachael is afraid that the man who tried to kill her, will come back for her. The problem is, she will have to face him again. February 7th, three days after the attack. Rachael is standing behind a one way mirror, just a few feet away, from a line of suspects. But Rachael has no idea, that someone in this line-up, has already killed two other girls, and if she can’t point him out, he will strike again.
NIGHTMARE IN BRIGHTON
The year is 1990. In a suburb of Brighton called Whitehawk, on the southern coast of England, 7 year old Rachael is living a happy life with her loving parents, Jennie, and Peter. On that particular day, Rachael is out rollerskating, while her dad is working in the front garden. She asks him for money, to go buy a chocolate bar at the local candy store. It’s around 4pm when Rachael rolls away in her white rollerskates. Just a little over an hour later, Rachael’s parents are beginning to worry that she hasn’t come home yet, when suddenly, there’s a knock at the door. It’s the police. Rachael, is in the hospital. She was found by a couple on Devil’s Dyke road, over 7 miles from her home.It’s clear to the couple, what happened to her. And they’re horrified. They rush Rachael over to the closest house, and call the police.Rachael’s mother Jennie rushes over to the hospital in Brighton, where she’s met by Police Officer, Debra Wood. Before she’s allowed to go see her daughter, Jennie is asked to do the impossible. She‘s told she cannot show her daughter she’s upset, or it may cause her to shut down, and for now, police still need to interrogate her.
THE LINE-UP & A SCARILY FAMILIAR FACE
Three days later, Rachael is asked to identify her attacker. Police have arranged a line-up consisting of one suspect, and 9 look-alikes. One of them, is a man named Russell Bishop, someone Police have accused of murder before. But in 1987, after being acquitted of all charges against him, Russell Bishop walked free.It all starts on October 9th 1986. The day Karen Hadaway and Nicola Fellows go missing.
THE BABES IN THE WOOD CASE
Over 150 police officers, and neighbors of the families have been searching the large wooded area near the girls’ homes. But after nearly 24 hours with no sign from them, people are beginning to lose hope they’ll be found alive. The story gains national attention. And Karen and Nicola’s parents go on television, to ask the public for help.
It’s 4pm, October 10th. Police Officer Paul Smith is walking towards Wild Park, just a few streets down from where the two girls live, when he has the strangest encounter.
The voice is that of Russell Bishop. Russell lives in Moulsecoomb and is close to the families of the two girls. He’s part of the search efforts, and has been walking around with his dog.
Bishop is known by the police for his petty criminal history; car theft, shop lifting. Everyone around the estate considers him to be a bit of a joke. But his comment doesn’t go unnoticed. As the men are walking back into Wild Park, they hear two boys screaming the words “we found them, we found them” Russell Bishop runs off toward the voice, faster than Officer Paul Smith can catch up.
The crime has a devastating effect on the community. Everyone is terrified for their own children.
A BLUE SWEATSHIRT
Detectives interview over 10 thousand people, in what will become the largest murder hunt in Sussex. One name keeps coming up.
Bishop is known to both families, so the girls knew him very well. Which means it wouldn't have been hard, for Bishop to convince them to follow him into the woods.
There were multiple sightings of Russell Bishop, in and around the area, at the time the girls went missing. What’s more, one witness says they saw Bishop wearing a blue sweatshirt that night. The description matches that of a blue sweatshirt which was found discarded on a trail, close to where the bodies were found. And that trail, leads to Russell Bishop’s house.
In order to confirm they have the right suspect, detectives have to connect Russell Bishop to that sweatshirt. But in 1986, DNA science is still in its infancy. However, forensic analysis reveals the red stains on the sweatshirt are not blood, but a very specific type of paint. The same red paint Bishop was seen using on two of his friends’ cars. This could indicate it was in fact Russell Bishop’s sweatshirt. But they need to be sure.
As Russell Bishop is being interrogated by Police at the station, officers take the blue sweatshirt to his house, where they’re greeted by Russell’s girlfriend, Jenny Johnson. The first thing she says when she opens the door is, “Oh, you’ve brought Russell’s sweatshirt back.”
Jenny has no idea that she has just incriminated her boyfriend. The two officers take a sworn statement from her, which she signs without hesitation, proving that Russell Bishop owned the sweatshirt that was worn by the girls’ killer.
FAILED TRIAL & DOUBLE JEOPARDY
November 1987, more than a year after the murders, Russell Bishop’s trial begins. The entire country is watching, everyone wants to see justice for the girls they call the Babes in the Wood. And the prosecution is convinced they have a strong case. But there’s one thing they couldn’t have accounted for. When Jenny Johnson, Russell Bishop’s girlfriend takes the stand, she changes her entire story.
The prosecution knows Jenny Johnson is lying under oath, to protect her boyfriend, but they have no way of proving it.
Because the blue sweatshirt can no longer be linked to Bishop, the defense argues that almost anyone could have killed the two girls. The case, falls apart. After four weeks of trial, the jury is asked to deliberate.
It takes them less than two hours to reach a verdict.
In 1987, there’s a law called Double Jeopardy, which states that a person cannot be tried twice for the same crime. Once acquitted, Russell Bishop can never be tried again for the murders of those two little girls, even if police could find irrefutable proof that he is the killer.
As Bishop leaves the courtroom, he puts his hands in the air, and shouts “I’m innocent”. He then rushes through the line of reporters, to go celebrate at the pub across from the courthouse, with his brothers, and his girlfriend.
Still inside the courtroom, the Hadaway and the Fellows families are devastated. They know, they will never see justice for Karen and Nicola.
BISHOP’S PUBLIC IMAGE & CASE CLOSED
As months pass, a wrongfully accused Russell Bishop takes the spotlight, while the country forgets about the real victims. The Sussex police are convinced that Russell Bishop is guilty, and that they had the right man. But with the double jeopardy law, there’s no use in them continuing the investigation. This angers the public, and everyone is demanding answers.
August 19th 1989, the parents organise a march to force the Sussex police to reopen the case. Among those who participate in the protest, is Russell Bishop.
Everyone can see that Russell Bishop is using the protest, organised by the families of the victims, as a platform to improve his public image.
After his acquittal, Bishop received £15,000 from the tabloid “News of the World”, to publish his version of the story, as a victim of this miscarriage of justice. In the article, the Bishop family explicitly frames Barry Fellows, Nicola’s father, as being a better suspect.
However, after a full investigation by Sussex police, they find the accusations to be baseless. Barry Fellows is completely innocent, and cleared of all charges. But the damage is already done.
Russell Bishop got what he wanted. He’s no longer the villain of his community. And on February 2nd 1990, the Sussex police send Bishop a letter, confirming that the case of the Babes in the Wood is officially closed. Which means someone, has gotten away with murder.
THE KIDNAPPING OF RACHAEL WATTS
February 4th 1990, 2 days after Bishop receives that letter, is the day 7 year old Rachael, is kidnapped.
At around 4pm, Rachael is out rollerskating, while her dad is working in the garden.
Rachael has no time to react. Without a word, the man snatches her off the street, and throws her in the trunk of his car. Then, the car speeds off. Rachael is terrified, but her mind remains sharp. She looks around the trunk, illuminated by the breaklights, and finds a can of WD40, and a hammer. She starts hammering on the lid of the trunk, as loud as she can, screaming at the top of her lungs.
She then starts to untie her rollerskates and take them off, because she knows that without them, she stands a better chance of running away, once the man opens the trunk.
With her mom sitting next to her in the interrogation room, Rachael omits parts of the story. She says nothing about what happened in the back seat of the car, and to investigators, it means she doesn’t remember.
The man then puts his hands around her throat. Rachael can’t breathe, but before she can say anything, she blacks out. He then carries Rachael into the woods, and abandons her, convinced that she’s dead.
When she comes to, Rachael is alone, and unable to stand, she fumbles her way out of the bushes, but she’s dizzy and keeps falling over.
But she quickly realizes, that if she doesn’t approach those headlights, she’s going to freeze to death. When she finally sees a shape in the dark, it’s a young couple, offering a blanket and their help. After being admitted to the hospital, Rachael is reunited with her mom.
BISHOP’S SECOND ARREST AND CONVICTION
With the details given by Rachael, police are quickly able to start the investigation. They’re looking for a white male, with a mustache, driving a red car. As the information is shared with the unit, detectives are informed that someone they know all too well, was seen driving a red car, that same night. Russell Bishop.
Bishop is immediately put under arrest. In an effort to make sure, Bishop doesn’t escape justice, Rachael is asked to face her attacker once more. The man Rachael points out, is in fact, Russell Bishop. On December 13th 1990, Russell Bishop is found guilty of kidnapping, indecent assault, and attempted murder. And while everyone is relieved that he finally got what he deserved, there is no celebration in the courtroom. No cheers. Because everyone in Brighton is convinced Bishop killed Karen and Nicola in 1986, and that he should never have been allowed to walk free.
And while the families of Karen Hadaway and Nicola Fellows continue to fight in their daughters' names, Rachael returns to her family life. She is granted anonymity by the court, and is hoping everything will go back to the way it was. And for more than a decade, she has managed to live a normal life. Until one day, out of nowhere, the phone rings. Russell Bishop is up for parole.
PAROLE FEARS AND DOUBLE JEOPARDY REPEALED
It’s 2004. Rachael is now 22 years old, and the news is terrifying. Bishop, who has been in jail for the last 14 years, is due to be released at any moment. She’s convinced Bishop will come back for her.
It’s 2005, and finally, there’s hope for Rachael, and for the Fellows and Hadaways. The Double Jeopardy law, an 800 year old law preventing anyone from being tried twice for the same crime, is repealed. This means, with new evidence, Bishop could be retried for the 1986 murders of Karen and Nicola.
But they need to act fast, before he gets out on parole.
A new investigation is opened on the 1986 murder case, but gathering new and compelling evidence proves to be harder than expected.
Ever since that phone call, Rachael has been terrified of Bishop being released. She’s developed a condition called agoraphobia, which prevents her from ever leaving the house.
As years pass, Bishop’s parole continues to be denied, but until he’s put away for good, Rachael will never feel at ease.
DNA BREAKTHROUGH
Then, finally in 2013, there’s a break in the case.
The discovery is huge. But there’s just one problem, scientists can’t say for sure, that the sweatshirt was not contaminated back in 1986. This means that any new DNA found on the sweatshirt is inadmissible.
However, when the bodies were found, forensic pathologists had taken tapings from the girls’ arms, and kept them under seal. Back then, they didn’t have the science to examine them for DNA. No one knows what they might find.
This could be the new compelling evidence investigators need to win this case.
In May 2016, Russell Bishop is taken out of his prison cell. He is convinced his parole has finally come.
After his interrogation, Bishop is arrested, and sent back to his cell, to wait for his third trial.
With his DNA on the girl’s arms, the prosecution is convinced they have a strong case. But they have no idea, that Russell Bishop has a plausible explanation for that, and it could destroy the case once more.
THE FINAL CONVICTION
October 16th 2018. Russell Bishop’s retrial for the murders of Karen Hadaway and Nicola Fellows begins. When the prosecution shows the evidence to the court, the defense insists the sweatshirt was not Bishop’s. And they explain why his DNA was found on Karen’s arm. According to Bishop, he claims that when the bodies were found, he went to check their pulse. Something, apparently, he had told detective John Moreton back in 1986.
Russell Bishop’s argument cracks in front of the courtroom. The truth, is far more disturbing. After he strangled the two girls to death on October 9th 1986, Russell Bishop participated in the search the next morning. He wanted to be the first on the scene, to check their pulse, so he could explain why his DNA was on the two girls. The problem is, he never got the chance to get close enough.
Bishop is furious, he knows he’s about to lose. This is when, the prosecution reveals one last bit of evidence against Bishop. Letters written by Bishop while he was on trial in 1987, sent to a 13 year old. The letters are read out loud to the court.
On December 10th, at 12:30pm, the jury is sent out to deliberate, and in less than two hours, they come back with a verdict.
Russell Bishop is finally convicted for the murders he committed in 1986, and for which he escaped justice for 32 years. He is sentenced to an additional 36 years.
RACHAEL’S HEALING JOURNEY
Since the trial, Rachael has been on a journey to get back control of her life. She has built a beautiful family, with her loving husband.
To support Rachael’s ongoing healing journey: https://www.gofundme.com/f/rachael-russell-bishop-...
Michelle Hadaway, Karen's mother, has also written a book detailing her years-long fight for justice: https://www.amazon.ca/My-Girl-Michelle-Hadaway/dp/...
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Credits
Written, directed & edited by Justin Chalifoux
Research by Manon Lafosse
Voiceover by William Akana
Produced by Alexandra Salois & Salim Sader
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Sources
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