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The family of murder victim Muriel McKay have offered a landowner £40,000 to let them excavate the farm where they believe her body was buried 54 years ago.

They hope the money would compensate the banker for the inconvenience and any damage and repairs to his land.

The offer was made in a letter hand-delivered to Ian de Burgh Marsh’s home at Stocking Farm in the Hertfordshire village of Stocking Pelham.

He has always refused to give the family access but did agree to let Scotland Yard dig up a small, restricted part of the land last year.

Detectives found nothing, but the family later insisted the police team had searched the wrong area.

The sum on offer is the same as the family had agreed to pay Mrs McKay’s killer Nizamodeen Hosein to break his silence over the 1969 kidnap and finally reveal the burial site.

Hosein, 75, who is unwell and has lived in poverty in his native Trinidad since his prison release, turned down the offer but revealed the location anyway “for my peace of mind”.

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Muriel McKay’s killer wants to help find her body

In the letter, Muriel’s grandson Mark Dyer writes: “The perpetrator has admitted his part in this crime after so many years and he genuinely wishes to help us find Muriel. He has provided a written and sworn affidavit detailing the location of the burial site.

“We now wish to search a small, targeted and specific area with minimal police attendance. That way there will be no unnecessary searching.

“We agreed to a limited search previously and now the circumstances have changed as we have specific information as to the burial location from the person who actually dug the grave.”

Mr Dyer, who is a businessman, adds. “As a family, we now offer you this sum for any inconvenience caused and any legal fees incurred. Please assist us as we need to have closure on this family tragedy.”

Alick and Muriel McKay. Martin Brunt package. Uploaded 15 November 2023.
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Alick, who was deputy to press magnate Rupert Murdoch, and his wife Muriel

Nizamodeen and his older brother Arthur were jailed for life for kidnapping and murdering Mrs McKay, 55, the Australian wife of a newspaper executive, after an Old Bailey trial in 1970.

Her husband Alick was deputy to press magnate Rupert Murdoch who had just bought the Sun newspaper. The bungling brothers had meant to kidnap Murdoch’s then wife Anna.

It was one of the first murder convictions without a body being found and the killers, who claimed they were innocent, always refused to say more.

Last year Nizamodeen Hosein told the family Mrs McKay was held at the farm, which Arthur owned, for several days while they demanded a £1m ransom, but she collapsed one night and in a panic, they buried her behind a barn.

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Killer offers to reveal location of body

The Hertfordshire farm where Muriel McKay was kept prisoner by the Hosein brothers. Martin Brunt story. Uploaded 15 November 2023
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The Hertfordshire farm where Muriel McKay was kept prisoner by the Hosein brothers

Hosein has offered to travel to the UK and lead searchers to the exact spot, which he insists he can identify even though the landscape and farm buildings have changed in the many years since.

To do so, he has asked the Home Office to lift, temporarily, the deportation order issued when he finished his prison sentence in 1990.

And the family is still hoping that Scotland Yard will apply for a search warrant for the farm, but detectives are concerned at what they believe are discrepancies in Hosein’s description of the burial site. They are considering formally interviewing him before making a decision.

The letter, containing the £40,000 offer, was left at the farmhouse after no one answered the door.

Sky News has asked Mr de Burgh Marsh for a comment.

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Migrant jailed after helping smuggle more than 3,000 others into Europe

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Migrant jailed after helping smuggle more than 3,000 others into Europe

An illegal immigrant who was involved in smuggling more than 3,000 others into Europe has been sentenced to 25 years in jail.

Egyptian national Ahmed Ramadan Mohamad Ebid, who arrived in the UK in a small boat in October 2022, worked with people smuggling networks in North Africa to bring hundreds of migrants at a time from Libya to Italy.

The National Crime Agency (NCA) believes the 42-year-old’s case is the first time someone has been convicted for organising migrant crossings of the Mediterranean from the UK.

Ahmed Ramadan Mohamad Ebid being arrested. Pic: NCA
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Ahmed Ramadan Mohamad Ebid being arrested by plain clothes officers. Pic: NCA

Ebid had a “significant managerial role within an organised crime group” and his “primary motivation was to make money out of human trafficking”, Judge Adam Hiddleston said.

He told Ebid the “conspiracy that you were a part of generated millions of pounds” and he must have been a “beneficiary” of “a significant amount”.

He said the “truly staggering” amount of money came from the “hard-earned savings of desperate individuals”, who were “ruthlessly and cynically exploited” by Ebid and the crime group.

Ahmed Ramadan Mohamad Ebid. Pic: NCA
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Ahmed Ramadan Mohamad Ebid. Pic: NCA

Details of the case emerged during a rare Newton hearing – a trial within a trial that takes place when the prosecution and defence disagree about facts of a case.

Ebid was living in Isleworth, west London, at the time of his arrest in June 2023.

He later admitted to being involved in enabling seven fishing boats to make the dangerous crossing to Europe, with a total of 3,781 migrants on board. He said he only played a minor role in the operation but a judge rejected this claim in March.

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Boat picture from the phone of people smuggler Ahmed Ramadan Mohamad Ebid Pic: NCA 
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Boat picture from the phone of people smuggler Ahmed Ramadan Mohamad Ebid. Pic: NCA
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Pictures of small boats used for crossings were found on Ebid’s phone. Pics: NCA

Ebid, who had worked as a fisherman in the Mediterranean, helped two boats carrying hundreds of migrants cross the sea in a convoy just three weeks after he arrived in the UK.

Once the boats were in Italian waters, a satellite phone on board one vessel was used to call the Italian coastguard, who rescued everyone and brought them ashore.

A boat used by Egyptian national Ahmed Ramadan Mohamad Ebid for an illegal crossing on November 30, 2022.
Pic: PA/NCA
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A boat used by Ebid for an illegal crossing. Pic: PA/NCA

Ebid’s mobile phone had been in contact with the satellite phone 34 times over two days, the prosecution told the Newton hearing.

He used the same method to help five more boats make the crossing in the next six months, it added.

Each migrant was charged an average of around £3,200, bringing the criminals involved more than £12m, the NCA said.

Investigators found pictures of boats, conversations about the possible purchase of vessels, videos of migrants making the journey and screenshots of money transfers on a phone seized from him.

In a conversation with an associate which was recorded via a listening device planted by NCA officers, Ebid said migrants were not to carry phones with them on boats, adding: “Tell them guys anyone caught with a phone will be killed, threw in the sea.”

Ebid was sentenced to 25 years after pleading guilty to conspiracy to assist unlawful immigration.

Tim Burton, specialist prosecutor for the Crown Prosecution Service, said Ebid “played a leading role” in an operation “which breached immigration laws and endangered lives, for his own and others’ financial gain”.

Jacque Beer, of the NCA, said: “Ebid was part of a crime network who preyed upon the desperation of migrants to ship them across the Mediterranean in death trap boats.

“The cruel nature of his business was demonstrated by the callous way he spoke of throwing migrants into the sea if they didn’t follow his rules.”

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Second man charged and appears in court over fires at properties and car linked to Sir Keir Starmer

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Second man charged and appears in court over fires at properties and car linked to Sir Keir Starmer

A second man has appeared in court charged in connection with a series of fires linked to Sir Keir Starmer.

Romanian national Stanislav Carpiuc was remanded in custody after a hearing at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday accused of arson with intent to endanger life.

He has been charged with conspiring with Roman Lavrynovych, 21, and others unknown to “damage by fire property belonging to another, intending to damage the property, and intending to endanger the life of another or being reckless as to whether the life of another would thereby be endangered”.

The 26-year-old, from Romford, east London, was arrested by counter-terrorism officers at Luton Airport on Saturday as he tried to travel to Romania, the court heard.

With the help of a Russian interpreter, Carpiuc, who was born in Ukraine, spoke only to confirm his identity in a short hearing.

The charge relates to three fires.

Two of the fires took place in Kentish Town, north London. One occurred during the early hours of 12 May at the home where Sir Keir lived before he became prime minister and moved into Downing Street.

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A car was set alight in the same street four days earlier on 8 May.

The other fire took place on 11 May at the front door of a house converted into flats in Islington.

A forensics officer is seen in Kentish Town, north London. Police are investigating a fire at Sir Keir Starmer's house in north London. Picture date: Monday May 12, 2025.
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A forensics officer outside the house in Kentish Town. Pic: PA

Keir Starmer's house in Kentish Town.
Pic: PA
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Pic: PA

Prosecutor Sarah Przybylska said: “At this stage, the alleged offending is unexplained.”

The court heard Carpiuc gave a no comment interview to police.

Defending, Jay Nutkins said his client has lived in the UK for nine years and is currently waiting for his degree results having studied business at Canterbury Christ Church University in Kent.

He denies being present at the scene of any of the fires, the court was told.

Carpiuc, who was supported by his father in court, was said to work in construction.

He will next appear at the Old Bailey on 6 June.

Lavrynovych, a Ukrainian national from Sydenham in southeast London, has already been charged with three counts of arson with intent to endanger life in connection with the fires.

He denied the charges in a police interview.

Lavrynovych appeared at Westminster Magistrates’ Court last Friday and was remanded in custody until a further hearing at the Old Bailey also scheduled for 6 June.

A third man, aged 34, was arrested in Chelsea in southwest London on Monday on suspicion of arson.

He remains in custody, the Metropolitan Police said.

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Tommy Robinson due to be released from prison in days after sentence reduced

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Tommy Robinson due to be released from prison in days after sentence reduced

Tommy Robinson is due to be released from prison in days after his sentence for the civil offence of contempt of court was reduced by four months at the High Court.

The far-right political activist, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon, was jailed for 18 months in October last year after admitting breaching a 2021 High Court order banning him from repeating false allegations against a Syrian refugee who successfully sued him for libel.

The sentence was made up of a 14-month “punitive” element and a four-month “coercive” element, with sentencing judge Mr Justice Johnson telling Robinson he could have the latter taken off his sentence if he were to “purge” his contempt by taking steps to comply with the injunction.

Robinson applied to purge his contempt at a hearing on Tuesday, with his lawyers telling the court he had shown “commitment” to comply with the order.

Lawyers for the Solicitor General agreed Robinson had taken steps to adhere to the injunction.

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In a ruling, Mr Justice Johnson said while there was an “absence of contrition or remorse” from Robinson, he had shown a “change in attitude” since he was sentenced.

He said: “He [Robinson] has given an assurance that he will comply with the injunction in the future, that he has no intention of breaching it again, and that he is aware of the consequences of what would happen if he breached the injunction again.”

He continued: “I consider it appropriate to grant the application.”

He added: “The practical effect, subject to confirmation by the prison authorities, is that the defendant will be released once he has completed the punitive element, which I understand will be within the next week.”

Robinson was originally due to be released on 26 July.

After he was jailed, Robinson lost a bid to bring a legal challenge against the Ministry of Justice over his segregation from other prisoners in March.

He then lost a legal challenge to his sentence at the Court of Appeal in April, but three senior judges said he could “still reduce the period he has to spend in custody by taking the steps identified” by Mr Justice Johnson.

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