A woman whose mother’s murder has been unsolved for 30 years has issued a plea for help in finding her killer.
Mother-of-three Janet Brown, 51, was bludgeoned to death at her home in Radnage, Buckinghamshire, on 10 April 1995.
Thames Valley Police (TVP) has a DNA sample from the scene that they believe belongs to the murderer but does not match anyone on the police database.
More than 1,000 men have been screened and eliminated from the inquiry by the investigation team.
A reward of £20,000 is on offer for information given to Crimestoppers that leads to the arrest and conviction of the killer.
Image: Janet Brown’s home in 1995, cordoned off by police, in the quiet village of Radnage, Buckinghamshire. Pic: Family handout/TVP
Image: Janet Brown (front, centre left) with her family, including son Benedict Brown (back, far left), husband Grahaem Brown (back, centre right), eldest daughter Zara Harden (front, centre right) and youngest daughter Roxanne Brown (front, far right). Pic: Family handout/TVP
Mrs Brown, a medical researcher at the John Radcliffe Hospital in Oxford, was found dead at the foot of the stairs naked, gagged and handcuffed. But detectives believe there was no sexual motive to the killing, and while the house was searched, nothing was stolen.
Mrs Brown’s oldest daughter, Zara Harden, said it was “baffling” why anyone would target her mother, but is convinced “somebody must know something because there would have been a lot of blood”.
More on Buckinghamshire
Related Topics:
“She was handcuffed and beaten badly, literally bludgeoned to death. It doesn’t matter if a person didn’t come forward at the time. It’s not too late,” she added.
Image: Zara Harden wants her mother’s killer found ‘to make sure he does not strike again’. Pic: Family handout/TVP
On the night she was murdered, Mrs Brown’s three children Zara, Benedict and Roxanne were not at home while her husband Dr Grahaem Brown was in Switzerland working.
The killer initially tried to cut a hole in the glass of a double-glazed patio door before smashing his way in. It is believed Mrs Brown was killed between 8.15pm and 10.15pm that night.
Her body was found the following morning by a builder and his son who were due to carry out work at the house.
Mrs Harden said: “Ultimately her killer, or killers, have so far gotten away with it.
“We want to see them prosecuted, and not to have somebody who is extremely dangerous still be out there on the loose… we just want to stop it happening again.”
Image: Peter Beirne from Thames Valley Police wants to compare DNA from potential suspects with samples taken from the scene. Pic: TVP
The head of Thames Valley Police’s Major Crime Investigation Review Team, Peter Beirne, said: “I still believe there are people who have information or suspicions about this vicious murder.
“We have a DNA profile that was left at the scene. It does not belong to the family, and we believe it could be a vital piece of evidence linking the killer to the scene.
“If you have suspicions, it is very easy for our team to trace and request a DNA sample from the person you suspect, or a relative of theirs if they have perhaps passed away or have emigrated.”
Police investigating a fire at a north London house owned by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer are also looking into whether it is linked to two other recent blazes.
The Metropolitan Police said on Monday evening that detectives are checking a vehicle fire in NW5 last week and a fire at the entrance of a property in N7 on Sunday to see whether they are connected to the fire at Sir Keir Starmer’s house in the early hours of Monday morning.
The prime minister is understood to still own the home and used to live there before he and his family moved into 10 Downing Street after Labour won last year’s general election. It is believed the property is being rented out.
Counter-terrorism police are leading the investigation as a precaution, the Met said.
The blaze damaged the entrance to the house, but there were no injuries, the force said.
Image: The entrance to the house was damaged by the fire. Pic: LNP
Image: Counter-terror police are leading the investigation. Pic: LNP
A statement from the Metropolitan Police said: “On Monday 12 May at 1.35am, police were alerted by the London Fire Brigade to reports of a fire at a residential address.
More on Sir Keir Starmer
Related Topics:
“Officers attended the scene. Damage was caused to the property’s entrance, nobody was hurt.
“As a precaution and due to the property having previous connections with a high-profile public figure, officers from the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command are leading the investigation into this fire. Enquiries are ongoing to establish the potential cause of the fire.”
A police cordon and officers, as well as investigators from London Fire Brigade, could be seen outside and at one point, part of the street was cordoned off to all vehicles.
London Fire Brigade said firefighters were called just after 1am, and the blaze was out within half an hour. It described the incident as “a small fire outside a property”.
Image: Pic: PA
Image: Emergency services were deployed to the scene in north London. Pic: PA
Sir Keir expressed his gratitude to the police and fire services via his official spokesman, who said: “I can only say that the prime minister thanks the emergency services for their work, and it is subject to a live investigation. So I can’t comment any further.”
He did not clarify how far he wants figures to fall, only saying numbers will come down “substantially” as he set out plans in the government’s Immigration White Paper, including banning care homes from hiring overseas.
A power outage caused major travel disruption on London’s Tube network on Monday, stretching into rush hour.
The Elizabeth, Bakerloo, Jubilee and Northern lines were among the routes either suspended or delayed, with several stations closed and passengers forced to evacuate.
A spokesman for Transport for London (TfL) said there was an outage in southwest London for “a matter of minutes” and “everything shut down”.
National Grid confirmed a fault on its transmission network, which was resolved in “seconds”, but led to a “voltage dip” that affected some supplies.
The London Fire Brigade said the fault caused a fire at an electrical substation in Maida Vale, and it’s understood firefighters destroyed three metres of high-voltage cabling.
Image: The scene in Piccadilly Circus as passengers were evacuated
That came just weeks after a fire at the same substation, which saw elderly and vulnerable residents among those moved from their homes.
But today’s fire – between Cunningham Place and Aberdeen Place – is understood to have involved different equipment to the parts in the 29 April incident.
Datawrapper
This content is provided by Datawrapper, which may be using cookies and other technologies.
To show you this content, we need your permission to use cookies.
You can use the buttons below to amend your preferences to enable Datawrapper cookies or to allow those cookies just once.
You can change your settings at any time via the Privacy Options.
Unfortunately we have been unable to verify if you have consented to Datawrapper cookies.
To view this content you can use the button below to allow Datawrapper cookies for this session only.
TfL’s chief operating officer Claire Mann apologised for the disruption, adding: “Due to a brief interruption of the power supply to our network, several lines lost power for a short period earlier this afternoon.”
Passengers told Sky News of the disruption’s impact on their plans, with one claiming he would have had to spend £140 for a replacement ticket after missing his train.
He said he will miss a business meeting on Tuesday morning in Plymouth as a result.
Another said she walked to five different stations on Monday, only to find each was closed when she arrived.
“Supermax” jails could be built to house the most dangerous offenders following a spate of alleged attacks on staff, the prisons minister has said.
James Timpson told the Politics Hub with Sophy Ridge that “we shouldn’t rule anything out” when asked if the most dangerous criminals should be placed in top security prisons.
It comes after Southport triple killer Axel Rudakubana allegedly threw boiling water from a kettle at an officer at HMP Belmarsh on Thursday. Police are now investigating.
Speaking from HMP Preston for a special programme of the Politics Hub, Mr Timpson told Sophy Ridge: “We inherited a complete mess in the prison system.
“Violence is up, assaults on staff is up. But for me, we shouldn’t rule anything out.”
More on Prisons
Related Topics:
He added: “What we need to do is to speak to our staff. They’re the experts at dealing with these offenders day in, day out. “
Mr Timpson – who was the chief executive of Timpson Group before he was appointed prisons minister last year – said the violence in prisons was “too high”.
Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player
1:06
Are we sending too many people to prison?
He continued: “The number of people when you have prisons are so full, and the people in there are not going to education or into purposeful activity.
“You get more violence and that is totally unacceptable. Our staff turn up to work to help turn people.
“They want to turn people’s lives around. They didn’t turn up to work to get assaulted. It’s totally unacceptable.”
Reflecting on the crisis facing the UK prison system ahead of the government’s sentencing review, Mr Timpson said a major problem was the high rate of reoffending, saying “80% of offending is reoffending”.
He said people were leaving places like HMP Preston “addicted to drugs, nowhere to live, mental health problems – and that’s why they keep coming back”.
Asked whether every prison had a drugs issue, he replied: “100%.”
“If we want to keep the public safe, we need to do a lot more of the work in here and in the community. But also we need to build more prisons.”
Put to him that making more use of community sentences – thought to be one of the recommendations in the government’s sentencing review – might be considered a “cushy option” compared to a custodial sentence, Mr Timpson said: “There are some people in this prison tonight who would prefer to be in prison than do a community sentence – but that’s not everybody.
“Community sentences need to be tough punishments outside of prison, not just to help them address their offending behaviour, but also the victims need to see punishments being done too and for me, technology has a big part to play in the future.”