True Crime Live-logo

True Crime Live

True Crime

True Crime Live is the UK’s best true crime event - with TV’s top true crime experts, crime writers, investigative psychologists, ex cops and ex criminals. Birmingham, 10-10-2020. www.truecrimelive.co.uk

Location:

United Kingdom

Genres:

True Crime

Description:

True Crime Live is the UK’s best true crime event - with TV’s top true crime experts, crime writers, investigative psychologists, ex cops and ex criminals. Birmingham, 10-10-2020. www.truecrimelive.co.uk

Language:

English

Contact:

+44203 8657618


Episodes
Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Episode 5 - Jack Whomes

5/7/2020
Jack Whomes was convicted in 1998 of the triple murder of Pat Tate, Tony Tucker and Craig Rolfe, 3 local drug dealers. It’s alleged that he held a grudge against these men for the tragic death of Leah Betts in 1995 - something which made national headlines at the time as she died after taking ecstasy provided by the murder victims. It can be proved Whomes was in the area at the time, and there’s even a witness who accused him of the crime. However, to this day he maintains his innocence. He believes phone data proves he was at a pub nearby when the murders took place. The so-called witness, Darren Nicholls, had good reason to accuse Whomes. Nicholls had acted as the getaway driver, but he claimed he knew nothing of the plan to murder. Join us as we unpick the evidence with defence barrister, Matt Stanbury and former Met police detective, Colin Sutton.

Duration:00:20:38

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Episode 4 - Omar Benguit

5/7/2020
Oki was walking home from a nightclub in Bournemouth in July 2002 when she was attacked from behind without warning. She was stabbed in the back 3 times, she bled to death. She was still alive when the emergency services arrived, and in her broken English, she explained she’d been attacked by a masked man. Eventually, Omar Benguit would be tried and convicted for her murder. A known drug user, Benguit had already racked up 60 convictions, including one for stabbing a man in the chest and threatening another with a syringe. The main evidence used to convict him came from another known drug user with a history of false allegations. She started drip feeding information to the police about the murder of Jong-Ok Shin - Oki, as she was known. The witness was to become part of a story which led to 3 trials, 2 appeals and the involvement of a magazine and hugely popular TV programme (BBC Three’s Unsolved: The Man With No Alibi). Listen to the facts of the case, would you convict Omar Benguit of murder?

Duration:00:25:11

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Episode 3 - Andrew Feather

5/5/2020
In the early hours of the night in October 2013, Barry Selby and his wife awoke to the terrifying site of 3 screaming masked men pointing a gun at them. Barry Selby was shot in the leg and had acid poured all over him. The severe injuries resulted in his death 5 days later. The 3 men were caught and convicted, but so was a 4th - Andrew Feather. Police accused him of acting as a getaway driver, and he was convicted under the controversial joint enterprise law. But evidence uncovered by his father has cast doubt on his conviction, hear this and more in this podcast where you decide - is Andrew Feather guilty of murder?

Duration:00:20:49

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Episode 2 - Susan May

5/5/2020
The campaign to clear her name is backed by 100 MPs and peers, but she died before her case could get to appeal. So-called 'bloody handprints' left by Susan May at the scene are now being questioned, weren't those just the dusty fingerprints left by somebody regularly entering the home to look after her beloved aunt? The appeals process continues after her death, but they are yet to reach a conclusion. Listen to new evidence in this podcast and decide for yourself, was Susan May really guilty of murder?

Duration:00:20:09

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

Episode 1 - Ben Geen

5/5/2020
“Ben Geen is walking into work and is called by one of his supervisors to one side…”. A police investigation has been started into the deaths and respiratory arrests of 18 patients in his care. When his supervisor speaks to him, he’s found with a syringe in his pocket containing a muscle relaxant called vecuronium bromide. He’s arrested and eventually convicted, but many people still argue that he’s innocent. They suggest that due to the, at the time, recent case of Harold Shipman, there was a hysteria around these kinds of deaths. Join us as we work through the case with expert contributions from defence lawyer Matt Stanbury and former Met Police Senior Detective Colin Sutton. This time, you’re in the jury - do you think Ben Geen is guilty?

Duration:00:22:16

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

The Anastasi Mystery - Part 2

5/4/2020
This Maryland murder mystery twists and turns in ways you won’t expect. We found out in the last episode that Ann Marie’s husband of around 2 decades had moved his much younger lover into their family home. Hear her voice when she calls 9-1-1, is this the voice of a murderer? Find out in part 2 of the Anastasi Mystery.

Duration:00:23:35

Ask host to enable sharing for playback control

The Anastasi Mystery - Part 1

5/4/2020
It’s 2013, a summer’s day, when Ann Marie Anastasi is confronted by an ugly scene... her husband had moved his mistress into the family home in Maryland. Ann Marie seemed cool about it, some said, even joined in the sex games. She was cool, too, when she made a 9-1-1 call. Had she stumbled across the classic murder-suicide? Had her husband killed his lover and then shot himself? Or was it the other way round...? Or was Ann Marie Anastasi hiding something…? Join us as we unpick the truth of a Maryland Murder.

Duration:00:09:07