In The Dark - Blood Relatives, Episode 1
Episode Date: October 28, 2025On August 7, 1985, five family members were shot dead in their English country manor, Whitehouse Farm. It looked like an open-and-shut case. But the New Yorker staff writer Heidi Blake finds ...that almost nothing about this story is as it seems. New Yorker subscribers get early, ad-free access to “Blood Relatives.” In Apple Podcasts, tap the link at the top of the feed to subscribe or link an existing subscription. Or visit newyorker.com/dark to subscribe and listen in the New Yorker app. In the Dark has merch! Buy specially designed hats, T-shirts, and totes for yourself or a loved one at store.newyorker.com. Learn about your ad choices: dovetail.prx.org/ad-choices
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That's why I was so excited to hear that WonderBraw, the fit and comfort experts, have entered the game with their new period panties.
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you dry and fresh all day. Grab yours in a two-pack at wonderbraw.ca and use code New Yorker at checkout for
25% off regular price and free shipping. Some conditions apply, code valid until December 6th.
I love period underwear. They're practical, have less impact on the environment, and they just make
life easier. That's why I was so excited to hear that Wonderbraw, the fit and comfort experts,
have entered the game with their new period panties. And honestly, they're the triple threat,
comfy, cute, and absorbent. As you're spending most of my adult life,
fussing with tampons and pads, period panties feel like a cheat code, and Wonderbra has elevated
period underwear to a whole new level. They're designed for moderate flow holding up to three
regular tampons worth and made with moisture wicking and anti-odor tech to keep you dry and fresh all day.
Grab yours in a two-pack at wonderbraw.ca and use code New Yorker at checkout for 25% off regular
price and free shipping. Some conditions apply, code valid until December 6th.
The shoreline in this part of England is marshy and riddled with inlets and creeks.
It's a pretty desolate place.
This is the coast of Essex, just northeast of London, but an entirely different landscape.
The tides seep in and out with eerie drama, flooding the mudflats.
On some mornings, mist rushes up suddenly, over the marshes, and forth.
forms a briny fog.
I'm kind of driving in under smoldering gray cloud
and just this expanse of bleak salt marshes
of the Blackwater estuary.
And it feels so isolated.
Heading inland from the Blackwater estuary,
away from the fog and the sea,
I turned onto a rough dirt track,
with tall hedges on one side
and open green fields on the other.
I wound around the lane, turned down a gravel drive, and there it was.
See, yeah, here's the farmhouse.
Big signs saying trespassers will be prosecuted.
I had arrived at White House Farm.
A place so infamous in Britain that I later learned,
reporters are specifically banned from visiting it.
Despite its notoriety, it's.
a beautiful place, an elegant Georgian manor standing in open fields, with a columned portico
and commanding views over the salt marshes. And it's here that our story begins.
The story I want to tell you is about a family, whose life. Who's life.
once seemed nearly perfect.
It centres around two siblings, a sister and brother, both blessed with charm and beauty,
who grew up surrounded by the trappings of privilege in this gracious country manner.
They appeared to have all the advantages in the world, wealth, glamour, status.
But in this family, things were not always as they seemed.
By the end of the story, one of the siblings would end up dead.
The other, in prison for murder.
And the tragedy that would tear this family apart
would become one of Britain's most infamous crimes.
One of the most notorious and shocking crimes in living memory.
Up to that time, I've never seen anything as horrific as that.
It would become a story so often,
told and retold, that it passed into public folklore.
We have a scene of a crime which has been very cunningly arranged.
It was one of the most sensational murder cases of the decade.
The kind of thing that didn't need to be questioned,
because it seemed like there was nothing more to know.
I felt that I was in the presence of evil.
But obviously we feel very sad about it all,
knowing somebody that well,
and knowing that they're capable of committing this sort of act.
From in the dark and the New Yorker, I'm Heidi Blake, and this is blood relatives.
Thank you.
Part 1. The Family
In 1951, a young couple moved into the manor at White House Farm.
They were newly married and hoping to start a family.
Their names were Neville and June Bamba.
Neville and June's marriage united two distinguished lineages.
Neville came from an illustrious family.
One ancestor's portrait hung in the Tate Gallery
in London. Another had apparently fought beside Richard the Lionheart, and had even, according
to family legend, killed a lion in Palestine. June's family were a sort of local dynasty.
They'd been in this part of Essex for generations, and they'd amassed an enviable fortune,
a portfolio of country properties, farms, manor houses, even a lucrative vacation resort on the
River Blackwater. Together, June and Neville became pillars of the rural community.
like local gentry.
They were like the squires of the village, really.
They were quite important to us all,
and they helped us out a lot, the villages in general.
Barbara Wilson lived for years in the village of Tollshunt Darcy,
about a mile from White House farm.
There were two or three levels above us, us menials, you know,
and everybody looked up to them, really.
Neville Bamba was tall and dashing, a former RAF fighter pilot.
He managed the family's sprawling farming business and served as a local magistrate.
Everyone I spoke to told me that Neville was scrupulously kind and fair in all his dealings.
June Bamba was less gregarious than Neville, a bit more enigmatic.
Mrs. Bamba, she used to come to most of the functions in the village like teas and things like that,
and she helped in the church a lot.
And I found that she was very quiet, but very pleasant.
She always had a smiley face, and her eyes used to smile as well.
So you knew it was sort of genuine, really.
For a long time, Barbara Wilson saw the bambas the way everyone in the village did.
Kind, in a patrician way, but remote and untouchable.
But one day, she had a chance encounter that would offer her an inside seat.
right at the heart of the Bamber's family home.
I was coming back from taking my daughter to primary school
and Mr Bamber came along and stopped his van and said,
Barbara, would you be kind enough to give me a hand with some office work?
And I said, yes, sure.
And that's how started.
Neville asked Barbara to come to work for him several days a week,
managing his farm accounts in his study at the family manor.
The office was a jumble of old papers and golf clubs and back issues of farmers weekly.
But the rest of the house was neat and cosy.
It was a real working farmhouse where the Arga stove was always burning,
surrounded by gardens that blossomed with buddlier and honeysuckle.
It was nice to go in the summertime because June always seemed to be happy and smiling.
And Mr Bamber would always be jolly. He'd come in from the farm.
and he'd make it some sort of joke or something.
So it was a happy sort of atmosphere then.
But Barbara came to learn that life was not as simple as she'd imagined for the Bambas.
Despite their serene exterior, June and Neville had long been plagued by a private sorrow.
They couldn't have a baby.
June in particular was haunted by this.
After years of trying, the thing she wanted most in the world remained.
out of reach.
So one day, the couple turned to the Church of England.
They told officials at the Church's Children's Society
that they wanted to adopt a child.
And a few months later, in 1957,
the church presented them with a baby,
a girl, with a pale face and wisps of dark hair.
And then after a few more years, another baby.
This time, a boy.
The children were named Sheila and Jeremy.
At first, the siblings seemed to grow up in perfect harmony,
running around the farm with the family's yellow Labrador, Jasper.
There's a photograph of the two kids, sitting on the lawn in front of the manor.
Jeremy in a knitted jumper with checked trousers,
Sheila in a pleated skirt with a page boy haircut.
Jasper sitting between them, almost as if guarding them.
It seemed from the outside, like the family was finally complete.
They wanted to give the impression, I think, that everything's fine, but underneath, you know,'s turmoil.
Privately, June had never recovered from her grief at being unable to conceive her own biological child.
She struggled to accept Sheila in particular as her own daughter
and often treated her coldly, rarely hugging her or kissing her.
June became severely depressed and she started disappearing for long stretches of time.
Barbara Wilson remembered the moment when she first learned what was going on.
Mr Bamber had a word with me and said that she had to go away
and then we set up the money to send, to pay for her keep.
That was basically, you know, that she wasn't very well.
And we've put her somewhere where hopefully she'll be looked after and get better.
I assume that, you know, they do whatever they do, you know, use electric shock and things like that, don't they?
June had been committed to a psychiatric hospital.
and she did undergo multiple courses of electroshock therapy there.
But it didn't seem to help.
She kept being sent back again and again.
In the end, she was diagnosed not only with depression,
but also with psychosis and paranoia.
As her mental health kept deteriorating,
June became more and more fixated on religious ideals.
She'd always been involved in the church,
but now she was obsessed with notions of good and evil, holy and unholy.
By now, June's daughter, Sheila, had grown into an arrestingly beautiful teenager.
She was so striking that people would come up to her in the street and ask to take a photo with her.
June was troubled by the attention men paid to her daughter.
She saw Sheila's flirtations as a mark of wickedness.
Once she found Sheila sunbathing naked in a field with a boyfriend
and flew into a fury, screaming at Sheila,
that she was the devil's child.
Sheila was anxious to get away from her mother.
When she was 17, she moved to London to start a modeling career.
And at first, it was a success.
Sheila got a big job in Tokyo and appeared in a Bacardi ad.
More jobs followed.
she became known in the press as Bambi.
In one black and white photo from the mid-70s,
she's dressed for the seashore,
wearing a bando bikini top and skirt,
gentle waves of dark hair framing her face,
big wide eyes smiling at the camera.
In London, Sheila soon fell in love with an artist,
and they moved in together.
But it was a turbulent relationship.
They had explosive rouse and,
he slept around.
Eventually, Sheila got pregnant, and her mother, June, insisted that the couple get married.
But then, soon after the ceremony, the baby was stillborn.
After that, Sheila became increasingly preoccupied with trying to have a baby.
But then she had another miscarriage, and some of her mother's dark thought patterns seemed to
surface within her.
She seemed to see these losses as a sort of divine punishment
and she told people that she thought she exuded an evil aura
She wrote in a letter
I've never felt so confused and unable to control my brain
It's almost as if I'm schizophrenic or something
I feel so sick of people and stale
Finally, in the summer of 1979,
Sheila carried a pregnancy to term.
She gave birth to healthy twin boys,
Nicholas and Daniel.
They were beautiful babies,
Bonnie with snowy blonde hair and their mother's big wide eyes.
It was everything Sheila had hoped for.
But June, who'd.
struggled for so many years with her own infertility, found it hard to welcome her grandson's
arrival. When she visited Sheila in hospital, instead of congratulating her or giving her a hug,
June stood in the doorway and said, frostily, who's a clever girl then?
Sheila was crushed. Then a few months after her twins were born, Sheila's husband abandoned
her, for another woman, leaving her alone in her London flat with the babies.
Barbara Wilson remembers that when Sheila would come up from London to visit White House
Farm around this time, she seemed quiet and withdrawn.
And we'd sit around the table and chat and have coffee.
When I first started to see her, she was...
She was quite normal, and she'd chat and smile.
Not a great deal, but she would be normal.
But latterly, she did say some odd things.
Sheila was quietly unraveling.
She started hallucinating and resorting to self-harm.
Then she started telling people that she was scared she might even hurt the twins.
Eventually, her father Neville intervened.
He arranged for Sheila to be sent away to the same psychiatric hospital
where June had undergone electroshock therapy.
Once again, Barbara Wilson was deputized to pay the bills.
I used to write the checks out for her hospitals
that she used to have to go to,
because she just kept on having breakdowns.
Did you get a sense of sort of what was wrong with Sheila?
Oh yes, I knew that it was,
probably due to drugs
Sheila had been doing a lot of drugs
while she was in London
but her troubles went much deeper
as she'd feared
Sheila went on to be diagnosed
with paranoid schizophrenia
at the hospital
she was prescribed an antipsychotic
but when she got out
she quickly began skipping her meds
instead smoking marijuana and doing
cocaine
she'd call the manor from her London flat
late at night rambling about being the
Virgin Mary or Joan of Arc. Barbara said that by now, the strain of it all was hard for
the bambas to hide. They were always fairly jolly and such like, but gradually you could tell
that their mood was changing. It wasn't only Sheila weighing on her parents' minds. The couple
were also having trouble with their younger child, their son. Jeremy had been sent away at the
age of nine to board at Greshams, one of the country's most prestigious schools.
He'd been a rebellious student. He brewed beer in his dorm and sneaked out at night to watch
punk bands. And when he left school and came back to the farm at 17, he rubbed everyone the wrong
way. And with Jeremy coming home and not being very nice, Mrs. Bamba in particular was
very nervy. And Mr. Bamba was more cross about things.
Jeremy was handsome and debonair
with dark hair and fine features
kind of an incongruous figure on the back of a tractor
and when he came home
he quickly caused a scandal
by striking up an affair with a married mother of three
then he started growing marijuana
behind the cattle shed
and though he did pitch in on the farm
as the years went by he continually infuriated
his father by taking off to go travelling
and flirting with more enticing careers
as a cocktail waiter or scuba diver.
Barbara said Jeremy could be charming.
He was absolutely lovely at times.
You could really, really like Jeremy
when he was, you know, to start with when you first got to see him
and he'd laugh and joke and be very friendly.
But she also saw a side to him that she found unsettling.
She felt like he was always trying to antagonise his parents.
I mean, he did horrible things.
He rode on Mrs. Bamba's bicycle.
She got a bicycle.
He rode round and round in tighter circles around her,
and she'd flinch.
Oh, Jeremy, don't do that,
but he would do it and laugh and odd things like that.
And he used to make up because it used to annoy Mr. Bamba.
He used to wear makeup?
Yeah.
He used to wear lipstick, and I don't know whether it was eye makeup.
And he'd come up in the office.
It was just to embarrass me, really, and to embarrass Mr. Bamber.
To Barbara and others in the village, a man wearing makeup seemed strange.
It was just not the done thing.
Tolstant Darcy was a pretty reactionary place.
But that wasn't the only thing Barbara objected to.
She said Jeremy could be cruel.
Once, she claimed, he'd even put a bag of rats in her car.
She said he hid them inside a sack of potatoes.
It was a big sack, a paper sack.
And I went to get in my car and it rustled.
And so I jumped and I was petrified.
I'm petrified of mice and rats.
It seemed to Barbara that Jeremy was turning into an embarrassment, maybe even a menace.
And as for Sheila, she was declining rapidly.
Her modelling career had crumbled and she was working as a cleaner,
turning up to jobs dishevelled, staring blankly in.
into space.
In the spring of 1985, when Sheila was 27, she seemed to hit a breaking point.
She was home with the twins in London when she flew into a frenzy, battering the walls with her
fists and accusing anyone who came near of trying to kill her.
Neville came down to London and had Sheila readmitted to the psychiatric hospital, where she
stayed for a few weeks before being discharged again, this time with new anti-psychological.
medication.
Her doctor gave instructions for it to be administered monthly by injection, so she wouldn't
skip a dose.
That August, Sheila came to stay at the manor with Nicholas and Daniel.
The twins were six years old by now, sweet, tousal-haired boys, all knees and elbows.
Nicholas was to do so.
chatty and fascinated by nature.
Daniel was shyer and more sensitive.
He carried a baby doll everywhere and told people he wanted to be a mummy.
The boys always used to come up into the office and Mr Bamber always gave them a peppermint.
And they used to chat and say what they'd been doing and things like that.
And we'd probably have about 10 or 15 minutes talking to them and they'd go down quite happily.
Around that time, Barbara remembered being called down to join the family for coffee in the kitchen, as usual.
She could see that Sheila was in a bad way.
She was dressed all in black and she didn't look well, I must admit.
She just looked vacant that last time.
I sat one end of the table and Mrs. Bamba was at the top.
and so was Sheila
and we were just sort of chatting in general
and that's when Sheila said
the devil
and everything is black
and all men are evil
all men are evil
shella said
everything is black
but we didn't
You don't say, well, why?
Because you just knew that she wasn't herself.
Yeah, she was a poor thing really towards the end.
That was the last time Barbara Wilson would ever see Sheila.
Forty years later, as I sat with her in her comfortable living room,
watching crows wheeling over the field,
beyond the window, she told me she's haunted to this day by that scene and everything that followed.
It took me a long time, a long, long time to get over it.
Before this happened, I was just a normal person, but I'm different.
I know I'm different.
I love period underwear.
They're practical, have less impact on the environment, and they just make life easier.
That's why I was so excited to hear that Wonderbraw, the fit and comfort experts, have entered the game with their new period panties.
And honestly, they're the triple threat, comfy, cute, and absorbent.
After spending most of my adult life fussing with tampons and pads, period panties feel like
a cheat code, and Wonderbra has elevated period underwear to a whole new level. They're designed
for moderate flow holding up to three regular tampons worth, and made with moisture wicking and
anti- odor tech to keep you dry and fresh all day. Grab yours in a two-pack at wonderbraw.ca and use
code New Yorker at checkout for 25% off regular price and free shipping. Some conditions apply,
code valid until December 6th. I love period underwear. The practical
have less impact on the environment, and they just make life easier. That's why I was so excited
to hear that WonderBraw, the fit and comfort experts, have entered the game with their new period
panties. And honestly, they're the triple threat, comfy, cute, and absorbent. As you're spending
most of my adult life fussing with tampons and pads, period panties feel like a cheat code, and
WonderBarr has elevated period underwear to a whole new level. They're designed for moderate flow
holding up to three regular tampons worth, and made with moisture wicking and anti- odor tech to keep you
dry and fresh all day.
Grab yours in a two-pack at wonderbraw.ca and use code New Yorker at checkout for 25% off
regular price and free shipping.
Some conditions apply, code valid until December 6th.
Part 2. August 7th, 1985.
Police sergeant Chris Buse had been stationed in rural Essex for about a year.
It was mostly an uneventful job.
In this intensely traditional community,
local people like to keep the cops out of their private business.
It's the way British country life is.
Got lots of little villages, lots outlying farms.
Like, you know, we'll sort our own problems out.
It's the way country people deal with things, I suppose.
Sergeant Bues spent much of his time going out on street patrols,
responding to the occasional petty theft.
Not a lot of crime at all.
Police forces is probably 90% bored and 10% percent.
But on August 7th, 1985, that was about to change.
Sergeant Buse was on duty in the early hours of that morning.
He and two colleagues were patrolling an industrial park, where there'd been a space of break-ins,
hoping to catch the thief in the act.
We're sitting in bushes and creeping around the industrial estate when I get a call on my
personal radio to go back to the state.
station, urgent.
So literally drop what you do and get back there right away.
There's a guy called Jeremy Bamber's phoned who said there's something going on at his
parents' house, White House farm.
Jeremy Bamber had phoned the station from the cottage where he lived nearby at around
3.30 a.m. to report that he just received an alarming call from his father, Neville, at the
manor.
Phone call from his father, who sounds very much.
Panicky, who tells him it's Sheila. She's gone mad.
His sister, Sheila, had gone berserk, Jeremy said Neville had told him.
The twins were asleep upstairs, and Sheila had a gun.
And he said, then the phone just cut off.
Jeremy told police he'd tried calling back, but the phone at the manor seemed to be off the
hook. Sergeant Bues and two colleagues jumped into a patrol car and sped through the countryside
towards White House farm. And it's all very dark country lanes, no road lighting, anything like that.
Hedge rows either side. And I wonder what hell I'm going to find at the other end.
When they reached the farm, they stopped at the end of its winding driveway and climbed out of
the patrol car. The manor lay around a bend, hidden by tall trees.
and the scene was strangely quiet.
The only sound was the faint whining of a dog.
Fire-home incident where someone's got a gun, you're going to get noise.
There's no noise in the house at the moment.
Well, it's ominous, isn't it?
Soon a silver car pulled up behind them,
an out-climed a tall, slender figure.
It was Jeremy Bamba.
The youngest guy, tussled hair, and he spoke quite a refined accent, not a localistic accent.
He said, have you been in there yet?
I said, no.
And he said, well, can't he go in?
I said, no.
I said, the last thing we're going to go is go in there and confront someone with a gun.
Regular police in Britain don't carry guns, and Sergeant Buse was not prepared to go in without armed.
back up, but he asked Jeremy to follow him, up the driveway, to take a look at the house
from the outside.
They tiptoed through the darkness, until it came into view.
Lights were shining in three windows, the kitchen, the bathroom, and the bedroom where
Sheila's twins were sleeping.
But the house was totally still.
Sergeant Buse said the scene unnerved him
and he wondered if bringing Jeremy this close
had been a miscalculation.
I was thinking isn't that good an idea bringing him with me
because if there is someone in there that sees us
and takes a pot shot at others,
I'm actually putting a civilian at risk by doing this.
Still, he'd gestured for Jeremy to follow him
through a field to the front
where light was filtering through the curtains of the master bedroom
and suddenly a shadow seemed to loom in the window.
I thought out of the corner of my eye, I caught a movement.
The men ducked behind a hedge and braced for shots, but none came.
Then they raced back to the patrol car and Sergeant Bues radioed for backup.
From their notes that night, it seems like the awful significance
of what might be happening with Sheila was starting to dawn on Jeremy.
Oh God, he said, I hope she hasn't done anything silly.
He told the officers that his sister was mentally ill
and that she'd been distressed earlier that evening
by a fraught conversation with their parents.
Neville and June had told Sheila
that she was no longer fit to look after her sons, he said.
And they'd urged her to have the boys placed in foster care.
He worried that this might have tipped her over the edge
and he begged the officers again to go into the house.
But again, they refused.
Jeremy kept pleading.
They're all the family I've got, they noted him saying.
But Sergeant Buse was adamant.
No, Jeremy, I've explained you several times now.
We're not going in because of the dangers.
If, unfortunately, there's something serious gone off in there,
we don't want to make it worse by having two or three dead policemen added to it as well.
I asked Sergeant Buse about that
How he weighed his fears for his own safety
And that of his fellow officers
Against the fact that there were two little kids inside that house
Obviously concerned for everybody in there
And I'm a father
If I had a kid calling for help
But it'd definitely be gone in
But it's easy for me to say
I would have done this, I would have done that
That's not what happened
It was almost five in the morning
before a van thundered up the farm track, carrying a squadron of armed officers.
But even then, they didn't enter the house straight away.
Instead, they mustered inside a cattle barn, facing the back of the property.
Then they spent two and a half hours calling through a bullhorn for Sheila to surrender.
Still, there was no response.
Finally, at 7.30, the raid team was authorized to go in.
The back door was locked, and it took several blows with a sledgehammer to open it.
When the officers finally burst inside, they found a harrowing scene.
Neville Bamba was found in his dressing gown, lying amidst a load of ransack furniture effectively.
Neville lay slumped over an upturned chair by the kitchen hearth, with his face resting inside a coal scuttle.
He'd been shot.
repeatedly, in the head, and blood had pulled on the floor.
He'd also been shot in the shoulder and the arm,
and he seemed to have been battered in a struggle.
There was shattered crockery and shards of a broken light fixture scattered on the floor.
The raid team continued through the house.
They went up the stairs, found June in the doorway of a bedroom,
obviously shot
went into that room
and found Sheila
lying on the floor
with rifle
going lengthways up the body
Sheila was on her back
in a turquoise nightgown
and jewellery
with a fatal bullet hole
through her chin
beside her
lay a blood-stained Bible
opened to a passage from Psalms
There was a streak of red in the middle of the page
under a line that said
Save me from blood guiltiness
Down the hall in the twins room
officers found the boys in bed
Daniel was curled on his side with his thumb in his mouth
Nicholas lay on his back
the covers pulled up to his chin
five bullets had been fired through the back of Daniel's head
Nicholas had been shot three times in the face.
The firearms officers paused in the doorway, briefly stricken.
Then they radioed through the news.
Outside, a senior officer walked over to Sergeant Buse
and told him what had happened.
One of my bosses comes up and said they've gone in
and it's not good.
It looks like all the family had been killed by the daughter.
and you don't like telling people, giving people bad news
but unfortunately it's part of the police's officer's job
and so I went to Jeremy
I said unfortunately they've now made entry
and unfortunately everybody is dead
I said I don't know the circumstances but everybody's dead
and he looked at me and he started to cry
News of the killings tore through the sleepy rural community of Toll's Hunt Darcy.
The next day, the massacre filled the front pages of the national newspapers
with headlines like Farmhouse of Death and Top Model Massacre's family.
Police in Essex are investigating a bizarre shooting in which...
Late on Tuesday evening, something happened which triggered the deaths of all five of the Bamba family.
Police said they had all died together from gunshot wounds.
No one knows why the family had to die.
The only remaining member of the family was Mr. Bamber's adopted son, Jeremy.
As police conducted their investigation, what happened at White House Farm seemed beyond doubt.
All the details added up.
People close to Sheila told police that she'd talked about hearing voices and being chased by the devil.
One who'd witnessed her most recent breakdown said he was extremely scared for everyone's safety.
Sheila behaved like a person possessed, he said, and she'd claimed she could hear the voice of God.
Sheila's psychiatrist told officers that she'd had bizarre delusions.
She thought her sons would say,
seduce her and saw evil in both of them, he said. Her worst fear was that she might be capable
of killing the boys. Though the psychiatrist had prescribed her a monthly injection of her
antipsychotic so that she couldn't skip it, when she'd received her last shot, a month before the
murders, she'd cajoled a different doctor into giving her a half dose. It seemed clear that Sheila had
suffered a psychotic breakdown, a horrifically violent episode, in which she'd killed everyone,
her parents and her two sons, and then turned the gun on herself.
There was the story about the panicked call Jeremy had received from his father, saying
Sheila had gone berserk with a gun. There was Sheila lying dead, holding the rifle, a bloody
Bible beside her body. And there was the house, which had been securely locked.
from the inside.
It all cohered into a dark, logical narrative.
As one police officer who was there that night said to me,
it was all so believable.
What other explanation could there be?
He told me, the story had ended.
It started and finished on that day.
Hi, it's Madeline.
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Part 3, Master Criminal
The shooting at White House Farm happened a year before I was born,
So I grew up hearing about it.
My mom would sometimes read out snippets of murder stories from her newspaper,
and this story was all over the papers.
Huge, huge, huge story.
It was like being in a movie almost sometimes, you know,
that you were the centre of something that everyone else was reading about.
David Woods covered the story of the murders from the beginning
for the Colchester Gazette, a local paper in Essex.
Digging and digging and digging
There was like a feeding frenzy
on trying to find out what you could
Not only were mass shootings
exceedingly rare in Britain
But the story had all these tantalising elements
You got everything
Big family, money
It was seen as
You know, living the ideal life
Of being pillars of the society they live in
And Sheila, the doe-eyed model, turned killer
Bambi were great nicknames
beautiful, tragic.
She fitted a lovely narrative, didn't she, for the press?
So there was a feeding frenzy on her as well.
But then, the narrative, which had seemed so clear, began to change.
Exactly one month after the murders at White House Farm,
came a sudden, astonishing turn in the case.
Essex police now say that the model Sheila Caffell could have been murdered,
But all the evidence at the time, say police, pointed to suicide.
In the past week, they've been working on new information.
Police now suspected that the crime had been carried out by an assassin,
who shot the whole family, and then arranged the scene to make it appear that Sheila had fired the gun.
And Sheila would be the scapegoat because of her mental illness.
He would make it look as though she had killed the family and then committed suicide.
And now, the prime suspect in the case,
was none other than Sheila's own brother, Jeremy Bamba.
New witnesses had come forward and new evidence had been found
and now police were convinced Jeremy had been plotting for months to murder his family.
They said he was a killer so cunning that he'd staged a crime scene that fooled dozens of detectives,
so manipulative that he had bamboozled them all with his performance at the scene.
and so shameless that he'd used his sister's mental illness
to make her a scapegoat
and he'd done it all for his family's fortune
to which he became the sole heir
but his crime had finally caught up with him
Jeremy was arrested and arraigned on five counts of murder
As he was driven away from the courthouse in handcuffs,
Jeremy was photographed smiling broadly out of the window.
The resulting picture of the accused killer
grinning in the back of a police fan
became one of the most iconic images of the crime.
For David Woods and the rest of the press pack,
Jeremy turned out to be the ideal tabloid villain.
A woman eyes, a bit of a cad, really.
I mean, you have to say he was a good-looking guy,
and he appears to have had a lot of charm.
Someone who thought a lot of himself, I think.
Cocky, narcissists, psychopath, and also cold-blooded.
He didn't exactly get a good press, did he?
In 1986, the year after the killings,
Jeremy Bamba was convicted and sent to prison for life.
The murders at White House Farm became Britain's most notorious family massacre.
and Jeremy Bamba became one of the country's most despised villains.
Tonight is this man evil beyond belief.
This was the version of the story I grew up hearing about.
When I got my first job in journalism, decades later,
the case was still a tabloid favourite.
The infamous case of the White House farm murder.
It was rehashed over and over again in books, documentaries, and hit TV dramas.
Neville Bamber called Jeremy told him Sheila was going crazy with a gun
If you believe Jeremy
The phone call he said his dad made to him
It doesn't make sense
So you're accusing him now are you
Hey? The son
Someone's shooting me
But I personally never had a reason
To think too deeply about it
Until one day
A couple of years ago
When I heard something about the murders
At White House Farm
That did intrigue me
I got a tip
That this most famous of crimes
Might still be unresolved
that the narrative that had been presented to the jury
and then been repeated in countless retellings
might be completely wrong.
So I dug in.
I began looking into the murders,
and as I learned more,
I became preoccupied with trying to figure out
how the whole case had turned so decisively upside down.
What had happened to,
to transform Jeremy Bamba in the eyes of the police and the public
from a grieving son,
weeping outside a locked manor where his whole family lay dead,
into a cunning mass murderer.
The more I found out, the clearer it became
that nothing about this story was as it seemed.
And what I began to uncover would challenge what I thought I knew,
not only about the murders at White House Farm,
but also about the police, the judiciary,
the whole British legal establishment.
He said to me with quite a lot of fearments that he'd get rid of all of the family, including Sheila and the boys, and he would do so by shooting them.
Do not be full by Jeremy Bauer, who's got away with so much.
And your family, I think, was very instrumental in finding the evidence and putting the case together, really.
I think we hadn't have done. I think he really got away with it. I really do. I think he would have got away with it.
Blood Relatives is written and produced by me, Heidi Blake, and lead producer Natalie Jablonsky.
It's edited by Alison McCadham. Samara Fremark is the managing producer for the series.
Additional editing by Madeleine Barrett,
Willing Davidson and Julia Rothschild.
Additional production by Raymond Tunga Car.
Theme and original music by Alex Weston.
Additional music by Chris Julian and Alison Leighton Brown.
This episode was mixed by Corey Shreppel.
Our art is by Owen Gent.
Art direction by Nicholas Conrad and Aviva Michaelov.
Fact-checking by Naomi Sharp.
Legal review by Fabio Bertone.
Tony and Ben Murray.
Our managing editor is Julia Rothschild.
The head of global audio for Condé Nast is Chris Bannon.
The editor of The New Yorker is David Remnick.
If you have comments or story tips,
please send them to the team at in the dark at new yorker.com.
And make sure to follow in the dark wherever you get your podcasts.
From PRX.
