Mind of a Serial Killer - Blood in the Basement: The Chohan Family Case Pt. 2
Episode Date: March 12, 2026In the early 2000s, a brutal crime shocked the United Kingdom.Prosecutors argued that Kenneth Regan and his associates murdered Anil Chohan and members of his family in a calculated plot to seize cont...rol of Chohan’s successful shipping business. According to the case presented in court, the motive was clear: financial gain and the opportunity to use the company as a front for criminal enterprises.What followed was a complex investigation that exposed deception, manipulation, and an alleged conspiracy rooted in greed. If you’re new here, don’t forget to follow Serial Killers & Murderous Minds to never miss a case! For ad-free listening and early access to episodes, subscribe to Crime House+ on Apple Podcasts. Serial Killers & Murderous Minds is a Crime House Original Podcast, powered by PAVE Studios 🎧 Need More to Binge? Listen to other Crime House Originals Clues, Crimes Of…, Murder True Crime Stories, Crime House 24/7, and more wherever you get your podcasts! Follow me on Social Instagram: @Crimehouse TikTok: @Crimehouse Facebook: @crimehousestudios YouTube: @crimehousestudios To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Hi, it's Vanessa.
If you're drawn to true crime stories about disappearances,
there's a new crime house original you should check out.
It's called The Final Hours, hosted by Sarah Turney and Courtney Nicole.
Sarah's an advocate for missing and murdered victims whose own sister disappeared in 2001.
And Courtney is a true crime storyteller who's seen firsthand how crime can change a family forever.
Together, they bring lived experience to every case,
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This is Crime House.
Most of us recognize red flags, like an acquaintance who tells wild stories that never quite add up,
or a partner's problematic behaviors.
Kenneth Regan was a walking red flag, but he knew how to keep those warning signs from fully registering.
First, he charmed, then he manipulated.
Then when that stopped working, he was never afraid to take what he wanted by force.
And Kenneth's willingness to cross any line ultimately led him to commit one of the most brutal crimes the United Kingdom has ever seen.
The human mind is powerful.
It shapes how we think, feel, love, and hate.
But sometimes it drives people to commit the unthinkable.
This is serial killers and murderous minds, a crimehouse original.
I'm Vanessa Richardson.
And I'm forensic psychologist Dr. Tristan Engels.
Every Monday and Thursday, we uncover the darkest minds in history, analyzing what makes a killer.
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Before we get started, be advised. This episode contains descriptions of violence and murder,
including the murder of small children.
Please listen with care.
Today we conclude our deep dive on Kenneth Regan,
a money-hungry career criminal
who'd do anything to rise to the top.
Kenneth's greed was so powerful
he was willing to betray and manipulate everyone.
And when there was just one man left in his way,
Kenneth turned on him in the most shocking way possible.
As Vanessa goes through this story,
I'll be talking about things like how some
offenders continually try to manipulate others even after multiple failed attempts.
How they react when the people they have been manipulating turn on them
and the psychological fallout of money-obsessed offenders losing everything.
And as always, we'll be asking the question, what makes a killer?
In February of 2003, 50-year-old Kenneth Regan lured his boss, Anil Chohan,
to his father's home just outside London.
where Kenneth also lived.
The two men had met in prison, and for the last few months, Kenneth had been trying to convince
Anil to sell his company, Siba Freight Services.
Even though Anil had given Kenneth a steady job as a truck driver, Kenneth wanted more,
so he lied to Anil and told him he had a group of investors willing to pay millions to
take over the company.
In reality, Kenneth wanted Siba for himself.
He saw it as the perfect opportunity to rebuild the drug smuggling enterprise.
he'd lost when he went to prison.
He could use the freight to transport drugs
and launder his earnings through the company.
The only problem was,
Anil wouldn't agree.
He wanted to sell the business,
just not to Kenneth's supposed investors.
So on February 13th,
when the two men arrived at Kenneth's dad's house,
two of Kenneth's criminal associates,
William Hornsey and Peter Reese,
were waiting there, ready to ambush Anil.
Over the next several days,
Anil was held captive.
was held captive at Kenneth's father's house.
While many of the details of what happened to him remain unclear,
Anil was gagged and bound, drugged,
and forced to sign forged documents that appeared to give Kenneth Regan full control of Siba freight.
This is an extreme escalation.
Kenneth went from financial manipulation to abduction and captivity.
He's become more morally disengaged, but also continues to justify his actions.
It's highly likely that he's framed these actions as necessary rather than criminal, especially
when we consider how important it is for him to live a particular lifestyle and how within that
lifestyle he's accustomed to instant gratification. This is likely one of the first times that
Kenneth has encountered someone who held firm on their boundaries, who couldn't be manipulated or
quote bought, even if it was with fake money. In terms of motivation, it's often not just one
factor like entitlement or desperation, but a combination of both of those things.
Entitlement can create the belief that he deserves what Anil has, and desperation adds the
pressure and the urgency of needing it now. When those two factors exist, extreme actions like
this are more likely to result in someone like Kenneth. Does Kenneth seem genuinely delusional
about what he could get away with? Based on what you've described, and of course without having
met or evaluated him personally, I don't see any clear evidence of a delusion in the clinical sense.
A clinical delusion is a fixed false belief that a person holds despite clear evidence to the contrary,
and it's typically associated with severe mental illness. I think what we see here instead is
behavior that appears goal directed, organized, and strategic. He's using deception,
planning, and other people to achieve a very specific outcome. That kind of behavior usually suggests
that the person understands the rules
and is trying to work around them.
Because if he truly believed
everything he was doing was legitimate,
there would be less need for secrecy or manipulation.
There's also not obvious signs of psychosis
and the behaviors described.
So this appears to me better explained by overconfidence,
distorted risk perception,
and a belief of invincibility.
As we discussed in episode one,
when someone repeatedly engages
in high-risk behavior and avoid
serious consequences, it can reinforce the belief that they're smarter than the system or capable
of outmaneuvering others. And in this situation, Anil doesn't appear to come from the same kind
of entrenched criminal environment, which may have made him seem like a more approachable or
vulnerable target to begin with from Kenneth's perspective. And also why he's so insistent on seeing
this through instead of finding his next con. This rejection may be hitting Kenneth in his ego.
otherwise, why not just let it go, you know?
Well, as drastic as Kenneth's actions were, they were only the beginning,
because he knew that in order to avoid suspicion,
he needed to create a false narrative around Anil's disappearance.
So when Anil's wife, Nancy, started to worry after he didn't come home from work,
Kenneth was ready.
He'd already made sure to tell Siba's staff that Anil had been called away
on an urgent meeting in Holland.
So when Nancy called the office looking for him,
that's what they told her.
But that didn't sit right with Nancy.
She knew Anil better than anyone,
and she knew he wouldn't leave town without telling her.
Soon, Nancy's gut instinct was confirmed
when she realized that Anil's passport was still at home.
However, Kenneth must have been thinking one step ahead,
because later that same day,
Nancy received a recorded message from Anil,
assuring her he was okay.
But this also raised red flags,
because in the message,
Anil spoke in English, whereas he and Nancy always spoke to each other in Punjabi.
Now Nancy knew something was wrong.
Unfortunately, she didn't realize how serious the situation was.
She told her brother, Onkar, what was going on, but she didn't contact the authorities just yet.
However, Kenneth started to realize that she would call them eventually, and he couldn't let her do that.
So on February 15, 2003, two days after Anil's abduction,
Kenneth paid a visit to the Chohan family's home.
He brought William with him while Peter stayed back to guard Anil.
Kenneth and William drove a rented van to the Chohan's house.
When they got there, they introduced themselves as Anil's associates,
which was enough to be led inside.
But once the door closed behind them,
the situation turned unimaginably violent.
Inside the home, Kenneth and William turned on the entire family.
They immediately murdered his wife,
Nancy Chohan, her mother, Cheranjit Kor, who was visiting from India and the couple's two
young sons, 18-month-old Divinder and 8-week-old Ravinder.
Afterward, Kenneth and William carried the bodies through the backyard and loaded them into
the van. They returned to Kenneth's house where he shifted his focus back to Anil. He
forced Anil to sign more documents and even a few blank sheets of paper. The entire time, Anil's
deceased family was right outside. It's unclear whether Kenneth told Anil what they had done,
but once Kenneth believed he had everything he needed from Anil, he murdered him too.
Now that the entire Chohan family was dead, Kenneth thought that Siba Freight was his.
Two days later, he called his friend Belinda Bruin in for her first day of work. Kenneth had hired
Belinda to replace Anil. She didn't know about all the atrocities Kenneth had committed to
remove Anil from the company or what Kenneth planned to do with it once Anil was gone.
But now that he was finally out of the picture, it was time for Belinda to take over with Kenneth
pulling the strings.
This is horrific.
And it highlights how strongly he viewed Anil and his family as obstacles to his ultimate
goal.
His desire to take over Siba was so central to his thinking that he was able and willing to
dehumanize his entire family, including 8.000.
toddler and a baby. And when violence escalates to this level in a context like this, it's often the
result of a narrowing of options in the offender's mind. So in Kenneth's case, the plan appears to
have required total control over the situation, meaning control over the business, the paperwork,
and the people who could expose what was happening. Once the situation started to unravel and it
became clear that Kenneth's weak narrative wasn't satisfying Anil's worried wife Nancy,
he likely felt Anil's family would complicate his plan. So what likely happened was
tunnel vision under pressure, where he became so focused on his outcome, his thinking
grew rigid, and violence became the solution. Violence is also likely a go-to solution
that he's been familiar with in the environment and lifestyle he's chosen, and he's chosen. And he's
been exposed to for decades now, and that can narrow his thinking even more.
Like you said, horrific, how do offenders mentally rationalize violence against children?
That's a really important question. And in cases like this, the same processes I talked about
earlier tend to be involved, things like dehumanization, moral disengagement, and emotional
detachment or compartmentalization. These are psychological mechanisms that allow someone to create distance
between themselves and the harm that they're causing. Instead of seeing a child as an individual
with their own life ahead of them and their own future, they may start to see them in terms of their
role in the situation, and that's they're a connection to the target or an obstacle.
That shift in perception can make it easier in their mind to justify the violence. I can also
speak to this from experience. I worked with individuals serving life sentences for many years,
and within prison culture,
there's often a very strong, informal code
against crimes involving children.
Many of the men I worked with
would say that they could never justify
that kind of violence.
But when I taught victim impact awareness,
we talked about the ripple effect of crime.
Over time, some of them began to recognize
that their actions actually did harm children,
even if it wasn't directly.
For example, if their victim was a parent,
Those children were in fact harmed by their actions because they now had to grow up without them.
And that realization was often very powerful.
That was actually one of my favorite groups to run because a lot of really meaningful work was done there.
Even though Kenneth had finally gotten what he wanted,
he still had to get rid of the evidence tying him to the multiple homicides.
So a few days after the murders, Kenneth, William, and Peter loaded the Chohan's bodies
and drove to Belinda's 50-acre property in the countryside.
William and Peter had already dug a 12-foot-long ditch on the property
and told Brenda it was an irrigation trench.
She could tell they were lying to her,
but she didn't witness what they did next.
Under the cover of night, the three men buried all five family members on Belinda's land.
When she returned home, it just seemed like the man had finally refilled the hole
like she'd asked them to.
After that, Kenneth had one last item on his checklist.
He gave Anil's car to an unnamed associate
who likely broke the vehicle down and sold it for parts.
Now Kenneth thought his plan was complete.
He could move forward with his smuggling operation
and within no time he'd be sitting on a mountain of cash.
But while he basked in his success,
other members of the Chohan family started to sense
that something was terribly wrong.
Nancy's brother, Onkar, lived thousands of miles away in New Zealand,
but he spoke to his sister and mother regularly.
Nancy had told him she thought something had happened to Anil,
and when Onkar didn't hear from her or their mom for a few days,
he got worried and called the authorities in London.
Ongar told them about his sister's worried phone call a few days earlier
and told them he hadn't heard from her or his mother since then,
but the police weren't convinced there was anything to investigate.
Investigators struggled to imagine that an entire family could just simply vanish,
they assumed there was a harmless explanation.
Since Cherangit had been visiting from India,
they figured the whole family probably decided to go back with her for a visit.
Ongar tried to explain how unlikely that was,
but the police still wouldn't listen,
and since he couldn't shake the feeling that something was terribly wrong,
he decided to do something about it himself.
On March 5, 2003, about three weeks after the murders,
Ongar flew to the U.K. and headed straight for Nancy and Anil's house.
When he got there, his fears were confirmed.
Not only was the house empty,
but there were a handful of signs that they hadn't been planning to leave.
First, everyone's passports were still there.
Then when Ongar checked the laundry machine,
he found wet clothes still inside.
But most troubling of all was his mother.
prayer book, she never traveled without it, but it was still sitting in the guest room.
To Onkar, the state of the house showed clear signs that the Chohans had vanished against
their will. For all of Kenneth's planning, he had no idea how many clues he'd left behind.
As we discussed earlier, Kenneth appeared to show strong entitlement and narcissistic traits,
which can contribute to an illusion of mastery. In other words, he may believe that he thought,
of everything and that this plan is airtight or that he can outsmart the people around him.
That confidence can feel very real to him even if it's not realistic.
We also talked about how his thinking seemed to become more rigid and narrowed leading
up to these events.
When someone develops that kind of tunnel vision, their focus shifts almost entirely to the
desired outcome.
And with that narrowed focus often comes reduced caution because they don't fully consider
the possibility that they could be wrong.
or that others might notice what they missed.
So ironically, the very traits that makes someone feel powerful and in control
can also make them more prone to careless mistakes.
They may believe they've planned meticulously,
but that inflated confidence and that narrow focus
can cause them to overlook the obvious.
Kenneth likely believed he'd thought of everything.
But now, Onkar had what he needed to convince Scotland Yard
to take the missing person's case seriously.
And when investigators conducted their own search of the Chohan's home,
they agreed with Onkar's suspicions.
The family clearly hadn't left on their own accord.
As the investigation gained momentum,
detectives would soon uncover even more dark and mysterious clues,
including one from Anil himself.
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By the end of March 2003, Kenneth Regan and his associates, William Hornsey and Peter Reese, had killed the entire Chowell.
Johan family to gain control of Siba freight services.
With the business now in Kenneth's hands, the men got it ready for international drug smuggling.
Kenneth was driven by a single goal to make as much money as possible, but there was one
thing he hadn't anticipated, how fast people would begin to catch on.
Kenneth had no idea that Scotland Yard was investigating the Chohan family's disappearance,
but he did quickly realize that top company officials at Siba
afraid were suspicious. People were starting to talk about how strange it was that Anil had suddenly
left, and a lot of those people knew he had no intention of leaving the company to Kenneth's friend
Belinda. As the chatter grew, Kenneth tried to get ahead of the situation. In late March, he gathered
up three of the blank sheets of paper that he'd forced Anil to sign and printed letters on each one,
which he then sent to various company members. The letters explained that Anil and his family had
grown tired of their life in the UK and simply decided to walk away from it all and return to
India. But once again, Kenneth had failed to see the flaw in his plan, because each recipient
noticed the same thing. The letters were typed, but Anil always wrote correspondence by hand.
Trying to control the narrative after a crime is extremely common. On a practical level,
it's about avoiding suspicion. They will do whatever they can to distance
themselves from the crime, divert attention, create confusion, or buy time. But for some individuals,
especially those who place a high value on power, status, or control, the need to manage the story
can be about feeling like they're still in charge of the situation. And of course, there's
impression management, which we talked about in episode one, where people actively shape how others
perceive them. In everyday life, we all do this to some degree, but in criminal contexts, it can
become more extreme. They may construct elaborate explanations or false timelines or staged scenarios
to preserve the image they want others to believe. Generally, though, it's often a mix of both
practical reasons and a need to remain in control. Do you think someone like Kenneth might find
enjoyment in manipulating the story in the aftermath of his crimes? And if so, what does this
suggest about how his brain chemistry might work? In some cases, they do get a sense of enjoyment or
excitement for manipulating the story. But based on what you've described, I don't necessarily see that
as the primary driver for Kenneth. His behavior, at least to me, reads more as desperation.
If his plan and his lifestyle or even his sense of identity were tied to money and success, which is now
tied to the success of the scheme, then losing control of the situation could feel like a major
personal threat. In that context, he may have been operating in more of a survival or
self-preservation mode, which he's done before, because he's scrambling to maintain control and
avoid consequences. That state is typically driven by fear and urgency. However, if someone like Kenneth
were to succeed in regaining control of the situation, that could feel very different psychologically.
Success might reinforce feelings of entitlement or superiority and inflate his sense of self-importance.
Manipulating a situation successfully can activate the brain's reward system, including dopamine
pathways, which can produce feelings of relief, power, or even temporary victory. In that sense,
it would be enjoyable then. But more often, though, it's the sense of regained control that
feels rewarding. But currently, I really think Kenneth is operating under pressure and threats
rather than pleasure. When the authorities learned about the suspicious letters, they felt even more
confident that someone out there knew something and was intentionally covering up the truth. So they
started looking into Aneill's business, and that's when they learned how Belinda Bruin had
suddenly been appointed as the new managing director, at the behest of one of Aneal's newest and
most controversial employees, Kenneth Regan. After learning this, detectives quietly started
collecting business documents. They even got their hands on Kenneth's laptop without him knowing.
However, as they searched for clues, Kenneth seemed to realize that he hadn't done enough to stop
the law from closing in. He decided to do it. He decided to do it.
decided that if he really wanted to throw them off his scent, he'd have to get rid of the main pieces of evidence, the bodies.
So on April 19, 2003, two months after killing the Chohan family, Kenneth, William, and Peter returned to Belinda's property and dug up the remains of all five family members.
They transported the bodies to a dock, where they loaded them onto a boat and ventured into the English Channel.
It's unclear how far they boated into the channel, but the men threw each body overboard.
Kenneth thought he'd finally covered the whole thing up for good.
But again, he'd overestimated himself, because three days later, a body surfaced in the water near Bournemouth Pier, about 80 miles from Belinda's home.
After the police were called, the remains were quickly identified.
They belonged to Anil Chohan.
The husband, father, and businessman was confirmed dead.
Now authorities had to figure out how he died,
and although his body was too decomposed to clearly determine the cause of death,
there were signs of strangulation,
which suggested that Anil was killed before his body was disposed of.
Then, right when it seemed like that was all the information they could glean,
someone in the M.E.'s office discovered a jaw-dropping clue.
While handling Anil's clothing, they felt something inside one of his socks.
They took it out and realized it was a piece of paper folded into a tight square.
And when they unfolded it, they saw that even though it had been in the water, the tight folds had preserved the ink.
It was still legible.
It was a piece of mail addressed to Kenneth Regan.
Now it was clearer than ever that Kenneth likely had something to do with Anil's death.
police came to believe that Anil had put the letter in his sock on purpose as a way to leave behind a clue into his own murder.
In situations where someone realizes that they may not survive, the brain can shift into a last resort problem-solving mode.
Even under extreme fear, many people retain a strong drive to protect others or to make sure the truth comes out.
You sometimes hear about victims leaving DNA under their fingernails or disqualifying.
disturbing the scene in ways that later become evidence, those actions can be purposeful in more ways than one.
The person may recognize that escape isn't likely, but they still have some control over what happens next.
By leaving evidence they're trying to influence the outcome after they're gone, by helping investigators or protecting their loved ones and increasing the chances that their offender is held accountable.
And as mentioned earlier, Anil has already shown signs of distrust toward Kenneth before the abduction.
So that suggests he may have become more vigilant than usual.
When someone's threat response has been activated over time,
they can become more mentally prepared for the possibility that something is wrong,
even if they hope it never escalates to that extreme.
So leaving that clue was likely not a sudden random act.
It reflects a combination of fear, awareness,
and an effort to maintain some sense of control in a situation
that Anil likely felt very powerless in.
With the discovery of Anil's body and the note he'd left behind, the investigation intensified.
As the authorities ramped up their efforts to find the rest of the Chohan family,
people who knew Kenneth started rethinking things they'd brushed off over the past several months.
One of those people was none other than Belinda Bruin.
About 10 days after Kenneth and his men had retrieved the bodies,
she noticed that the hole had been dug up again, and she promptly called the police.
Belinda told Scotland Yard investigators about how Kenneth's associates, William Hornsey and Peter Reese,
had dug the hole without her permission about two months earlier.
She explained that they'd also filled it back in without letting her know.
Now that the hole was redug, investigators had a hunch that the men had buried the bodies there.
So by the end of April 2003, investigators were combing through the hole in search of evidence.
They found clothing and jewelry that they were able to confirm had belonged to Anil.
But that wasn't all.
They also obtained DNA samples.
And when they got the results back, they showed matches for multiple Chohan family members.
Investigators lost all hope that they'd find the rest of the family alive, but they still had to find them.
So they released the story of their latest developments to the media.
From a psychological standpoint, Belinda's decision to come forward,
likely reflects a shift in her internal cost benefit calculation. When someone realizes that they may be
connected even unknowingly to something serious, the risks of staying quiet may begin to outweigh the
risks of speaking up. In this case, the activity was happening on her property, and that alone could
create a feeling of personal vulnerability. So she likely recognized that coming forward is the safer
and more responsible option.
There's also a strong drive
toward self-protection
and moral alignment.
If someone sees themselves
as a law-abiding
or ethical citizen
but suddenly feels entangled
in something potentially criminal,
that can create
significant internal discomfort
and that's where cognitive
dissonance comes in.
When a person's situation
conflicts with their self-image,
it creates internal tension.
Reporting what they know
can be a way to resolve that tension,
both legally and emotionally by bringing their actions back in line with their own values.
So her decision to name Kenneth to police was likely influenced by a combination of self-protection,
evidence on her property, and the need to restore her own integrity and control.
How do you think someone like Kenneth would react emotionally or psychologically to realizing he'd lost control over someone he'd been manipulating?
What likely makes us even more significant for someone like Kenneth is who Belinda,
was to him in his mind. As we discussed in episode one, he seemed drawn to her status, her credibility,
social connections, and legitimacy that he didn't have on his own. So if he viewed her as a social
icon or gateway into a more respected world, her role in his plan was likely as symbolic as it
was practical. She was a part of the image he was trying to build for himself. And when someone
like that turns around and names him to the authorities, that's a person. That's a person.
personal blow and an ego injury. The very person who is supposed to elevate his status and help
maintain his image has now exposed him and contributed to his downfall potentially. Psychologically,
that's going to trigger humiliation, betrayal, or rage, especially in someone whose self-worth
is tied to status and control. And it can challenge a belief that they're in charge or that people
will fall in line or that they can manipulate others successfully, especially now when he's already
being challenged by law enforcement.
Once the news broke, Kenneth did the only thing he could think of.
He ran.
He and William fled the U.K., traveling first to France and then on to Spain.
Peter Reese went a different route, hiding out with a friend in Gloucestershire, about 100 miles
from London.
Clearly, he didn't go far enough because on May 14th, police tracked him down and arrested
him at a local pub.
As the investigation continued, officers' search.
the home that Kenneth had been sharing with his elderly father. Inside, everything was spotless.
But in the backyard, investigators found something that Kenneth had missed, a single drop of blood
on a garden wall. The DNA results were heart-wrenching. The blood belonged to Anil's eight-week-old
son. Investigators believed it was a sign that the infant boy had not survived. And if Kenneth
Regan was willing to murder a child, that probably meant he'd killed the entire family.
Their beliefs were further confirmed a few weeks later on July 15th when a fisherman discovered
Nancy's body. However, Kenneth hadn't been home when detectives searched the premises,
and now they couldn't find him or William anywhere. Detectives started tracking the men's bank accounts,
as well as Anil's, after learning that Kenneth had gained access to it. Soon, they realized,
that both men had fled the country.
Scotland Yard launched what would become
one of their biggest manhunts in history
spanning multiple countries
all with a single objective
to find Kenneth Regan and William Hornsey
then hold them and Peter Reese accountable
for the unthinkable violence they'd committed.
And pretty soon, Kenneth's love of money
would prove to be his undoing.
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By August of 2003, Scotland Yard was in the middle of what would become one of the largest manhunts in its history.
Investigators had successfully captured Peter Reese, but the international search was still on for Kenneth Regan and William Hornsey.
While Kenneth was in hiding, his world started closing in on him, and fast.
He couldn't access his own bank accounts or anneals without being tracked.
And every move he made cost money.
It was becoming increasingly difficult for him to stay hidden.
And when he eventually ran out of money completely, there was nowhere left to run.
On August 2nd, after months on the run, the man who had spent his life obsessing over wealth, status, and a lavish lifestyle,
was found hiding out at a campsite in Belgium
with almost nothing to his name.
Knowing what we know about Kenneth,
him being found at a campsite with almost nothing left
can be an identity collapse.
The image he had constructed of being powerful
and connected and in control
no longer matches his reality.
And that gap between his self-image
and his actual circumstances
can be very disorienting and destabilizing.
And for some individuals, moments like that can bring forced confrontation with reality,
and that can create feelings of shame, defeat, or emptiness.
That said, not everyone experiences that kind of moment as a turning point.
Some people double down on their existing beliefs or they blame others for their circumstances.
But whether losing everything like this actually leads to insight or change will depend heavily on the individual.
For someone like Kenneth, would losing money hit harder than the threat of prison?
I think it's reasonable to say that financial loss may carry more psychological weight for someone like Kenneth, especially because he's been to prison before.
When a person's already experienced incarceration, it's familiar. It's restrictive, of course, but it's also structured.
He's got basic needs like food, shelter, and clothing that are all provided, and the lifestyle is relatively predictable, but it's constrained.
What often creates more psychological stress is what happens after prison.
Many people who are released find that they've lost jobs, housing, relationships, and their social standing.
They're not picking up where they left off.
They're starting from the ground up.
That loss of status and stability can feel more threatening than the confinement itself,
especially for someone whose identity is tied to status or wealth or control and success.
So for a person like Kenneth, the idea of losing,
losing everything financially may represent a deeper, more personal threat than prison alone,
because it means losing the lifestyle and the identity that he spent years trying to build.
At the same time, though, this situation is different because if he's facing multiple murder charges,
the stakes are much higher, and prison may no longer be a temporary setback.
It could represent the rest of his life.
And for someone who is highly control-oriented, that's a permanent loss of autonomy.
That can also be very psychologically significant.
But the loss of money, status, and identity may have been a more immediate and personal threat,
especially given his history and the life he seemed to value.
And now it's a loss that will likely be indefinite.
But something tells me that that reality hasn't hit him yet.
Thankfully, Kenneth didn't put up a fight as he was taken into custody and officially charged with murder.
Then about a month later, on September 7th, William Hornetian,
also worn down by life on the run, willingly turned himself in.
With his surrender, the multi-month international manhunt finally came to a close.
Shortly after William was taken into custody, another grim discovery was made.
The body of Nancy's mother, Cherangit Kor, was found on a beach, further confirming the full scale of the men's crimes.
With all three men now behind bars, formal charges followed.
Kenneth Regan and William Hornsey were each charged with five counts of murder.
Peter Rees was charged with the murder of Anil Chohan and preventing the lawful and decent burial of a body.
Still, despite the mounting evidence against them, all three continued to deny any involvement.
They insisted they were being wrongfully imprisoned.
For Kenneth, the man who had spent his entire life believing he would outsmart everyone,
there was now nothing left to control, except the version of the story.
story he chose to tell himself.
There are a number of reasons why people like Kenneth and Peter and William might
maintain their innocence even when the evidence against them is substantial.
The most practical explanation is legal strategy.
They may have been advised to assert their innocence or to plead not guilty.
They may be hoping for a plea bargain or they may be thinking ahead to potential appeals
if they lose a trial.
But denial can also serve an important psychological function.
especially in a case like this involving, you know, the killing of an entire family, including children.
Crimes against children carry a particularly strong moral stigma in most cultures,
and they're often seen as some of the most unthinkable and unforgivable acts a person can commit.
That means the gap between the accusation and the person's self-image becomes even wider.
So by insisting they didn't do it, they don't have to fully confront the moral weight of the behavior.
denying this protects their ego, their identity, and the version of themselves that they still want to believe in.
Admitting guilt would require accepting a very different and very unforgivable self-concept.
For some offenders, that's psychologically harder to tolerate than maintaining the denial, even in the face of strong evidence.
And in Kenneth's case, it's hard to say, but it's more likely than not a mixture of both.
He does have a pattern of behavior that suggests he prioritizes self-preservation and needs.
image. But again, he wants to control, like you said, the version of the story that he chooses to tell
himself. Do you think someone like Kenneth, like specifically with a psychological profile like Kenneth,
ever be able to admit guilt? It's hard to say. I've seen offenders with similar profiles
maintain their innocence for the rest of their lives, and I've also seen cases where people make
confessions at the very end. Because at the end of life, some individuals begin to reflect on their
actions. And for some, that creates, you know, space for admission or remorse or a desire to
unburden themselves. But to others, that's also still about image management. Because the true
intention can be less about remorse and more about absolving themselves of guilt because of maybe
faith-based beliefs that they have or fears about what will happen to them when they do pass away.
And then there are others who hold on to their denial until the very end. That denial may be so
intertwined with their identity that admitting guilt would be too intolerable or it's survival-based.
Again, having to live in an environment where crimes against children are not accepted is certainly
a motive to deny it in itself. So there's no single predictable outcome, really. It often depends
on the individual, their personality structure, their coping mechanisms, and their motivations.
After a long and meticulous preparation, the case against the three men finally went to trial.
By 2004, Kenneth, William, and Peter weren't just facing a courtroom.
They were up against extreme public outrage for what they'd done.
The scale of the crime and the brutality behind it had shocked the entire country.
As a result, prosecutors made it clear from the start that they intended to leave nothing to chance
when it came to keeping the men responsible behind bars.
When the trial kicked off, prosecutors laid out what they described as Kenneth Regan's motive and grand plan,
which they pieced together from his history of drug smuggling and the fact that he suddenly took control of Siba freight after the murders.
They told the jury that Kenneth planned to take over the company at any cost
and then used the business as a front for international drug smuggling.
They said the murders weren't random or impulsive,
but calculated, and they presented evidence they'd obtained from Kenneth's laptop,
including forged documents.
Finally, the prosecution presented Kenneth and Williams' cell phone location data,
which placed them with Anil on the day he disappeared,
and then at the Chohan family home when the remaining family members were murdered.
But the defense told a very different story.
In a surprise admission, Kenneth's attorney said his client
did help dispose of Anil's body,
but that he only did it because an Asian crime gang forced him to.
They said the gang operated in the same criminal circles as Kenneth,
and that they'd chosen him to carry out their dirty work.
They also challenged the prosecution's financial motive,
pointing out that there was no meaningful profit to be made
from the alleged drug scheme that would justify such extreme violence.
The trial stretched on for eight months.
When the jury finally reached a verdict on July 1, 2005,
the case had become the longest murder trial in the history of the Metropolitan Police Department,
with costs estimated at around 10 million pounds.
Inside a packed courtroom, none of the three defendants showed any real sign of emotion as the verdict was read aloud.
All three men were found guilty.
Sentencing followed soon after.
First, Peter received a sentence of 23 years for his role in Anil's murder.
But before handing down sentences to Kenneth and William, the judge took a moment to describe both men as highly dangerous individuals who should never be allowed freedom again.
He went on to sentence each man to five life terms with whole life orders, meaning they would never be eligible for parole and would effectively live the rest of their days in prison.
For Kenneth Regan, the man who'd spent his life chasing wealth, status and control,
It was the end of the road. After destroying an entire family, his life of crime was finally over.
I know I touched on this before, but the reality that he cannot outmaneuver consequences and he will never have a fast life of luxury again can be an identity fracture for someone like him.
This can lead to a range of emotions.
And with some individuals becoming more withdrawn or depressed, while others doubling down on denial, blaming others or finding a new purpose and a source of control,
while incarcerated. Some offenders begin to reconstruct a new inner narrative. They may shift from
seeing themselves as powerful or superior to seeing themselves as victims of circumstance, being misunderstood
or even morally justified in their actions, which it sounds like he already tried with his defense.
Others, though less commonly, may eventually develop insight or remorse as they process the
permanence of their situation. That said, the reality of never being free again, can't
be extremely destabilizing. I've seen this firsthand with many offenders, particularly in their
initial adjustment periods, which can range from months to years. But at the same time, human beings
are highly adaptive. Many long-term incarcerated individuals eventually did build new identities
around routine. They got roles within the prison community, or they built personal belief
systems that helped them make sense of their new circumstances. Of course, that's not the case
for all, but it truly depends on the person, their previous experiences, personality traits,
insight, and coping mechanisms.
How might the men's sentences affect the Johan's loved ones? Do you think long sentences,
especially life sentences or multiple life sentences, does that offer closure for the family?
This is such a complicated question, because if you were to ask a survivor or family member,
you'll get a different response each time. I've seen individual sentenced to life who are part of
the Restortive Justice program, attempt to make amends with their victims' families or their victims,
and they get mixed responses with some being receptive and others not. Some families do get closure
and they find a sentence like this to be justice or validation. Others never do, because in truth,
nothing's going to bring their loved one back. A sentence doesn't erase that loss or the grief
that comes with that loss. So while it can offer a sense of security or safety,
because they're behind bars for the rest of their life.
And it's certainly an acknowledgement of what's been done to them
and their loved ones.
They don't always bring the kind of emotional closure
that people expect.
Healing tends to be a much longer, more personal process
that's shaped by each family's relationships,
their beliefs and their support systems,
which if you really think about it,
is absolutely understandable.
Though the Chohan family ultimately received a measure of justice,
the bodies of the two Chohan children have never been recovered,
leaving a painful absence that no conviction can ever resolve.
Nancy's brother, Onkar, has long believed that the police were too slow to recognize the seriousness of what had happened.
He's openly criticized what he sees as a lack of urgency in the early days of the investigation,
time that could have stopped the criminals from tampering with evidence and ultimately fleeing.
As for Belinda Bruin, she was never found to have any involvement.
in the crimes themselves.
Authorities ultimately concluded that she had been manipulated by Kenneth Regan
and drawn into his orbit without fully understanding what was unfolding.
However, now that there was clarity around the case,
the authorities decided to revisit another old, unsolved mystery
that they thought Kenneth and William might have been involved in,
the 1992 disappearance of businessman Michael Shalamatch.
While working the Chohan case, investigators had noticed
the unsettling similarities between Michael's disappearance and Anil's, like the letters that
appeared after both men vanished, with each claiming to have left voluntarily.
So in 2016, Kenneth and William were identified by police as official suspects in Michael's
disappearance.
However, there have been no new developments in the case since then, which means Michael's case
remains unsolved.
To this day, neither Kenneth nor William has admitted,
responsibility to the murders of the Chohan family. But in the end, their silence and multiple
attempts to obscure the truth couldn't hold up and proved that they're not cut out for the
very life they'd been chasing. Thanks so much for listening. We'll be back next time for a deep
dive into the mind of another murderer. Serial Killers and Murderous Minds is a crimehouse
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Serial Killers and Murderous Minds is hosted by me, Vanessa Richardson, and Forensic Psychologist
Dr. Tristan Engels, and is a crime house original powered by Pave Studios.
This episode was brought to life by the Serial Killers and Murderous Minds team,
Max Cutler, Ron Shapiro, Alex Benadon, Lori Marinelli, Natalie, Natalie Pertzowski, Sarah Camp,
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and Carrie Murphy.
Thank you for listening.
Hi, it's Vanessa.
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