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Murder of Muriel McKay

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(Redirected from Muriel McKay) British murder and kidnapping in 1970

Muriel McKay
Born(1914-02-04)4 February 1914
Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Diedc. 1 January 1970(1970-01-01) (aged 55)
Rooks Farm, Stocking Pelham, Hertfordshire, England
NationalityAustralian
SpouseAlick McKay
Children3

Muriel Freda McKay (4 February 1914 – c. 1 January 1970) was an Australian woman who was kidnapped on 29 December 1969 in the United Kingdom and presumed murdered in the first few days of 1970. She was married to Alick McKay, an executive at News Limited and deputy to media proprietor Rupert Murdoch. McKay was kidnapped after being mistaken for Murdoch's then-wife, Anna Maria Murdoch. Two Indo-Trinidadian brothers, Arthur and Nizamodeen Hosein, were convicted of her murder and kidnapping in September 1970.

The case was one of the earliest examples in the United Kingdom of a trial and conviction secured for a murder without a body.

Disappearance

Muriel McKay and her husband Alick were both born and raised in Adelaide, South Australia. After moving to London in 1958 for her husband's job as a newspaper executive for Rupert Murdoch's News Limited, they lived in St Mary's House on Arthur Road in Wimbledon. Their three adult children, Jennifer, Diane and Ian, also lived in the United Kingdom.

On 29 December 1969, assailants broke into the McKay home and abducted Muriel while her husband was at work. Returning home at 7:45 pm and finding the front door unlocked, the telephone ripped from the wall, the contents of his wife's handbag scattered on the stairs and the house empty, Alick reported her missing at 8 pm. The attack was especially troubling given that jewellery had been stolen in a burglary incident three months earlier, and Muriel had become increasingly careful of her personal safety.

Investigation

When police arrived, the burglary case was quickly upgraded to a kidnapping after investigators found items that were foreign to the house: Elastoplast, twine, a newspaper and a billhook. After the phone was repaired at 1 am, a caller identifying himself as 'M3' (short for Mafia 3) contacted the house and demanded a £1 million ransom. Over the next forty days, M3 made eighteen more calls, demanding to speak to either Alick or their children Ian and Diane, and sent three letters (postmarked in Tottenham or Wood Green) demanding the money while repeatedly threatening to kill Muriel. Five letters written by Muriel and pleading for compliance were enclosed as 'proof' that she was alive, as were three pieces cut from her clothing.

Two successive attempts to deliver half of the ransom money were unsuccessful. The first, on the A10 road on 1 February 1970, was abandoned due to a large police presence in the area.

For the second attempt on 6 February 1970, the kidnappers specifically asked for Diane to make the drop off, as she was always at the forefront of communication with the McKay family. However, following M3's detailed instructions, two disguised police officers (instead of Diane) placed the ransom consisting of two lots of £500,000 (primarily composed of fake banknotes) in two suitcases and left them at a telephone box in Church Street in Tottenham, where they would receive further instructions. At 4:00 pm, M3 rang and instructed to take the ransom money to a second phone box in Bethnal Green. There, M3 rang again and instructed the officers to take the London Underground to Epping, where they were to take the money to yet another phone box. Upon the arrival at the phone box in Epping, M3 rang and instructed the officers to take a taxi to a used car yard with a garage in Bishop's Stortford where they were instructed to leave the cases next to a minivan that would be parked there on the garage forecourt.

The police conducted surveillance in the area and noticed that a blue Volvo sedan with a broken taillight, bearing registration XGO 994G and carrying a single occupant, slowly passed the garage four times between 8 pm and 10.30 pm. At 10.47 pm it passed again, this time carrying two men. However, a local couple noticed the suitcases and became concerned. The woman kept watching while her husband reported the cases to the police, who were unaware of the drop-off and took them to Epping police station.

The investigation soon shifted to the Volvo, registered in the name of a man from Rooks Farm near Stocking Pelham, Hertfordshire. Reviewing previous reports, police noted that some witnesses had also described seeing a dark-coloured Volvo sedan driving near Arthur Road in the hours before Muriel's disappearance, and another reporting it as parked in the McKay driveway around 6 pm. Police also noted the Volvo acting suspiciously at the first drop-off attempt but had assumed it was either undercover police or a local.

Rooks Farm, which covered eleven acres (4.5 ha) and was considerably run down, was raided by police on 7 February at 8 am. The owners of the farm were Trinidad-born Arthur Hosein and his German wife, who also lived with Arthur's youngest sibling, Nizamodeen, a labourer at the farm since August. A notebook was found with torn pages that matched the tear patterns in Muriel's letters. Further, twine and a matching roll of tape were found, and the billhook was revealed as belonging to a neighbour. The brothers' physical descriptions matched those of the men seen in the Volvo, and Arthur's fingerprints matched those found on the ransom letters and a newspaper found in the McKay house. Similarly, Nizamodeen's voice matched that of recordings of M3 when he was tested on a telephone. However, no trace of Muriel was found at the farm, even after it was searched for several weeks.

Trial

Based on the evidence, the Hosein brothers were arrested and sent to trial on 14 September 1970, with the prosecution led by Peter Rawlinson. At trial it was learned that Arthur, a tailor in Hackney, was experiencing financial difficulty after buying Rooks Farm in May 1968. The Hoseins decided to kidnap Anna Maria Murdoch after watching her husband being interviewed on television about his recent purchase of the News of the World and The Sun newspapers on 3 October 1969. However, confusion arose when the Hoseins followed Murdoch's chauffeured Rolls-Royce to the house in Arthur Road, which they assumed to be the Murdoch family residence, but it was actually the residence of the McKays. Unbeknownst to the brothers, Murdoch had loaned the car to Alick for a few weeks while he and his wife were in Australia.

Throughout the case, each brother tried to put the blame on the other, although it was soon determined that Arthur was the dominant sibling. The Hoseins were charged with murder, kidnap and blackmail, and convicted at the Old Bailey on 6 October 1970. When imposing life sentences on the pair, plus twenty-five years in Arthur's case and fifteen in Nizamodeen's, the trial judge, Justice Shaw, said their "conduct was cold-blooded and abominable". Despite investigation, it was never established what happened to Muriel's remains, though there was speculation that the brothers had fed them to their guard dogs or pigs.

Aftermath

The Hosein brothers were sent to prison where they attempted to appeal their sentence in March 1971. In November 1987 and September 1994, Arthur unsuccessfully applied for parole. Arthur died in prison in 2009, whereas Nizamodeen served twenty years and was deported to Trinidad after his release.

The nature of the case led to widespread media coverage, along with numerous hoaxes, prank letters and phone calls to the McKay home. Psychic Gerard Croiset, who had participated in a number of famous missing person investigations, also became involved, though the accuracy of his information has been grossly exaggerated. Because of the notoriety of the case, likenesses of the Hosein brothers were displayed in the Chamber of Horrors in Madame Tussauds, alongside that of then-living murderers Donald Neilson and Graham Young.

In 2017, Kelvin MacKenzie's review of Ink, a play about the history of The Sun, described the portion of the play about McKay's kidnapping as its "most dramatic moment". Jane Martinson, in her review for The Guardian, described that portion of the play as its "most uncomfortable moment".

Searches for McKay's body

An initial search for McKay was made at Rooks Farm after the arrest of the Hosein brothers in February 1970, but was hampered by the ground being hardened in the cold weather and ultimately found no trace of her.

In 2021, it was reported that Nizamodeen had told a QC that Muriel died of a heart attack shortly after the kidnapping and provided details of the location of her body at Rooks Farm, which in the intervening years had been renamed to Stocking Farm. This information was featured as part of the Sky News documentary The Wimbledon Kidnapping and ultimately led to a second search in 2022; upon that search being unsuccessful, Nizamodeen began claiming that the police had dug in the wrong area, a view that later came to be shared by Muriel's family. In November 2023, Nizamodeen asked to be allowed back to the UK to show where he had buried Muriel. Nizamodeen signed a £40,000 settlement with the McKay family to reveal where Muriel was buried but later turned down the money and freely told the family how and where Muriel had died. In December 2023, Muriel's daughter Dianne urged the Metropolitan Police to cooperate with Nizamodeen to ensure the recovery of her mother's body.

In January 2024, the Home Office refused to allow Nizamodeen to return to Britain and identify the spot where he buried Muriel. Dianne McKay and Mark Dyer then flew to Trinidad on 27 January with The Times and Sky News to interview Nizamodeen over the course of two days. They claimed that Nizamodeen had disclosed exactly where Muriel was buried and had asked to come to Britain to show where. On 29 January, Detective Superintendent Katherine Goodwin of Scotland Yard made telephone contact with Dianne and agreed for the latter to give her recordings of a meeting with Nizamodeen. In March 2024, Goodwin told the family that investigators were due to interview Nizamodeen in Trinidad with a view to using the interview as a reason for the Home Office to let him into Britain for the purposes of the search. The interview took three days, with Goodwin texting the McKay family afterwards to tell them that Nizamodeen was "unable to provide a location with any consistency". Dianne McKay said that the family felt "completely let down by the police" and had previously told them that "if they went heavy handed, insisting on interviewing him in a police station with a male officer, it would go badly". It was also revealed that the family had asked the police not to send the senior investigating officer to Trinidad following a failed videolink interview at the time of the 2022 search; during that earlier interview, Nizamodeen became unresponsive before then collapsing and requiring hospital treatment. The officer had also had a complaint filed against him by the family following an incident during the 2022 search where, after Dianne had been invited to the search area, the officer was alleged to have shouted at her.

Mark Dyer was contacted by Scotland Yard in May 2024 to confirm that they would search Stocking Farm within six weeks. In June 2024, Dyer met with Detective Superintendent Goodwin at the farm with a view to agreeing the search area. The search started on 15 July 2024 with the Metropolitan Police allowing themselves a search period of between a week and ten days. The area to be searched was three times the size of the original search area. On 22 July, it was announced that the search had been unsuccessful and no remains had been recovered. Muriel's family was not satisfied that the search had been conducted properly and insisted that Nizamodeen should have been brought to the farm to pinpoint her location; the police said that Nizamodeen had been inconsistent in his evidence and had incorrectly recalled certain events of the case.

In October 2024, Mark Dyer said that he was willing to buy Stocking Farm for over £1,000,000 if it meant that he and the rest of Muriel's family could carry out their own search of the ground. Nizamodeen's lawyer said that his client remained willing to assist with any future searches. In November 2024, Ian McKay flew to Trinidad in order to talk with Nizamodeen after the latter had specifically asked for a conversation with him; Nizamodeen again indicated where he believed Muriel was buried. Around this time, Ian also began claiming that there were areas of Stocking Farm which had not been searched by police despite them having agreed to do so.

On 14 November 2024, Katherine Goodwin met with the McKay family. During the course of this meeting, the family requested copies of the official sign off's and professional reports in respect of the searches carried out 2022 and 2024.

To date, nothing has been provided.

See also

References

  1. Nash, Jay Robert (2004). The Great Pictorial History of World Crime, Volume 2. Scarecrow Press. pp. 710–711. ISBN 9781461712152. Retrieved 26 September 2017.
  2. ^ Joseph, Francis (3 April 2009). "Englishwoman missing for 39 years". Archives. Trinidad and Tobago Guardian. Archived from the original on 20 October 2017. Retrieved 25 September 2017.
  3. "Two bumbling kidnappers get life prison terms". The Montreal Gazette. UPI. 7 October 1970. p. 45. Archived from the original on 28 February 2022. Retrieved 8 July 2019 – via news.google.com.
  4. "Sir Alex Mackay, a director and former deputy chairman..." UPI. Archived from the original on 8 July 2019. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  5. ^ Kennedy, Dominic (14 September 2015). "Britain gives killer's ex wife £50,000 to fight death penalty". The Times. London. Archived from the original on 27 September 2017. Retrieved 27 September 2017.(subscription required)
  6. Tarver, Nick (3 April 2012). "Body of evidence but no murder body". Archived from the original on 8 July 2019. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  7. ^ Casefile: True Crime Podcast (3 May 2019). "Case 110: Muriel McKay". Archived from the original on 12 October 2019. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  8. ^ PANGEA (27 June 2018), The McKay Kidnapping | Great Crimes & Trials, archived from the original on 31 May 2022, retrieved 8 July 2019
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  10. Honeycombe, Gordon (7 February 2011). Murder of the Black Museum – The Dark Secrets Behind A Hundred Years of the Most Notorious Crimes in England. John Blake Publishing. ISBN 9781843584414.
  11. ^ MacKenzie, Kelvin (1 July 2017). "Almeida's new play about the Sun is exactly as I remember it, says Kelvin MacKenzie". The Spectator. London. Retrieved 26 September 2017. For me the most dramatic moment in the play came with the true story of the kidnapping and murder — although the body has never been found — of Muriel McKay, the wife of Rupert's trusted deputy chairman Sir Alick McKay.
  12. Borrell, Clive (7 October 1970). "Life sentences for Hosein Brothers". The Times. London. Retrieved 27 September 2017. (subscription required)
  13. Tarver, Nick (3 April 2012). "Convicting a murderer with no dead body". BBC News. Archived from the original on 29 September 2017. Retrieved 27 September 2017.
  14. Burrell, Ian (7 September 1997). "Death row millionaire may be set free". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 27 September 2017. Retrieved 26 September 2017. Adam Hosein was questioned but not charged over the McKay killing, which stemmed from a bungled attempt to kidnap the wife of Rupert Murdoch. Instead the 55-year-old wife of the newspaper executive Alick McKay was abducted.
  15. Pilbeam, Pamela (10 August 2006). Madame Tussaud: And the History of Waxworks. A&C Black. ISBN 9781852855116. Archived from the original on 8 February 2024. Retrieved 3 October 2020.
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  36. ^ Head-Thomas, Zoe (9 November 2024). "Muriel McKay: Son returning from meeting his mother's killer". Greatest Hits Radio. Retrieved 9 November 2024.
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