James G
Squadron vice admiral
Posts: 7,608
Likes: 8,833
|
Post by James G on Aug 21, 2019 15:28:23 GMT
This is an old story of mine written in a hurry four years ago on a different board. I am in the process of re-writing and editing it. In addition, I am changing bits around and expanding it elsewhere. The story is a 'political thriller' if it needed such a description. It's set in the modern-ish day but not specific in its politics on purpose. I should be done within a week or so as the story, even redone, isn't that long.
|
|
James G
Squadron vice admiral
Posts: 7,608
Likes: 8,833
|
Post by James G on Aug 21, 2019 15:28:58 GMT
The Mason Murders
One
Charlotte Mason was found dead on the evening of the last Sunday in April.
The forty-two-year-old International Director of the charity ‘Help Children Now!’ and wife of the UK’s Home Secretary William Mason was killed in the couple’s constituency home that they shared. She had been bludgeoned to death in what was clearly a brutal, savage murder. The residents of the little village of Bishopsgate, located a couple of miles outside of the historic city of York, were soon alerted to the sound of sirens from the emergency services after a call had been made by the Mason’s daughter to 999. The teenager had discovered the shocking scene of her mother’s slaying. She made a desperate and frantic call for help. The Home Secretary soon arrived after racing from his nearby constituency office where he had been holding meetings that evening. With him came one of his police protection officers as well.
Also in the house alongside Charlotte and her only child was another one of those specialist policemen assigned by London’s Met. Police as bodyguards for the Home Secretary. He was found to be in a distressed state. He was incoherent and apparently confused about where he was. He had blood on his clothes too with no sign of any injury of his own. Through the house’s living room there were signs of a struggle: broken furniture and smashed household items. Outward signs on Charlotte’s corpse suggested that she had suffered a sustained attack with a household object which lay next to it. A heavy, blood-stained iron rested on the carpet.
An immense scandal would afterwards commence following this incident.
|
|
lordroel
Administrator
Member is Online
Posts: 67,973
Likes: 49,378
|
Post by lordroel on Aug 21, 2019 15:36:54 GMT
This is an old story of mine written in a hurry four years ago on a different board. I am in the process of re-writing and editing it. In addition, I am changing bits around and expanding it elsewhere. The story is a 'political thriller' if it needed such a description. It's set in the modern-ish day but not specific in its politics on purpose. I should be done within a week or so as the story, even redone, isn't that long. Wait, no World War III, this is surprising to see.
|
|
|
Post by fieldmarshal on Aug 21, 2019 16:28:05 GMT
This is an old story of mine written in a hurry four years ago on a different board. I am in the process of re-writing and editing it. In addition, I am changing bits around and expanding it elsewhere. The story is a 'political thriller' if it needed such a description. It's set in the modern-ish day but not specific in its politics on purpose. I should be done within a week or so as the story, even redone, isn't that long. Wait, no World War III, this is surprising to see. Started lurking here again a few weeks ago and I've noticed he's been "branching out" so to speak in terms of content, between his Canadian Alaska oneshot and a couple straight British political thrillers. I appreciate it; not that I'm tired of WW3 in any way, but it's nice to see him trying new things
|
|
forcon
Lieutenant Commander
Posts: 988
Likes: 1,739
|
Post by forcon on Aug 21, 2019 17:02:06 GMT
Good start. IMHO, if the wife was bludgeoned to death, it isn't likely to have been a professional hit job. It sounds more like a botched robbery. But then, that could be just what the killers wanted the world to think...
If the copper didn't do it - I don't think he did - then it sounds like he's been drugged with something, maybe a hallucinogen or ketamine to allow for the killing to take place, which contrarily would make it a pro job. I'm eager to see were this goes!
|
|
James G
Squadron vice admiral
Posts: 7,608
Likes: 8,833
|
Post by James G on Aug 21, 2019 17:40:59 GMT
This is an old story of mine written in a hurry four years ago on a different board. I am in the process of re-writing and editing it. In addition, I am changing bits around and expanding it elsewhere. The story is a 'political thriller' if it needed such a description. It's set in the modern-ish day but not specific in its politics on purpose. I should be done within a week or so as the story, even redone, isn't that long. Wait, no World War III, this is surprising to see. It shouldn't be. I have written and posted on other subjects. Started lurking here again a few weeks ago and I've noticed he's been "branching out" so to speak in terms of content, between his Canadian Alaska oneshot and a couple straight British political thrillers. I appreciate it; not that I'm tired of WW3 in any way, but it's nice to see him trying new things Nice to see you. Oh, I always have plenty of ideas. I am just famous/infamous for one particular subject matter! Good start. IMHO, if the wife was bludgeoned to death, it isn't likely to have been a professional hit job. It sounds more like a botched robbery. But then, that could be just what the killers wanted the world to think... If the copper didn't do it - I don't think he did - then it sounds like he's been drugged with something, maybe a hallucinogen or ketamine to allow for the killing to take place, which contrarily would make it a pro job. I'm eager to see were this goes! Ah, everything is not what it seems and will continue to not be. The title The Mason Murder s is a deliberate thing.
|
|
James G
Squadron vice admiral
Posts: 7,608
Likes: 8,833
|
Post by James G on Aug 21, 2019 20:54:27 GMT
Two
There would be ongoing police activity throughout the night in Bishopsgate. In addition, members of the national media would also descend upon the usually quiet rural locality during the early hours. Residents wouldn’t get much sleep with all of the commotion. They would complain about the noise from vehicles & visiting people and then too the arrival & departure of a helicopter which made use of the village green as an improvised landing site.
North Yorkshire Police had their officers on the scene first. Police cars initially with uniformed officers and then detectives whizzed in. An ambulance had arrived long ahead of the plain-clothed policemen but they were unable to do anything to revive the murdered woman. The address from where the 999 call had been made had been something ‘flagged’ on the emergency services system because of the job that the principle resident did. This brought about the large response. Several Special Branch officers from North Yorkshire Police, and then the county force’s Chief Constable himself, all ended up in attendance too.
William Mason and his fourteen-year-old daughter Amy left Bishopsgate at the insistence of the Home Secretary’s other protection officer. They went to the house of his constituency agent where an armed officer was sent to as well. Amy had been attended to by those paramedics who could do nothing for her mother. She was in a state of mild shock, they said, but she would be okay. She certainly didn’t look like she would ever be okay. Her father didn’t want her to go to hospital as had been suggested by one of the policemen whose opinion differed from that of the Yorkshire Ambulance Service personnel. What the Home Secretary wanted was for the two of them to stay together and also go down to London rather than stay up here. The family maintained a home in the fashionable Notting Hill to allow for Mason’s parliamentary duties. Only the urging of that Chief Constable would keep him in Yorkshire instead of making that trip.
Once the two living Masons were gone from the house, the deceased third Mason was once more attended to. Charlotte Mason’s body was removed by police coroners to be taken away for an autopsy. A senior pathologist was called in to do that with haste but care. Out of the house too came Detective Constable Robert Keane. He had been kept in the kitchen, where he remained covered in dried blood, and was taken to York Police Station. He had no injuries but was still unable to give coherent answers to questions put to him about what had happened. In taking him away, he wasn’t placed under arrest yet he wouldn’t be leaving their custody.
Mason’s other full-time protection officer – he had two who rotated bodyguard duty plus extra manpower occasionally assigned when needed – had made emergency contact with the alert office at New Scotland Yard for officers like herself assigned to the Met.’s Specialist Protection Command: better known as SO1. Detective Sergeant Emma Wentworth had been greatly disturbed by what she had seen inside the house when it came to not just Charlotte Mason but her colleague too. She’s pushed Keane into that kitchen and then taken the Home Secretary and his daughter into the hallway while waiting on the arrival of the emergency services. Her carried pistol had been drawn as her training had kicked in. Wentworth’s fear was of some sort of terrorist threat to Mason, a senior government minister with Cabinet ranking. The killing of his wife – plus whatever had happened to Keane – could have been a botched assassination attempt on the Home Secretary.
News of what had occurred in Yorkshire reached London through Wentworth’s first contact with New Scotland Yard. Following this, North Yorkshire Police exchanged urgent messages with the Met. as well as the Security Service at Thames House. It was a Sunday night when these calls came into MI-5. There was an issue with the senior man at the alert desk being on paternity leave and his deputy being absent when he shouldn’t have been. That would be addressed at a later stage but in the meantime, it meant that there was a delay in giving the right people timely information on what was going on. Someone had murdered the Home Secretary’s wife and this could have been a terrorist event. Things weren’t meant to be as muddled as they initially were.
Better late than never, the Cabinet Office was informed and Downing Street staff contacted the Prime Minister. He was in Washington on official business when he was told of the death of Charlotte Mason and the possible implications of that. He knew her personally though that wider concern was there too over potential terrorism. A statement was prepared which he would deliver though held off until better information came.
Before they started getting information unofficially from high-level contacts within the Met. and the government too, the UK media heard about something serious occurring at Mason’s consistency home through local sources there in Yorkshire. A villager rang a local radio station’s news desk (the phone number was on the website) while an attending policeman had a girlfriend who worked with BBC Yorkshire. Initially, an unconfirmed story was circulating that there had been an ambulance called to the Home Secretary’s home because his wife was ill. A second story contradicted this and said that his daughter had died there. Rumour and speculation was abound. This included a third account that someone had tried to murder Mason himself. From their headquarters, North Yorkshire Police then made a statement to the media. An unnamed woman had been discovered dead in Bishopsgate. By that point, there was more unofficial semi-accurate information out there and the craziness of earlier reports was corrected. Sky News had rolling coverage followed by other news channels; the websites of the country’s major newspapers were changing their headlines. Those journalists started heading for Bishopsgate yet couldn’t get inside when the police shut off roads to everyone but the emergency services and confirmed residents.
Meanwhile, not that far away in another little village in this part of Yorkshire, this one named Dunthorpe where Mason’s constituency agent lived, the Home Secretary got himself some sound sleep in his host’s bed. His long-term, loyal colleague managed his MP affairs up here in Yorkshire for Mason. He was always a rock for the parliamentarian and minister. That man and his wife didn’t get any sleep tonight. Amy was in their guest bedroom and they were with her. She didn’t sleep. Instead, she spent the entire night in tears. She wouldn’t stop crying no matter what they said nor did.
|
|
James G
Squadron vice admiral
Posts: 7,608
Likes: 8,833
|
Post by James G on Aug 22, 2019 12:27:46 GMT
Three
DC Keane had been taken to York Police Station by officers with North Yorkshire Police. He had not been placed under arrest nor initially forcibly detained. During that car ride and then inside the station where he was escorted into an interview room, Keane several times become agitated. He repeatedly asked for his personal weapon – SO1 officers, unlike the majority of British policemen, are armed on a regular basis – and stated that he had to return to his duty guarding the Home Secretary. A colleague of his who had been sent up from London as well as locally-based Special Branch officers now were forced to restrain him. They had questions for him starting with what had happened inside that house in Bishopsgate. Keane said he had no idea as to what occurred. When told that Charlotte Mason had been killed and he was found not just present but covered in her blood too, he broke down in tears. He was muttering under his breath comments that the policemen asked him to repeat but he wouldn’t. Keane then declared his love for the Home Secretary’s wife. When pushed on how far that went, he made the claim to the soon startled officers present that the two of them had been engaged in an affair of a sexual nature. How long had this been going on? The answer to that was that this had moved to the physical starting in the New Year but for three months previously they had been ‘involved’. Following the opening interview – there would be several –, a police doctor was called in to take samples of Keane’s blood as well as his urine too due to an expressed concern by several police officers that he might be under the influence of drugs, either prescription medication or illegal substances. He was all over the place and this was a worry.
Away from York, several of the sleeping William Mason’s Cabinet colleagues had their personal security teams reinforced with extra officers during the night. Both the Foreign & Defence Secretaries, in addition to the Northern Ireland Secretary who always had an enlarged presence of protection officers due to the nature of his Cabinet brief, already had regular-assigned SO1 officers. However, them and their families were guarded by more personnel during the night as caution was employed in what was still an unknown situation where no one knew what might come out of the investigation ongoing in Yorkshire. The Chancellor of the Exchequer, long speculated in the media to be a Prime Minister in-waiting (as Mason was as well), usually didn’t have any protection officers. He’d always refused to have any bodyguards. Tonight, he had no choice in this matter. Counter-terrorism plans were put into place until some more answers came out of Yorkshire. There remained a conceivable threat to life of the nation’s top politicians and their families.
MI-5 sent Louise Saunders up to York. She arrived in the middle of the night after being alerted earlier in the evening that something big was up and thus dragged away from her family that Sunday. Her job at Thames House was to assist in the Security Service’s domestic anti-extremism fight and this had seen her work before with the Met.’s SO1 as well as those who guarded royalty and foreign diplomatic premises. She well understood the type of police officers who took on those jobs. The majority did so for career progression and the perks which came with what many would regard as an easy posting. A few, just a few, were different though. They really believed in the ideas that important people needed to be protected. All involved took at least a year-long posting. They completed firearms training, undertook advanced driving courses and had access to generous amounts of paid overtime. Following assignment to SO1, they could move further onwards with their careers to supervisory roles or serve with armed response units. Others would stay with SO1 for many years though, moving between guarding different people. It was a bore for them, Saunders had been told, and did put a strain on their personal lives with the long hours and much travel. MPs in the Government generally had two homes in different parts of the country – one in London and another in their constituency – and therefore the travelling with many nights away from home was hard on them. Some of them had been known to address those strains in manner which the Met. wouldn’t approve of: drinking, gambling and even having affairs with each other. There had been occasions where the bodyguards got too close to their charges as well. Her suspicion in arriving in Yorkshire, being told what little she did on the way, was that there would be something along those lines here with this case. Keane was off-duty, wasn’t he? So what was he doing in the Mason family home alone with the wife of the Home Secretary?
She observed the opening interview conducted with Keane. When the police officers in the room showed shock on their faces at his revelation that he and Charlotte Mason were having an affair, Saunders didn’t. She’d heard of similar things before. That had been cases of relations between SO1 officers and the politicians though there had been a female officer who’d been involved with the wife of a previous foreign secretary. Saunders had Wentworth – Keane’s partner – come to the police station. Another SO1 officer up from London was guarding that house where William & Amy Mason were spending the night. It was put to Wentworth what Keane had said about Charlotte Mason. Was this true? It was. Wentworth said that she had discovered this but wasn’t aware that her partner knew that she had become aware of what he and Charlotte were up to. It was a private matter, the policewoman said, and none of anyone else’s business. She hadn’t reported it to any superior officer because they weren’t harming anyone. Saunders asked too about where William Mason was at the time of the murder of his wife. Wentworth said that she was with him. The consistency office in Bishopsgate was several streets away from the family home. She was there with the Home Secretary for much of the day. Did she know where Keane was at the time? Off-duty, Wentworth confirmed, and she hadn’t any clue as to fact that he had been with Charlotte Mason that evening.
Saunders imagined that Wentworth was going to be in hot water with New Scotland Yard. The unprofessionalism she had shown when it came to Keane and the Home Secretary’s wife was going to see her career brought to a screeching end no matter what she said about it being a private matter. Saunders moved her mind as to where to go with this investigation next. She knew that she needed to talk to Keane herself and also William Mason. Furthermore, she decided that she needed to talk to the teenage daughter of the Home Secretary too.
Amy Mason couldn’t be left out of this.
|
|
James G
Squadron vice admiral
Posts: 7,608
Likes: 8,833
|
Post by James G on Aug 22, 2019 22:13:35 GMT
Four
The headlines for breakfast news on the television and radio led with the murder of Charlotte Mason with this dominating most of their coverage. It was the same with the news media online and the daily newspapers too. The latter weren’t as up-to-date in the printed edition as their online content was yet they still had the general gist of the one and only story that was sure to be all-encompassing all day. In all of this, there still remained few real facts that the media had. They still had a lot of speculation because North Yorkshire Police had only made the briefest of statements while Downing Street had issued something only slightly longer.
It was pictures of the deceased wife of the Home Secretary which thus formed a lot of what was presented to the British public with this story. She was a well-known figure aside from who her husband was with independent charity work done by Charlotte Mason in her own right. That charity which she co-ran with another high-profile individual – who would soon make herself a part of this story too – had been involved in the previous year raising money for children affected by an earthquake in Pakistan and then a famine in East Africa. An attractive woman that she was with a keen fashion sense, there was a wealth of images for the media to use. Most were of her on her own though her family and close associates were in others.
Those early false reports of what had occurred were all now treated by the media as if they had never been broadcast like they were. There was now only talk of her murder. Who could have done such a thing, and why? Without anything concrete, there was still speculation on that note to quite the degree. Sky News then ran an exclusive. They blew their competition out of the water with the revelation that the Home Secretary’s wife had been involved in an affair with one of his police bodyguards. In addition, he had been found at the murder scene too. It was said that there was a further report that he had been arrested on suspicion of her murder though that was qualified with the remark that such a thing was unconfirmed at this time. When their rival put this on the air, it caused a cancellation of what ITN News was soon to run with. The latter had prepared a piece where they would talk to a retired senior policeman concerning previous online threats recovered from the internet by ITN News’ researchers about the Mason family. This was going to focus on political extremism. It was a pretty weak angle to go with as what ‘a few twerps online’ – the words of the program’s chief producer – had posted on a web forum two years past. That was cancelled and instead the scoop that Sky News had was followed.
Come ten o’clock that morning, Mason spoke to the media. He was outside his constituency office, back in Bishopsgate, was journalists and cameramen before him. There’d been a phone call with the Prime Minister beforehand – it was really early in Washington where he was – though Mason had cancelled a meeting with Saunders from MI-5. Against advice from his constituency agent, and also one of the Home Office public relations staff who’d raced up to Yorkshire this morning, Mason held a press conference. It was him and the media, no police officers were present. It went out live to the nation across multiple media platforms.
The Home Secretary told those watching and listening that he had lost his ‘beautiful wife’. His daughter had lost her ‘adored mother’. It was an ‘uncalculatable, heart breaking loss’ of a ‘wonderful, soul’ who had been ‘so horribly ripped from us all’. He thanked those who had sent messages of condolence. Mason then asked for space from media intrusion for him and his daughter. Questions were asked of him: those here had been told that he would be answering questions. Those inquires were of the nature as to whether he wished to comment on the reports that his wife was having an affair with one of the Met. Police bodyguards assigned to protect him. Another journalist asked if he had anything to say to the news that that policeman had been arrested. No response came. The Home Secretary had nothing to say to these remarks. He turned his back on those gathered around him and went back inside that office from where he had emerged not long before.
Those who saw the images from Bishopsgate would afterwards say that he looked distraught. This was in direct contrast to those present, many of whom had had dealings with him in the past in a professional capacity, conversely would say that he seemed very calm about the whole thing and not upset at all. Those who fell in the latter category would put that down to shock. They all knew how much Mason loved his wife.
A couple of miles away, while her father was with the media, Amy Mason was leaving the house where she had spent the night. She didn’t walk out of the front door like her father had a few hours beforehand. There was a policeman sitting in the living room, drinking cups of tea delivered by the wife of her father’s colleague, so she didn’t go past him on her way out. Instead, she ever-so-carefully opened the back door which led from the kitchen to the garden. It made what seemed like a terrible racket and Amy considered with reflection that she should have just opened it normally rather than like she did. No reaction came to the noise though, not as far as she could tell anyway. It occurred to her that that policeman was going to get into trouble, and the cash she’d taken from the lady’s nurse was going to get her into trouble too, but she was committed now. She had to go, she had to get out of here. Amy was quickly at the end of the garden and got over the fence in a hurry. Her father would have said it was unladylike, the climb that was where she swung her legs over, but her father… well… there was a lot he always had to say. The boy in the car gave her a whistle as she dropped down onto the path behind the garden. Her skirt had ridden up. He’d gotten quite the view before she smoothed it back down. Amy got in the car, smiled at her friend’s older brother who was doing her quite the favour and asked if they could go. He obliged. They headed for York Train Station and once there, she thanked him and waved him goodbye as he drove off.
The morning after his wife had been murdered, the fourteen-year-old daughter of the Home Secretary had run away from home. She would be last confirmed to be seen at one of the country’s major train stations from where she would have gone anywhere after that boy dropped her there.
|
|
|
Post by fieldmarshal on Aug 22, 2019 23:09:55 GMT
Ah geez, the plot thickens. I'm of the opinion (so far) that the Home Secretary has a hand in his wife's death. You write him as being seemingly nonchalant about his wife's death; while that might be explained as him simply shutting down in an attempt to deal with his wife's sudden death, one line about him sleeping "soundly" in the aftermath seems particularly suspicious. Couple that with the revelation that she was having an affair DC Keane and you have a solid motive for the Home Secretary to commit murder (or hire someone else to do it for him). On the other hand, DC Keane definitely looks suspicious, and even little Amy seems a tad suspect; I could very easily see her behavior being interpreted as potentially guilty (her being apparently the first person to find her mother's body, her general agitated state afterwards, and then fleeing the premises), though it could just as easily be read as a scared and traumatized young girl trying to cope with her grief in the only way she knows how. In any case, it's your story and I'm not trying to dictate what happens; just putting out what I think now based on what's given. As an aside, you don't typically write romance, but whenever you incorporate it into your works it always seems to end in tragedy. For example, the doomed incestuous affair that helps start World War III in National Volksarmee, the poor girl who gets seduced into spying for the KGB in For Queen and Country, and I seem to remember one or two other instances that just aren't coming to mind now. Is Charlotte Mason named for Charlotte Mason?
|
|
stevep
Fleet admiral
Posts: 24,835
Likes: 13,224
|
Post by stevep on Aug 23, 2019 9:57:39 GMT
James
Would agree with fieldmashall that it sounds suspicious Mason is so calm. With Amy and her determination to get away from her father that could be guilt in some way but sounds more like she's afraid or possibly hostile to him for some while. It definitely sounds like the security officer has been drugged so I think he's innocent, of murder at least.
That cop will definitely be in trouble for not keeping an eye on her and a bit surprised that there wasn't a closer watch.
I'm also wondering if that ITV News story might turn out to have some relevance but could be just a red herring.
Steve
|
|
forcon
Lieutenant Commander
Posts: 988
Likes: 1,739
|
Post by forcon on Aug 23, 2019 10:54:12 GMT
Maybe the lass was involved in murdering her mother and worked with her father or an outside actor to do it? While I don't think the husband did it, I agree that the line about him sleeping soundly is suspicious.
|
|
James G
Squadron vice admiral
Posts: 7,608
Likes: 8,833
|
Post by James G on Aug 23, 2019 13:26:36 GMT
Ah geez, the plot thickens. I'm of the opinion (so far) that the Home Secretary has a hand in his wife's death. You write him as being seemingly nonchalant about his wife's death; while that might be explained as him simply shutting down in an attempt to deal with his wife's sudden death, one line about him sleeping "soundly" in the aftermath seems particularly suspicious. Couple that with the revelation that she was having an affair DC Keane and you have a solid motive for the Home Secretary to commit murder (or hire someone else to do it for him). On the other hand, DC Keane definitely looks suspicious, and even little Amy seems a tad suspect; I could very easily see her behavior being interpreted as potentially guilty (her being apparently the first person to find her mother's body, her general agitated state afterwards, and then fleeing the premises), though it could just as easily be read as a scared and traumatized young girl trying to cope with her grief in the only way she knows how. In any case, it's your story and I'm not trying to dictate what happens; just putting out what I think now based on what's given. As an aside, you don't typically write romance, but whenever you incorporate it into your works it always seems to end in tragedy. For example, the doomed incestuous affair that helps start World War III in National Volksarmee, the poor girl who gets seduced into spying for the KGB in For Queen and Country, and I seem to remember one or two other instances that just aren't coming to mind now. Is Charlotte Mason named for Charlotte Mason?Excellent! I wanted to give out all of these signals of guilt with the story and so it seems I have done well. Plenty of suspects and things are still ongoing. Ah, yes, I might have to agree with you on that note. 'Romance' might not be the right word but I get what you mean. With Nationale Volksarmee I wanted to have that opening titled 'Love' while the story was about war, death and hate. The girl in Queen and Country is something I only just remembered! Things seem to end bad! Nope. I just had the name Mason in my mind when I first did the story and then a forename came to me. James Would agree with fieldmashall that it sounds suspicious Mason is so calm. With Amy and her determination to get away from her father that could be guilt in some way but sounds more like she's afraid or possibly hostile to him for some while. It definitely sounds like the security officer has been drugged so I think he's innocent, of murder at least. That cop will definitely be in trouble for not keeping an eye on her and a bit surprised that there wasn't a closer watch. I'm also wondering if that ITV News story might turn out to have some relevance but could be just a red herring. Steve Suspects everywhere! Teenagers can be sneaky but he should have been watching more than he was. It could be that there was something significant with that other angle the media were chasing though I am still not sure. Maybe the lass was involved in murdering her mother and worked with her father or an outside actor to do it? While I don't think the husband did it, I agree that the line about him sleeping soundly is suspicious. Glad I still have your interest and the guilty party is still unknown!
|
|
James G
Squadron vice admiral
Posts: 7,608
Likes: 8,833
|
Post by James G on Aug 23, 2019 13:28:03 GMT
Five
That afternoon, DC Keane was arrested and charged with the murder of Charlotte Mason. He had awoken from a late morning nap just after lunch – finally getting some sleep – and refused to talk any more to the police detectives from North Yorkshire Police nor those who had come up from London either. Keane seemed much more aware now of what was happening. If he had been drugged – the results from tests on that note had yet to come back –, then any effects from such a thing had worn off by now. He seemed to understand what was happening. Therefore, Keane informed those with him that he no longer had anything to say and wanted to leave as well. The Detective Inspector heading up the ongoing investigation gave the go-ahead to arrest him. Things were already going in that direction following preliminary results which had already come in from forensics tests at the house in Bishopsgate. It was Keane’s fingerprints, bloody fingerprints too, which were on the murder weapon which that iron was and it was the blood of the Home Secretary’s wife on his clothing too. The DI was planning to arrest Keane soon enough before confronting him with this evidence against him because there was the need to make that formal. When this all eventually came to court, everything had to be have been done right or there would be no successful prosecution of Keane.
There were more reasons to move ahead with making everything formal with Keane by arresting and charging him. He did preempt that by his sudden clarity of the situation he was facing, but things were already moving that way. Other forensic examination of the house showed no evidence that there had been any forced entry into the Mason family home. The panic button in the living room and the one upstairs in the main bedroom each hadn’t been used. This all pointed to no one else having been there. From the autopsy, the murder weapon was confirmed to be the one with Keane’s fingerprints on it. There was evidence under two of her fingernails that she had scratched someone. The police detectives had seen the scratch on Keane’s neck and they were waiting on the DNA match there but it was enough for now to move forward. One of the junior detectives did point out that they had yet to have a motive. Why had he killed her? The physical evidence all appeared to be in place and with Keane wanting to leave their custody this all suggested guilt… but a reason for him to have done this would have been helpful. We’ll get to the motive once we question him under caution was the reply to that.
Upon being arrested, Keane resisted. He pushed one detective, punched another and tried to make a run for it. He was inside the police station and, while not in the custody suite, it still wouldn’t have been easy for him to get out of the building. Keane didn’t get very far. Several other officers tackled him before the investigating detectives caught up. Handcuffed while being cautioned, Keane was then taken down to the custody suite where he would be processed and then charged in the proper manner.
While these dramatics were going on, there was a different form of police activity ongoing in relation to the proceedings of the Mason investigation. The Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) made a direct request to the media to not broadcast any information about the disappearance of the Home Secretary’s daughter. There had been leaks made with great haste about that just like the ones concerning the murder of her mother. Those leaks would be looked into with the intention of finding out who the police officers involved were but before then, the ACPO wanted to silence word getting out into the public arena that they were looking for this teenager. It was explained that there was a possible danger to life on this. There was no legal power behind the request made. The media could have ignored it and carried on trying to get the latest scoop to out do one another. However, all of the mainstream media organisations did so; newer, alternative news outlets online didn’t but they had less reach than the bigger ones. The media could come back to the Amy Mason issue later. In the meantime, they had something else to focus on. The co-founder of that charity which Charlotte Mason fronted spoke live to BBC News and what she had to say changed so much.
Elizabeth Flint was a television personality. She was someone who people liked or hated. She brought forth polarising opinions because of her often outrageous antics in front of the cameras. Last year she had moved into charity work and the pairing up with such a respectable person as Charlotte Mason shocked many. However, when Flint threw herself into her charity work, she was able to make many of those who had disgust for her antics temporarily forget much of what she had done before. She was doing good work and it brought her respect. Still… Flint was always Flint. The BBC News camera crew caught up with her at Heathrow Airport after she’d arrived on a hurried flight home from Moldova. They knew that they were going to get a reaction from her in the typical Flint fashion and weren’t about to be disappointed.
Flint declared that William Mason was a philandering husband and he was a violent bully too. He’d cheated on Charlotte. He’d hit Charlotte. Tears ran down her face as she said this. She looked like she was telling the truth. Moreover, she had something else to add too. Cutting off a question asking if she had any proof about this, Flint went on. If anyone had killed Charlotte, it would have been her husband, not anyone else. William had murdered his wife, Flint told the watching world in this live broadcast, and she’d always known that he would eventually do that.
The Home Secretary was one of those watching. He was with two of his Home Office staffers who’d come up to Yorkshire. There was departmental business to be done, he told them, and they should all get on with it. The police were still all over his house and were now out looking for his daughter but he was working. The television was on at the time though Mason turned up the volume when Flint came on the screen. In reaction to her words, he had some words of his own for her image on the television. This all would have been called ‘un-parliamentary language’ had it been uttered in the House of Commons. What he called her would have shocked anyone who thought they knew him too: he was always so polite and wouldn’t be someone thought to use such language. Those with him had to stop their jaws from falling open. He muted the sound afterwards, tossed the remote control to the floor and then took his phone with him as he went to the bathroom upstairs. The two staffers exchanged alarmed glances once he was gone yet neither really could think of anything to say to each other nor in response to the policeman who put his head around the door asking what was going on. What could be said?
|
|
forcon
Lieutenant Commander
Posts: 988
Likes: 1,739
|
Post by forcon on Aug 23, 2019 14:08:34 GMT
This story is edge of your seat stuff: I keep guessing who did it and then realising why I'm wrong!
This Flint woman - She bears much resemblance to a certain Katie IMHO - sounds like she's being told what to say by somebody...
This could be anything from part of a great political conspiracy run by elements of the security establishment (either British or foreign) to the tragic end to a doomed love affair.
Really good work.
|
|