THE infamous White House Farm murders are to be dissected by a team led by investigative journalist Louis Theroux.
A new documentary series looking into Jeremy Bamber’s guilt is being screened from Sunday.
Bamber, now 60, was jailed for life after being convicted of murdering five members of his family at White House Farm in Tolleshunt D’Arcy, in 1985.
His adoptive parents Nevill and June, both 61, his sister Sheila Caffell, 26, and her six-year-old twins Daniel and Nicholas all died in the massacre and Bamber was convicted by a split jury.
However, he has always protested his innocence saying Sheila killed the family before turning the gun on herself.
He has had two appeals heard but both have been rejected and he is now pushing for a third appeal at the High Court.
Mr Theroux has examined the case for a new four-part documentary.
Read more:
>>> Jeremy Bamber aims for third appeal after submitting 'new evidence'
>>> White House Farm: Former cop aims to help free Jeremy Bamber
>>> Jeremy Bamber supporters say new alibi evidence could see him freed
Theroux, who executive produced the documentary, said: “What really amazed me was how bizarre almost every version of the story is, and yet one of them, quite evidently, must be true.
“Sheila did have a history of serious mental illness and had expressed confused ideations about possibly doing physical harm to people.
“And at the same time, to believe that she did it, you’d have to believe that in her psychosis she did an almost executioner-style job. Every one of the bullets, there were 20-something shots, hit its target.”
Theroux and his team gained access to unheard tapes for the new series which features first-hand testimony and evidential footage.
This includes recordings of Bamber speaking to a journalist while in prison.
“There are various strange, anomalous factors that mean there are these two camps: the people who believe passionately that Bamber did it, and the people who believe passionately that he didn’t do it,” added Mr Theroux.
The Bambers: Murder At The Farm is one of the first projects to emerge from the newly formed Mindhouse Production house.
Director Lucy Gammon said: “This is a really complicated four-episode story.
“Often with a series, each series has a different story and that’s kind of how all series used to be.
“Now, we’re in this world of doing single narrative, which as Louis was saying, is kind of novelistic and it takes a lot of brains to get that right.”
The Bambers: Murder At The Farm premieres on Sky Crime and NOW on Sunday at 9pm.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules hereLast Updated:
Report this comment Cancel