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 Post subject: Rebecca Middleton
New postPosted: Mon Sep 03, 2007 8:04 pm 
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Chris
posted april 02, 2007

HAMILTON, Bermuda (Reuters) - Bermuda authorities have rejected a call to reopen the case of a Canadian teen murdered a decade ago.

Bermuda's director of public prosecutions, Vinette Graham-Allen, who conducted a review of the case, said on Friday the authorities would not bring new charges of sexual assault against two men previously acquitted of murdering Rebecca Middleton in 1996, when she was 17.

Middleton, from Ontario, died after being raped, tortured and stabbed on a beach in the British mid-Atlantic territory.

http://snipurl.com/ok48


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New postPosted: Mon Sep 03, 2007 8:05 pm 
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posted april 18, 2007


The investigation into the death of Canadian teenager Rebecca Middleton came in for prime-time criticism during a top Fox News TV show.
Thursday night’s ‘On The Record’, hosted by Greta Van Susteren and beamed into households across America, shone the international media spotlight on the 17-year-old’s death ten years ago while on holiday in Bermuda.
The crime investigation programme asked why nobody has yet been convicted of the brutal killing – and raised serious doubts about the prosecution of a case that relatives and critics claim was botched from the start.

The decision to accept a plea of accessory after the fact from one of the suspects, Kirk Mundy, before DNA test results were sent back from Canada, came in for criticism. And campaigners also attacked the way the case against second suspect, Justis Smith, was handled before it collapsed and he was acquitted of murder.

Mr. Middleton told how, before the investigation started to unravel, Police initially assured him the case would be cracked, while Mr. Meens spoke about Rebecca’s final days and how a night in July 1996 turned to tragedy.
Rebecca was tortured, raped and murdered on Ferry Reach beach.


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 Post subject:
New postPosted: Mon Sep 03, 2007 8:05 pm 
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Doreen
posted April, 17, 2007

Bermuda court urged to re-open Middleton murder case
Elizabeth Roberts, Associated Press
Published: Monday, April 16, 2007

HAMILTON, Bermuda – The wife of British Prime Minister Tony Blair urged a Bermudian court today to reopen the investigation into the 1996 slaying of a Canadian teenager, arguing that authorities bungled prosecutions of two suspects.

Cherie Booth, the lead lawyer for the girl’s family at a judicial review, adds star power to a case that has generated international criticism of courts in this British territory for failing to convict anyone of killing Rebecca Middleton.

The 17-year-old from Belleville, Ont., was vacationing in the wealthy island enclave in July 1996 when she was raped, stabbed and left to die.At the start of a two-day Supreme Court hearing, Booth argued that the murder charge against one suspect was wrongly dismissed and that another suspect, who received a five-year prison sentence as an accessory to the crime, should have faced a more serious charge.

more here
http://tinyurl.com/26g3b6


LINK TO WEBSITE http://www.rebeccamiddleton.org/
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 Post subject: Rebecca Middleton
New postPosted: Thu Jan 24, 2008 4:00 pm 
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Father of slain Canadian abandons fight to bring killers to justice in Bermuda
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

HAMILTON, Bermuda - The father of a slain Canadian girl has abandoned a decade-long struggle to bring her killers to justice after spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on appeals in the wealthy island enclave.

Rebecca Middleton of Belleville, Ont., was raped, stabbed more than a dozen times and slashed in the throat on her 17th birthday while vacationing in Bermuda. Two men were charged in the crime in 1996, but only one with murder. Those charges were later dropped for lack of evidence.

"Nothing's going to bring Becky back to us. We thought the government of Bermuda was willing and able to listen to us, but they won't," David Middleton said Wednesday, arguing that authorities bungled prosecutions of the two suspects.

After the crime, police on the island narrowed their search to two men: 21-year-old Kirk Mundy and Justis Smith, 19.

Mundy cut a deal with the attorney general before DNA evidence was available. In exchange for his testimony, he would serve five years for being an accessory and Smith was charged with murder.

However, DNA results that came in later put only Mundy at the scene. Prosecutors had no physical evidence against Smith, whose trial in 1998 ended with the judge dismissing the case.

Last year, Cherie Booth, prominent human rights attorney and wife of former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, urged authorities in the British territory to reopen the case. They declined, saying it would amount to double jeopardy.

The Privy Council in London - Bermuda's highest court-criticized the judge for dismissing the case but said the decision could not be overturned.

Middleton was last seen leaving a bar on a motorcycle with Smith and Mundy in a popular tourist town. She was found barely alive and covered in blood. She died before the ambulance arrived and before she could identify her attackers.

The girl's family has received help with legal bills from the Rebecca Middleton Foundation, a charity dedicated to helping crime victims that has raised money in Bermuda and Canada.

No one has been convicted of Rebecca Middleton's murder.


this makes me sad/ mad

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 Post subject:
New postPosted: Thu Jan 24, 2008 4:31 pm 
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Location: Alberta
This is ridiculous.It seems Canadians are getting killed in different countries and no one gives a hoot,same as the couple murdered in mexico,what ever become of that story.It makes better sense to just stay safe here in canada and not go away for holidays,they love to make money off us as tourists but god forbid you get killed in their country.So sad for the family.


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 Post subject:
New postPosted: Thu Jan 24, 2008 11:03 pm 
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I really hope that someone steps up and offers some more help in finding who did this?


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 Post subject: Re: Rebecca Middleton
New postPosted: Fri Nov 06, 2009 3:33 pm 
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aww Hope is there!

read this! yes! ITS ALL ABOUT DNA!
New investigation team to swing into action on cold case murders

A dedicated team of detectives will be working full-time to crack Bermuda's cold case murders from Monday onwards.

Assistant Police Commissioner Paul Wright said the four officers won't be pulled away to investigate new crimes meaning they can focus all their efforts on the task at hand.

The team is comprised of an inspector, a sergeant and two constables, who will undergo training over the next few weeks from experts flown in from the UK. The move is part of a recent restructuring within the Serious Crime Unit, which will also see a specialised anti-gang unit rolled out from Monday too.

According to Mr. Wright: "We've always run a systematic review of cold cases and always continued those inquiries. It's quite painstaking work and often if you need dedicated resources on it they can be pulled away for other inquiries. What this does is create a dedicated resource that can focus solely on this without the other demands that occur day to day."

Around 20 murder cases remain unsolved on the Bermuda Police files dating back several decades. Some, which resulted in court cases and acquittals, are not being actively investigated. These include the notorious slaying of Canadian tourist Rebecca Middleton in 1996 and the murder of British expat Jacqueline Meridith, who was bludgeoned to death almost 20 years ago.

However, five of the killings in particular are the focus of the new cold case team, after input from UK-based investigators over the past year. These are the stabbings of Gleen Wolffe in 1999 and Marcus Gibbings in 2006, and the shootings of Shaundae Jones in 2003, Jason Lightbourne in 2006 and Shaki Crockwell in 2007.

According to Mr. Wright, those are the murders investigators feel they have "the best chance of success" in cracking although they will look at the others too if fresh leads come up.

One of their key tools will be the recently-implemented national DNA database. Samples are now being routinely taken from suspects arrested over new crimes and compared to forensic evidence found at the scene of unsolved cases.

"We've done some work, particularly on (the case of) Gleen Wolffe this year in relation to potential DNA leads which didn't pan out, but work is still going on," explained Mr. Wright. "Our investigations in serious crime are relentless over protracted periods in complex and difficult crimes. We never stop."

Superintendent Antoine Daniels, who heads the Serious Crime Unit added: "We've been consistently looking at these things, reviewing, re-interviewing witnesses, looking at different things we can do. In most of these cases we have an idea of who committed the acts it's just a case of tying them to it with evidence."

He said the UK team, from the Group Four security company, was comprised of around 12 crime analysts and investigators who spent time on the Island from October to December of last year, and returned from February to April this year.

"They came bringing a fresh pair of eyes, looking at some of our investigations that we had done, giving us advice on ways to take it forward, giving us a strategy and utilising overseas agencies," he explained.

One thing they did was put the Bermuda Police Service in touch with a UK laboratory specialising in a technique called low-copy DNA which can extract evidence such as blood or semen from items that may be many years old.

According to Supt. Daniels: "It's a very expensive and long process. But we have one case, for example, where we have a rusty tool where ordinarily it would be very difficult to get DNA."

Families of some of the cold-case murder victims last night welcomed news of the specialist team.

Richard Gibbings, father of Marcus Gibbings, 32, who was stabbed to death at his apartment in Devonshire in October 2006, said: "I think it's a good move to have these people paying particular attention to these cases and I would hope they would make some headway as regards to solving the case."

Marsha Jones, mother of Shaundae Jones, who was gunned down at the age of 20 in April 2003 said: "It's great and I wish them well but it's been years of promises and I'm not saying it's their fault directly, but I've been through about five team leaders in six years on Shaundae's case. We get promises and when it doesn't pan out or whatever, the plan is then cancelled.

"So I'm definitely elated when I see these things are being done and things are moving but I just want the day to come when they call me and say 'Ms Jones, we've made an arrest' or 'we're about to make an arrest'. Give me some closure."

http://www.royalgazette.com/rg/Article/ ... ctionId=60

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Please help solve my Sister Sharron's Coldcase
This year it will be 34 years. We Need to know who did this.


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