『Cold Case UK: Buried in Silence』のカバーアート

Cold Case UK: Buried in Silence

Cold Case UK: Buried in Silence

著者: David Bainbridge
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2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

a weekly podcast digging into the UK's most haunting unsolved crimes. Each episode reopens a forgotten file, murders, disappearances, and cases left to gather dust. We retrace the timeline, examine the evidence, and ask the hard questions the system never answered. This isn’t crime as entertainment. It’s the quiet pursuit of truth in stories that never found an ending. From overlooked victims to forensic dead ends, The Unclosed File is for listeners who want depth, integrity, and the unsettling silence of cases left unresolved. New episodes every Tuesday.Copyright 2026 David Bainbridge ノンフィクション犯罪 世界 社会科学
エピソード
  • Who Put Bella in the Wych Elm? The Unsolved Hagley Wood Mystery That Still Haunts Britain
    2026/04/17

    The question “Who put Bella in the Wych Elm?” remains one of the most chilling and enduring mysteries in British criminal history. Part murder case, part urban legend, part wartime riddle, it has fascinated investigators, writers, and true crime audiences for more than 80 years.

    At the heart of the mystery is the discovery of a woman’s skeletal remains hidden inside a hollow wych elm tree in Hagley Wood, Worcestershire, in 1943. Soon afterward, eerie graffiti began appearing on walls nearby, asking the now-famous question that would immortalise the case.

    But despite decades of investigation, public fascination, and countless theories involving local criminals, occult ritual, and Nazi spies, the identity of “Bella” has never been confirmed.

    The Discovery in Hagley Wood

    On 18 April 1943, four local boys entered Hagley Wood, reportedly to go bird-nesting or poaching on land owned by Lord Cobham. One of them climbed a large wych elm tree and peered into its hollow trunk, expecting to find a nest.

    Instead, he found a human skull.

    At first, the boys thought it was an animal remains. But when they noticed clumps of hair and human teeth, they realised they had stumbled upon something horrifying. Afraid of getting into trouble for trespassing, they initially kept quiet and returned the skull to the tree. Eventually, one of the boys told his parents, and police were called.

    When officers examined the hollow tree, they discovered an almost complete skeleton stuffed inside the trunk, along with a shoe, fragments of clothing, and a gold wedding ring.

    It was one of the most disturbing discoveries in British true crime history.

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    32 分
  • The Wrongful Execution of Timothy Evans
    2026/04/17

    In this episode of Case UK: Buried in Silence, we examine the harrowing case of Timothy Evans, a Welsh lorry driver wrongfully convicted and executed for the murders of his wife, Beryl Evans, and their baby daughter, Geraldine, at 10 Rillington Place in Notting Hill, London.

    What began as a tragic domestic case soon exposed one of the most disturbing miscarriages of justice in British history. Evans was convicted in 1950 and hanged, despite glaring inconsistencies, flawed police work, unreliable confessions, and the later discovery that his neighbour, John Christie, was a serial killer responsible for multiple murders at the same address.

    This episode explores the failures of the investigation, the rushed trial, the shocking revelations that followed, and the lasting consequences of Evans’s death. We also examine how his case became a major catalyst in the fight against capital punishment in the United Kingdom, helping to reshape public opinion and legal reform.

    A story of injustice, silence, and irreversible loss, the Timothy Evans case remains a chilling warning about the dangers of wrongful conviction and the human cost of a justice system that gets it wrong.

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    26 分
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