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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
National
Jessica Murray

Man hid wife’s remains in septic tank for nearly 40 years, court told

David Venables, 89, arriving at Worcester crown court.
David Venables, 89, arriving at Worcester crown court. Photograph: Jacob King/PA

An 89-year-old retired pig farmer who killed his wife so he could continue a longstanding affair hid her remains in a septic tank for nearly 40 years, a court has heard.

David Venables is on trial for the murder of his wife, Brenda Venables, whom he reported missing on 4 May 1982.

Her remains were discovered in 2019 in a septic tank behind the house the couple had lived in, and Venables was charged with her murder in June 2021.

Opening the case at Worcester crown court on Monday, prosecutor Michael Burrows QC said the septic tank had been the “perfect hiding place” and had allowed Venables to “get away with murder” for decades.

Police investigations at the time, which included using a helicopter to scour the local area, searching rivers, making door-to-door inquiries and speaking with friends and family, revealed no trace of Brenda’s whereabouts.

She had been suffering with depression prior to her disappearance, and some assumed she had taken her own life.

Her remains were discovered 37 years after she went missing, after Venables sold his house on Quaking House Farm, in Kempsey, Worcestershire to his nephew, who had the septic tank emptied in 2019.

Bones had been found in the tank on two previous occasions but were assumed to be animal bones and discarded. However, when a human skull was discovered, the finding was reported to the police.

DNA testing confirmed bones found in the tank belonged to Brenda, who was 48 years old at the time of her disappearance, and scraps of clothes found were consistent with styles available at the time.

Burrows said Venables had wanted his wife “out of the way” so he could continue an affair with Lorraine Styles, whom he had met in 1967 when she was working as a carer for Venables’ mother.

The pair conducted an on-off relationship for more than 14 years, which Brenda had become aware of, the court heard.

In 1981 Venables promised Styles he was going to divorce his wife so they could start a new life together, Burrows said.

“He wanted her out of the way: he wanted to resume his longstanding affair with another woman,” Burrows said. “He knew about the septic tank in its secluded location. It was, for him, almost the perfect hiding place.

“It meant he didn’t have to travel and risk being seen making a suspicious journey around the time of her disappearance or risk being seen disposing of her body somewhere else. And, of course, even if someone did think to look inside the tank, her body would be hidden from view.

“And for nearly 40 years, it was the perfect place and he got away with murder.”

Venables told police he had awoken to find his wife was not in bed or in the house, and told them she had been depressed, Burrows said, and officers noted he “didn’t seem anxious in any way, and appeared calm”.

Burrows said: “It is beyond belief to suppose that Brenda Venables took her own life by climbing into the septic tank and that she somehow shifted the heavy lid and put it back in place above her so that there was no sign of any disturbance.”

He also said the remote location of the farm where the Venables lived made it “preposterous” to suppose Brenda had walked out of the house and been attacked by someone else.

Venables, of Elgar Drive, Kempsey, denies murdering his wife between 2 May and 5 May 1982. The trial, scheduled to last six weeks, continues.

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