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Friday, 8 September, 2000, 18:15 GMT 19:15 UK
'Doubt' over Range Rover murders verdict
![]() Part two of an examination of the case of the Rettendon Two - serving life for the murder of three gangsters in a Range Rover in 1998 - by BBC News Online's Chris Summers.
Earlier this year one of Nicholls' fellow "supergrasses" on the Protected Witness Programme in Woodhill prison near Milton Keynes came forward and spoke to the Daily Mail. The man, known for legal reasons as Mr P, said Nicholls told him early in 1997 that the story he was supposed to tell in court was "a pack of lies". Nicholls asked Mr P if he should go through with it, and he replied: "If you're telling lies you better not get caught". Mr P said he assumed Steele and Whomes were guilty and was not unduly bothered.
Wrong place at the right time There is also new evidence from a mobile phone expert which appears to undermine Nicholls' version of events. Whomes called Nicholls at 6.44pm. Nicholls claimed this was Whomes ringing him from Workhouse Lane to say "come and pick us up" after the murders. Whomes said he rang from the car park of a nearby pub to confirm he had picked up Nicholls' broken-down car. Mobile investigation David Bristowe, an independent forensic scientist, conducted a series of tests for the first time using Whomes' own mobile phone. Of the 20 calls made from the pub car park more than a third connected via the Hockley transmitter, which he is known to have used, but none from Workhouse Lane did so Mr Bristowe told BBC News Online: "The new tests suggest Jack Whomes was telling the truth, and Darren Nicholls wasn't." Timing was key to the case. The pathologist did not provide a time of death so Essex Police based their theory about the deaths on the fact that Tate, Tucker and Rolfe made no calls on their mobile phones after 7pm. Shots at midnight But by the same reasoning Steele and Whomes could have been dead after 7pm themselves, for their phones were not used either. Jasper claimed the shootings took place late at night and two independent witnesses both heard gunshots at around midnight. The later time of death would at least go some way towards explaining why the Range Rover was not iced over when it was found by farmer Peter Theobald and his friend Ken Jiggins at 8am on 7 December. Their own vehicle had been left outside all night and was completely iced over.
At the trial Nicholls claimed Whomes was the "shooter", with Steele only joining in to finish off the three men. But Whomes' brother, John, told BBC News Online: "Jack is frightened of guns, ever since he was hit by a clay pigeon trap when he was a kid. "My dad used to own guns but Jack never had one. He couldn't have done this." Mr D, on the other hand, was a former soldier and a crack shot who won several regimental prizes.
Gale was wanted for questioning by a number of police forces but a friend of the family denied Gale was connected to the Rettendon murders. She said: "He was no Kenny Noye. He was a lovable villain with a bad temper and there is no way he had anything to do with those murders. They're clutching at straws." The whereabouts of Jasper and Mr D are unknown but as Mr Bowen told BBC News Online: "It's not my job to prove who carried out these killings. My job is simply to prove my clients did not." 'Not a shred of evidence' Whomes' brother John told BBC News Online: "If Jack had gone there to shoot those three men he would not take Nicholls and Steele. He would have taken me. We did everything together." Steele's partner, Jackie Street told BBC News Online there was " not a shred of evidence that supports the convictions". Essex Police said: "The whole case was fully investigated and the men were sentenced. If anyone has any hard evidence they should contact us. "But so far nothing has come our way which changes our views on the conviction."
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