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Death on a Country Lane: Were the Chillenden Murders Truly Solved?

New evidence suggests that the murderer may not have been the man convicted.

chillenden murders
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  • Photo Credit: Crime Feed / Kent Police

After a pool party at a local school on July 9, 1996, Dr. Lin Russell, 45; her two daughters, Josie, 9; and Megan, 6; and the family dog, Lucy, headed back home along a country lane in the normally quiet village of Chillenden. A man with a hammer interrupted the family’s stroll.

The attacker forced the Russells into a wooded area, where he blindfolded them with their towels and, one by one, beat their skulls in with the hammer. He even killed the dog. Lin and Megan bled out and died on the spot.

Related: Secrets and Lies: 7 True Crime Books About Cases with Shocking Twists 

Josie just barely survived, sustaining severe injuries that would require a multitude of surgeries. The little girl would even have to learn how to talk again.

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  • Dr. Lin Russell with her daughter, Megan

    Photo Credit: Crime Feed / Kent Police

A frustrating manhunt lasted more than a year until, finally, on July 17, 1997, Kent Police picked up Michael Stone, 37, a heroin addict with a history of violence and a number of convicted felonies. During one of his three prior prison stints, psychiatrists had also officially diagnosed Stone as a psychopath.

When asked where he was on the day of the murders, Stone replied

“I can’t remember for two reasons. One, I was badly on drugs, and two, it was so long ago.”

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  • Michael Stone

    Photo Credit: Murderpedia

Despite his lack of a distinct memory, Stone stated outright that he was innocent of all accusations. Nevertheless, in 1998, a jury convicted Stone on two counts of murder and related charges, based almost entirely on witness testimony.

Related: In Cold Blood: The Brutal Murder of the Walker Family 

Three of Stone’s fellow inmates—Barry Thompson, Damien Daley, and Mark Jennings—stated that he had confessed to them about killing the Russells. A lifelong acquaintance told the jury that Stone’s father used to beat his son with a hammer. A local couple, Sheree Batt and Lawrence Calder, testified that Stone showed up at their home the day after the slaughter wearing blood-splattered clothing.

The court handed Stone a triple life sentence. The very next day, however, Barry Thompson, one of the testifying convicts, told the press he had lied. Stone’s conviction was promptly overturned on appeal, necessitating a second trial, which took place in 2001. The second trial, again, ended with Stone being ordered to serve three life sentences.

However, considerable doubts have since arisen about Stone's conviction.

Related: 6 Creepy True Crime Cases to Read About in Bed Tonight 

The Chillenden Murders, a 2017 BBC documentary, asked forensic scientists, law enforcement officers, and legal scholars to look deeper into the case. Some of those interviewed for the project suggested that a more likely culprit may be Levi Bellfield, a sadistic slayer who brutally raped and murdered two girls and attempted to murder another 13-year-old girl in the 2000s. Bellfield is currently serving a life sentence for three murders and one attempted murder.

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  • Levi Bellfield

    Photo Credit: Murderpedia

In addition to his own criminal convictions, Bellfield seemed to uncannily match the man Josie Russell described as her assailant. She said he stood taller than her six-foot dad. Bellfield is six-foot-one; Michael Stone is five-foot-seven. Josie also said the attacker had a round face with chubby cheeks. Bellfield fits that bill as well while Stone does not.

Related: The Beast of Birkenshaw: The Brutal Crimes of Peter Manuel 

Witnesses in Chillenden on the day of the murders mentioned seeing an unfamiliar beige Ford vehicle. Joanna Collings, Bellfield’s girlfriend at the time, owned a beige Ford. She said she lent it to her boyfriend that very day. Shortly thereafter, the car was stolen and ultimately turned up torched and abandoned miles away.

On top of all that, police have unofficially connected Bellfield to a long list of unsolved crimes, dating back to the 1980 strangling of a 14-year-old school friend, Patsy Morris.

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  • The Russell family before the murders

    Photo Credit: Murderpedia

Nonetheless, Scotland Yard issued an official statement on the newly raised issues, proclaiming:

“It has taken a considerable amount of time and police resources to conduct the investigation. All lines of enquiry have now been exhausted and the decision has been taken to close this investigation as there is no evidence to link the individual to any case for which he has not already been convicted.”

For the time being, then, the case of the Chillenden Murders is closed.

Read more: History; The Sun; Telegraph; Kent Online; Michael Stone Official Site

This Story Was First Published on Crime Feed. 

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Woman Convicted Of Murder That Was Witnessed By Cursing Pet Parrot 

Featured photo of Dr. Lin Russell and her daughter, Josie via: Crime Feed / Kent Police