True crime cases, examined by the UK's top forensic psychologist
Podcaster
Episoden
14.07.2026
33 Minuten
On 28 July 1986, estate agent Suzy Lamplugh left her office in Fulham, west London, for a house viewing with a client she recorded in her diary as 'Mr Kipper'. She never returned. Despite one of the largest missing-persons investigations in UK police history, no body has ever been recovered — and no-one has ever been charged. In Part 1 of this story Kerry Daynes revisits the streets where 25-year-old Suzy was last seen, examines the original investigation, and follows the trail of a chilling lead: just three days before the disappearance a convicted sex offender named John Cannan was freed from a nearby prison. Within a year he would be linked to the abduction and murder of another young woman in Bristol. Was he, as many detectives believe, the real Mr. Kipper?
Key psychological themes
This episode explores: opportunistic predation • the psychology of women's safety in public-facing work • the language of identification — Photofits, witness recall and trauma • the recklessness of a serial offender
Contributors featured in this episode
• Kerry Daynes — Forensic psychologist, presenter, and author of Dark Side of the Mind and What Lies Buried.
• Richard Lamplugh — Suzy's brother.
• Michael Barley — Former Detective Sergeant, Metropolitan Police; assigned to the original Suzy Lamplugh investigation in 1986.
• Rod Chaytor — Veteran crime correspondent (Daily Mirror) who covered the Lamplugh case, the Cannan investigation and trial.
What you'll learn in this episode
• What the 'Mr Kipper' entry in Suzy's office diary actually said — and why every other appointment that day checked out except this one
• The exact movements of Suzy on Monday 28 July 1986, and the witness who described seeing her in Shorrolds Road, Fulham, alongside a tall, well-dressed man
• The scale of the original police inquiry: hundreds of officers, thousands of statements, and the year-long search that brought back nothing
• How a serial sexual offender named John Cannan, released from a Wormwood Scrubs pre-release hostel on Friday 25 July 1986, came into the frame more than a year later
• Kerry's psychological profile of an offender who collects, returns to and goads — and what that pattern suggested about the man at the centre of two of the worst cases of the 1980s
Relevant links and further reading
• Kerry Daynes — Dark Side of the Mind (Endeavour, 2019)
• Kerry Daynes — What Lies Buried (Endeavour, 2021)
• Faking It: Tears of a Crime (Warner Bros. Discovery) — some interviews in this episode were originally featured in the series. Watch on discoveryplus.com.
• https://www.suzylamplugh.org/suzys-story — The Suzy Lamplugh Trust: Suzy's story, in her family's own words
• https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-66298929 — BBC News: timeline of the Suzy Lamplugh investigation
• Personal safety advice and bereaved-family support — Suzy Lamplugh Trust • Missing People (UK) • Victim Support
Subscribe & follow
If you're gripped by The Profiler, with Kerry Daynes, follow the show in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. A rating or review takes thirty seconds and genuinely helps new listeners find us.
Visit theprofiler.co.uk
For an exclusive filmed interview with Kerry Daynes and to join her mailing list visit theprofiler.co.uk..
Credits
• Presented by Kerry Daynes
• Produced by Shearwater Media
• Executive producers: Jeff Anderson and Steve Anderson
• Edited by Jeanette Smedley
• Music by Rob Warner
Content note
This episode contains descriptions of abduction, sexual violence, and a long-unsolved disappearance presumed to be a murder. Listener discretion is advised. If you have been affected by the issues raised, support is available from Victim Support (0808 168 9111), the Suzy Lamplugh Trust (020 7091 0014) and the Samaritans (116 123)
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Key psychological themes
This episode explores: opportunistic predation • the psychology of women's safety in public-facing work • the language of identification — Photofits, witness recall and trauma • the recklessness of a serial offender
Contributors featured in this episode
• Kerry Daynes — Forensic psychologist, presenter, and author of Dark Side of the Mind and What Lies Buried.
• Richard Lamplugh — Suzy's brother.
• Michael Barley — Former Detective Sergeant, Metropolitan Police; assigned to the original Suzy Lamplugh investigation in 1986.
• Rod Chaytor — Veteran crime correspondent (Daily Mirror) who covered the Lamplugh case, the Cannan investigation and trial.
What you'll learn in this episode
• What the 'Mr Kipper' entry in Suzy's office diary actually said — and why every other appointment that day checked out except this one
• The exact movements of Suzy on Monday 28 July 1986, and the witness who described seeing her in Shorrolds Road, Fulham, alongside a tall, well-dressed man
• The scale of the original police inquiry: hundreds of officers, thousands of statements, and the year-long search that brought back nothing
• How a serial sexual offender named John Cannan, released from a Wormwood Scrubs pre-release hostel on Friday 25 July 1986, came into the frame more than a year later
• Kerry's psychological profile of an offender who collects, returns to and goads — and what that pattern suggested about the man at the centre of two of the worst cases of the 1980s
Relevant links and further reading
• Kerry Daynes — Dark Side of the Mind (Endeavour, 2019)
• Kerry Daynes — What Lies Buried (Endeavour, 2021)
• Faking It: Tears of a Crime (Warner Bros. Discovery) — some interviews in this episode were originally featured in the series. Watch on discoveryplus.com.
• https://www.suzylamplugh.org/suzys-story — The Suzy Lamplugh Trust: Suzy's story, in her family's own words
• https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-66298929 — BBC News: timeline of the Suzy Lamplugh investigation
• Personal safety advice and bereaved-family support — Suzy Lamplugh Trust • Missing People (UK) • Victim Support
Subscribe & follow
If you're gripped by The Profiler, with Kerry Daynes, follow the show in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. A rating or review takes thirty seconds and genuinely helps new listeners find us.
Visit theprofiler.co.uk
For an exclusive filmed interview with Kerry Daynes and to join her mailing list visit theprofiler.co.uk..
Credits
• Presented by Kerry Daynes
• Produced by Shearwater Media
• Executive producers: Jeff Anderson and Steve Anderson
• Edited by Jeanette Smedley
• Music by Rob Warner
Content note
This episode contains descriptions of abduction, sexual violence, and a long-unsolved disappearance presumed to be a murder. Listener discretion is advised. If you have been affected by the issues raised, support is available from Victim Support (0808 168 9111), the Suzy Lamplugh Trust (020 7091 0014) and the Samaritans (116 123)
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Mehr
06.07.2026
29 Minuten
Oxford, April 1991. English student Rachel McLean vanishes from the house she shares with friends, mid-way through a weekend of exam revision. Her tutor calls 999. Her boyfriend — a British-born New Zealander named John Tanner — tells detectives he last saw her at Oxford station chatting to a mystery stranger. He gives a detailed description. He fronts a televised appeal. He plays the grieving boyfriend to perfection. But police soon discover that the ‘stranger’ is a figment of his imagination. And, by the time they arrest Tanner, Rachel’s body has been found under the floorboards of her home. Forensic psychologist Kerry Daynes traces a case that changed the way Britain looked at controlling relationships, and asks what Tanner's later New Zealand conviction — for serious violence against another partner — reveal about a man who has always insisted he simply 'snapped' as a result of provocation. Listen now to The Profiler with Kerry Daynes.
Key psychological themes
This episode explores: coercive control disguised as devotion • the psychology of the manufactured appeal • jealousy, possession and staged grief • the 'crime of passion' myth • the pattern of a serial domestic abuser
Contributors featured in this episode
• Kerry Daynes — Forensic psychologist, presenter, and author of Dark Side of the Mind and What Lies Buried.
• Catherine Houlihan — Then a young reporter with the Oxford Mail; covered Rachel's disappearance and the trial.
• Colin Sutton — Retired homicide detective; expert commentator on the original investigation.
• Rod Chaytor — Veteran crime correspondent (ex-Daily Mirror); covered the case throughout.
• John Tanner — In archive footage of the 1991 press-conference appeal for information.
What you'll learn in this episode
• Why Rachel's disappearance immediately struck detectives as ‘out of character’.
• How Tanner's 'man at the train station' story unravelled.
• The polished press-conference performance that made Colin Sutton uneasy from the very first viewing.
• Where Rachel's body was found, and how the forensics at the house pointed straight to the person she loved.
• Why Tanner's later New Zealand convictions aren't a coda to this case — they're confirmation of who he always was.
• Kerry's reframing: why 'crimes of passion' are more accurately called crimes of possession.
Relevant links and further reading
• Kerry Daynes — Dark Side of the Mind (Endeavour, 2019)
• Kerry Daynes — What Lies Buried (Endeavour, 2021)
• Faking It: Tears of a Crime (Warner Bros. Discovery) — some interviews first featured here. Watch on discoveryplus.com.
• BBC News archive — contemporary coverage of the Rachel McLean investigation and 1991 trial.
• Support — Refuge • Women's Aid • Suzy Lamplugh Trust • Victim Support
Subscribe & follow
If you're gripped by The Profiler, with Kerry Daynes, follow the show in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. A rating or review takes just seconds and genuinely helps new listeners find us.
Visit theprofiler.co.uk
For an exclusive filmed interview with Kerry Daynes on the cases behind the series — including on the McLean investigation — visit theprofiler.co.uk. Sign up to the mailing list for weekly news and updates from Kerry.
Credits
• Presented by Kerry Daynes
• Produced by Shearwater Media
• Executive producers: Jeff Anderson and Steve Anderson
• Editing and Music by Rob Warner
• Edit Assistant: Kay Homan
Content note
This episode contains descriptions of the murder of a young woman by her partner, references to strangulation, and discussion of serial domestic abuse. Listener discretion is advised. If you have been affected by the issues raised, support is available from Refuge (0808 2000 247), Women's Aid, and the Samaritans (116 123).
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Key psychological themes
This episode explores: coercive control disguised as devotion • the psychology of the manufactured appeal • jealousy, possession and staged grief • the 'crime of passion' myth • the pattern of a serial domestic abuser
Contributors featured in this episode
• Kerry Daynes — Forensic psychologist, presenter, and author of Dark Side of the Mind and What Lies Buried.
• Catherine Houlihan — Then a young reporter with the Oxford Mail; covered Rachel's disappearance and the trial.
• Colin Sutton — Retired homicide detective; expert commentator on the original investigation.
• Rod Chaytor — Veteran crime correspondent (ex-Daily Mirror); covered the case throughout.
• John Tanner — In archive footage of the 1991 press-conference appeal for information.
What you'll learn in this episode
• Why Rachel's disappearance immediately struck detectives as ‘out of character’.
• How Tanner's 'man at the train station' story unravelled.
• The polished press-conference performance that made Colin Sutton uneasy from the very first viewing.
• Where Rachel's body was found, and how the forensics at the house pointed straight to the person she loved.
• Why Tanner's later New Zealand convictions aren't a coda to this case — they're confirmation of who he always was.
• Kerry's reframing: why 'crimes of passion' are more accurately called crimes of possession.
Relevant links and further reading
• Kerry Daynes — Dark Side of the Mind (Endeavour, 2019)
• Kerry Daynes — What Lies Buried (Endeavour, 2021)
• Faking It: Tears of a Crime (Warner Bros. Discovery) — some interviews first featured here. Watch on discoveryplus.com.
• BBC News archive — contemporary coverage of the Rachel McLean investigation and 1991 trial.
• Support — Refuge • Women's Aid • Suzy Lamplugh Trust • Victim Support
Subscribe & follow
If you're gripped by The Profiler, with Kerry Daynes, follow the show in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. A rating or review takes just seconds and genuinely helps new listeners find us.
Visit theprofiler.co.uk
For an exclusive filmed interview with Kerry Daynes on the cases behind the series — including on the McLean investigation — visit theprofiler.co.uk. Sign up to the mailing list for weekly news and updates from Kerry.
Credits
• Presented by Kerry Daynes
• Produced by Shearwater Media
• Executive producers: Jeff Anderson and Steve Anderson
• Editing and Music by Rob Warner
• Edit Assistant: Kay Homan
Content note
This episode contains descriptions of the murder of a young woman by her partner, references to strangulation, and discussion of serial domestic abuse. Listener discretion is advised. If you have been affected by the issues raised, support is available from Refuge (0808 2000 247), Women's Aid, and the Samaritans (116 123).
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Mehr
30.06.2026
29 Minuten
In November 2015, schoolgirl Kayleigh Haywood told her parents she was going to stay at a friend’s house. She wasn’t. For the previous two weeks the fifteen-year-old had been groomed online by Luke Harlow, a man twelve years her senior. He had bombarded her with over a thousand Facebook messages persuading her to come to his flat in Ibstock, Leicestershire. After she finally agreed, he plied her with alcohol, assaulted her, then introduced her to a rapist and killer. In this episode, forensic psychologist Kerry Daynes examines how two predators — a calculating online groomer and a violent opportunist living next door — converged on one teenage girl who had no idea her life was in danger. Listen now to The Profiler with Kerry Daynes.
Key psychological themes
This episode explores: online grooming and the psychology of digital predation • the escalation from flattery to control in sustained coercive communication • the ‘bubble’ dynamic — how secrecy isolates victims from protection • opportunistic sexual violence and male social networks that enable harm • the devastating consequences of a child’s trust exploited by multiple offenders
Contributors featured in this episode
• Kerry Daynes — Forensic psychologist, presenter, and author of Dark Side of the Mind and What Lies Buried.
• Phil Mackie — BBC News Midlands correspondent who covered the investigation, search, and trial.
• Miranda Moore — Barrister and Crown Prosecutor who led the case against Luke Harlow and Stephen Beadman at Leicester Crown Court.
What you’ll learn in this episode
• How Harlow used Facebook to target Kayleigh — and what the thousand-plus messages he sent her reveal about the mechanics of online grooming
• Why Kayleigh kept her contact with Harlow secret — and how that secrecy removed the one protection that might have saved her
• What happened when Harlow introduced his neighbour Stephen Beadman to Kayleigh on the Saturday night — and what that decision set in motion
• How a neighbour’s account of what he believed was a police arrest helped detectives reconstruct Kayleigh’s final hours
• What the physical evidence — bloodstained clothing hidden in an unlit bonfire — revealed about Beadman’s attempts to conceal his crime
• Kerry’s psychological analysis of how two men with very different criminal profiles came together to destroy one young life
Relevant links and further reading
• Kerry Daynes — Dark Side of the Mind (Endeavour, 2019)
• Kerry Daynes — What Lies Buried (Endeavour, 2021)
• Faking It: Tears of a Crime (Warner Bros. Discovery) — some interviews in this episode were originally featured in the series. Watch on discoveryplus.com.
• https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leicestershire-36651220 — BBC News: coverage of the Kayleigh Heywood case and trial
• Kayleigh’s Love Story — NSPCC educational film inspired by this case, used in schools to teach young people about online grooming
• Support for those affected — NSPCC Helpline (0808 800 5000) • Victim Support (0808 168 9111)
Subscribe & follow
If you’re gripped by The Profiler, with Kerry Daynes, follow the show in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. A rating or review takes thirty seconds and genuinely helps new listeners find us.
Visit theprofiler.co.uk
For Kerry’s exclusive notes on the cases in this series visit theprofiler.co.uk. Whilst there, subscribe to the newsletter for case updates.
Credits
• Presented by Kerry Daynes
• Produced by Shearwater Media
• Executive Producers: Jeff Anderson and Steve Anderson
• Editing & Music: Rob Warner
Content note
This episode contains descriptions of the grooming and murder of a child, references to sexual violence, and details of a police investigation. Listener discretion is advised. If you have been affected by the issues raised, support is available from the NSPCC (0808 800 5000), Victim Support (0808 168 9111), and the Samaritans (116 123).
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Key psychological themes
This episode explores: online grooming and the psychology of digital predation • the escalation from flattery to control in sustained coercive communication • the ‘bubble’ dynamic — how secrecy isolates victims from protection • opportunistic sexual violence and male social networks that enable harm • the devastating consequences of a child’s trust exploited by multiple offenders
Contributors featured in this episode
• Kerry Daynes — Forensic psychologist, presenter, and author of Dark Side of the Mind and What Lies Buried.
• Phil Mackie — BBC News Midlands correspondent who covered the investigation, search, and trial.
• Miranda Moore — Barrister and Crown Prosecutor who led the case against Luke Harlow and Stephen Beadman at Leicester Crown Court.
What you’ll learn in this episode
• How Harlow used Facebook to target Kayleigh — and what the thousand-plus messages he sent her reveal about the mechanics of online grooming
• Why Kayleigh kept her contact with Harlow secret — and how that secrecy removed the one protection that might have saved her
• What happened when Harlow introduced his neighbour Stephen Beadman to Kayleigh on the Saturday night — and what that decision set in motion
• How a neighbour’s account of what he believed was a police arrest helped detectives reconstruct Kayleigh’s final hours
• What the physical evidence — bloodstained clothing hidden in an unlit bonfire — revealed about Beadman’s attempts to conceal his crime
• Kerry’s psychological analysis of how two men with very different criminal profiles came together to destroy one young life
Relevant links and further reading
• Kerry Daynes — Dark Side of the Mind (Endeavour, 2019)
• Kerry Daynes — What Lies Buried (Endeavour, 2021)
• Faking It: Tears of a Crime (Warner Bros. Discovery) — some interviews in this episode were originally featured in the series. Watch on discoveryplus.com.
• https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leicestershire-36651220 — BBC News: coverage of the Kayleigh Heywood case and trial
• Kayleigh’s Love Story — NSPCC educational film inspired by this case, used in schools to teach young people about online grooming
• Support for those affected — NSPCC Helpline (0808 800 5000) • Victim Support (0808 168 9111)
Subscribe & follow
If you’re gripped by The Profiler, with Kerry Daynes, follow the show in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. A rating or review takes thirty seconds and genuinely helps new listeners find us.
Visit theprofiler.co.uk
For Kerry’s exclusive notes on the cases in this series visit theprofiler.co.uk. Whilst there, subscribe to the newsletter for case updates.
Credits
• Presented by Kerry Daynes
• Produced by Shearwater Media
• Executive Producers: Jeff Anderson and Steve Anderson
• Editing & Music: Rob Warner
Content note
This episode contains descriptions of the grooming and murder of a child, references to sexual violence, and details of a police investigation. Listener discretion is advised. If you have been affected by the issues raised, support is available from the NSPCC (0808 800 5000), Victim Support (0808 168 9111), and the Samaritans (116 123).
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Mehr
23.06.2026
28 Minuten
Three months after Helen Bailey vanished, a search team lowered themselves into a hidden cesspit beneath her luxury home. What they found there ended a twelve-week missing-person search — and led to Ian Stewart being exposed as a calculating, money-driven killer who had drugged his fiancée with his own sleeping tablets, dumped her body, and then spun a defence about phantom blackmailers. In the conclusion of this story, forensic psychologist Kerry Daynes follows Stewart’s trial, conviction and sentence – then rewinds to 2010 as police begin investigating the mystery of his first wife’s death. Listen now to The Profiler with Kerry Daynes
Key psychological themes
This episode explores: psychopathy and the absence of empathy • the financial motive and the 'serial widower' pattern • the construction and collapse of an alibi • coercive control culminating in homicide • the role of forensic preservation in cold-case justice
Contributors featured in this episode
• Kerry Daynes — Forensic psychologist, presenter, and author
• Colin Sutton — Former Senior Investigating Officer, Metropolitan Police
• Jack Hardy — Press Association journalist who covered both the Helen Bailey and Diane Stewart trials
• Kate Bradbrook — Journalist who covered the 2022 trial for the murder of Diane Stewart.
• Mavis Drake — Helen Bailey's neighbour in Royston, whose intervention proved crucial.
What you'll learn in this episode
• What was found in the converted well beneath the garage at the Royston house — and how a 48-hour excavation finally ended the search for Helen.
• How Hertfordshire Police pieced together Stewart's 'phantom blackmailers' defence and demonstrated that it could not be true
• The forensic significance of Zopiclone in Helen's hair — and how it linked her, chemically, to her killer's own prescription
• Why police were drawn back to the death of Stewart's first wife, Diane — and what one hospital had quietly preserved that made a second prosecution possible
• The 999 call from June 2010 that’s been described as 'a complete sham from start to finish'
• Kerry's psychological assessment of why the label 'psychopath' — so often over-used in true-crime — applies to Ian Stewart with unusual precision
Relevant links and further reading
• Kerry Daynes — Dark Side of the Mind (Endeavour, 2019)
• Kerry Daynes — What Lies Buried (Endeavour, 2021)
• Faking It: Tears of a Crime (Warner Bros. Discovery) — some interviews in this episode were originally featured in the series. Watch on discoveryplus.com.
• https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/feb/16/ian-stewart-guilty-of-murdering-first-wife-diane-stewart — The Guardian: 'Ian Stewart found guilty of murdering first wife Diane Stewart'
• https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cambridgeshire-60413716 — BBC News: full coverage of the Diane Stewart trial and verdict
• https://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/news/cambridge-news/what-happened-helen-baileys-beloved-12646909 — Cambridge News: aftermath of the Helen Bailey case
• Support for those bereaved by homicide — Victim Support • AAFDA (Advocacy After Fatal Domestic Abuse)
Subscribe & follow
If you're gripped by The Profiler, with Kerry Daynes, follow the show in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. A rating or review takes thirty seconds and genuinely helps new listeners find us.
Visit theprofiler.co.uk
For Kerry’s in-depth notes accompanying each episode in the series visit theprofiler.co.uk. Subscribe to the newsletter for case updates, parole-hearing alerts, and early access to new episodes.
Credits
• Presented by Kerry Daynes
• Produced by Shearwater Media
• Executive producers: Jeff Anderson and Steve Anderson
• Editing & Music: Rob Warner
Content note
This episode contains descriptions of homicide, references to the discovery of human remains, and the re-investigation of a previous suspected death. Listener discretion is advised. If you have been affected by the issues raised, support is available from Victim Support (0808 168 9111), AAFDA (0207 186 8270), and the Samaritans (116 123).
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Key psychological themes
This episode explores: psychopathy and the absence of empathy • the financial motive and the 'serial widower' pattern • the construction and collapse of an alibi • coercive control culminating in homicide • the role of forensic preservation in cold-case justice
Contributors featured in this episode
• Kerry Daynes — Forensic psychologist, presenter, and author
• Colin Sutton — Former Senior Investigating Officer, Metropolitan Police
• Jack Hardy — Press Association journalist who covered both the Helen Bailey and Diane Stewart trials
• Kate Bradbrook — Journalist who covered the 2022 trial for the murder of Diane Stewart.
• Mavis Drake — Helen Bailey's neighbour in Royston, whose intervention proved crucial.
What you'll learn in this episode
• What was found in the converted well beneath the garage at the Royston house — and how a 48-hour excavation finally ended the search for Helen.
• How Hertfordshire Police pieced together Stewart's 'phantom blackmailers' defence and demonstrated that it could not be true
• The forensic significance of Zopiclone in Helen's hair — and how it linked her, chemically, to her killer's own prescription
• Why police were drawn back to the death of Stewart's first wife, Diane — and what one hospital had quietly preserved that made a second prosecution possible
• The 999 call from June 2010 that’s been described as 'a complete sham from start to finish'
• Kerry's psychological assessment of why the label 'psychopath' — so often over-used in true-crime — applies to Ian Stewart with unusual precision
Relevant links and further reading
• Kerry Daynes — Dark Side of the Mind (Endeavour, 2019)
• Kerry Daynes — What Lies Buried (Endeavour, 2021)
• Faking It: Tears of a Crime (Warner Bros. Discovery) — some interviews in this episode were originally featured in the series. Watch on discoveryplus.com.
• https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/feb/16/ian-stewart-guilty-of-murdering-first-wife-diane-stewart — The Guardian: 'Ian Stewart found guilty of murdering first wife Diane Stewart'
• https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cambridgeshire-60413716 — BBC News: full coverage of the Diane Stewart trial and verdict
• https://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/news/cambridge-news/what-happened-helen-baileys-beloved-12646909 — Cambridge News: aftermath of the Helen Bailey case
• Support for those bereaved by homicide — Victim Support • AAFDA (Advocacy After Fatal Domestic Abuse)
Subscribe & follow
If you're gripped by The Profiler, with Kerry Daynes, follow the show in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. A rating or review takes thirty seconds and genuinely helps new listeners find us.
Visit theprofiler.co.uk
For Kerry’s in-depth notes accompanying each episode in the series visit theprofiler.co.uk. Subscribe to the newsletter for case updates, parole-hearing alerts, and early access to new episodes.
Credits
• Presented by Kerry Daynes
• Produced by Shearwater Media
• Executive producers: Jeff Anderson and Steve Anderson
• Editing & Music: Rob Warner
Content note
This episode contains descriptions of homicide, references to the discovery of human remains, and the re-investigation of a previous suspected death. Listener discretion is advised. If you have been affected by the issues raised, support is available from Victim Support (0808 168 9111), AAFDA (0207 186 8270), and the Samaritans (116 123).
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Mehr
16.06.2026
30 Minuten
In April 2016, the bestselling children's author Helen Bailey vanished from her £1.4 million home. Her fiancé Ian Stewart called the police, then wrote an open letter begging her to return. But, behind the public grief, he was hiding a terrible secret. Forensic psychologist Kerry Daynes traces how 51-year-old Helen fell for a quiet, unassuming father of two she met on a Facebook bereavement group after her husband’s death. She and Stewart got engaged. But as the wedding approached, she grew exhausted and forgetful. Then, on Monday April 11th, every trace of her online life suddenly went dark. This is the story of how detectives saw past Stewart's lies and began to suspect he was a man who had not only murdered once – but twice.
Key psychological themes
This episode explores: the predatory courtship of a grieving widow • performative grief and manufactured intimacy • coercive control disguised as care • the psychology of a killer who stays close to the investigation
Contributors
• Kerry Daynes — Forensic psychologist, TV presenter, and author.
• Colin Sutton — Former Senior Investigating Officer, Metropolitan Police; expert commentator on the Stewart case.
• Jack Hardy — Press Association journalist who covered the Helen Bailey investigation and trial.
• Mavis Drake — Neighbour and close friend of Helen Bailey in Royston.
• Trevor McCallum — Close friend of Helen and her first husband, John Sinfield.
• Helen Bailey — In archive video-blog material from October 2015.
What you'll learn in this episode
• How a Facebook group for the bereaved became the meeting place that would change — and end — Helen Bailey's life
• What Kerry Daynes calls the 'predatory courtship' — how some offenders identify, isolate and emotionally re-shape a grieving partner
• Why Helen's friends were taken aback by the man she chose to marry — and why their unease did not, on its own, protect her
• The chronic fatigue, confusion and memory loss Helen began suffering in the months before her disappearance — and what toxicology reports revealed
• How police pieced together what happened on April 11th 2016 — and why Stewart's own account of his fiancée's disappearance kept shifting
• The reason a passing remark from a neighbour became one of the most important moments in the case
• Why detectives, by the end of this episode, were no longer sure that Helen was Ian Stewart's first victim
Relevant links and further reading
• Kerry Daynes — Dark Side of the Mind (Endeavour, 2019) What Lies Buried (Endeavour, 2021)
• Faking It (Warner Bros. Discovery) — some interviews in this episode were originally featured in the series. Watch on discoveryplus.com.
• https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/feb/23/helen-bailey-murder-ian-stewart-jailed-years-killing-author — The Guardian: contemporary trial coverage and verdict
• https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4105158/ — Daily Mail: 'Partner of children's author Helen Bailey goes on trial'
• Helen Bailey — When Bad Things Happen in Good Bikinis (Blink, 2015) — her own writing on grief and the early days with Ian Stewart
• Support for those bereaved by homicide — Victim Support • AAFDA (Advocacy After Fatal Domestic Abuse)
Subscribe & follow
Follow the show in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. A rating/review is quick and helps new listeners find us.
Visit theprofiler.co.uk
For an exclusive filmed interview with Kerry Daynes on the cases behind the series — including untold detail on the Ian Stewart story - visit theprofiler.co.uk. Subscribe to the newsletter for case updates, parole-hearing alerts, and early access to episodes.
Credits
• Presented by Kerry Daynes
• Produced by Shearwater Media
• Executive producers: Jeff Anderson and Steve Anderson
• Editing & Music by Rob Warner
Content note
This episode contains descriptions of homicide, the drugging and isolation of a partner, and the discovery of human remains. Listener discretion advised. If you have been affected by the issues raised, speak to Victim Support (0808 168 9111) and the Samaritans (116 123).
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Key psychological themes
This episode explores: the predatory courtship of a grieving widow • performative grief and manufactured intimacy • coercive control disguised as care • the psychology of a killer who stays close to the investigation
Contributors
• Kerry Daynes — Forensic psychologist, TV presenter, and author.
• Colin Sutton — Former Senior Investigating Officer, Metropolitan Police; expert commentator on the Stewart case.
• Jack Hardy — Press Association journalist who covered the Helen Bailey investigation and trial.
• Mavis Drake — Neighbour and close friend of Helen Bailey in Royston.
• Trevor McCallum — Close friend of Helen and her first husband, John Sinfield.
• Helen Bailey — In archive video-blog material from October 2015.
What you'll learn in this episode
• How a Facebook group for the bereaved became the meeting place that would change — and end — Helen Bailey's life
• What Kerry Daynes calls the 'predatory courtship' — how some offenders identify, isolate and emotionally re-shape a grieving partner
• Why Helen's friends were taken aback by the man she chose to marry — and why their unease did not, on its own, protect her
• The chronic fatigue, confusion and memory loss Helen began suffering in the months before her disappearance — and what toxicology reports revealed
• How police pieced together what happened on April 11th 2016 — and why Stewart's own account of his fiancée's disappearance kept shifting
• The reason a passing remark from a neighbour became one of the most important moments in the case
• Why detectives, by the end of this episode, were no longer sure that Helen was Ian Stewart's first victim
Relevant links and further reading
• Kerry Daynes — Dark Side of the Mind (Endeavour, 2019) What Lies Buried (Endeavour, 2021)
• Faking It (Warner Bros. Discovery) — some interviews in this episode were originally featured in the series. Watch on discoveryplus.com.
• https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/feb/23/helen-bailey-murder-ian-stewart-jailed-years-killing-author — The Guardian: contemporary trial coverage and verdict
• https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4105158/ — Daily Mail: 'Partner of children's author Helen Bailey goes on trial'
• Helen Bailey — When Bad Things Happen in Good Bikinis (Blink, 2015) — her own writing on grief and the early days with Ian Stewart
• Support for those bereaved by homicide — Victim Support • AAFDA (Advocacy After Fatal Domestic Abuse)
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Visit theprofiler.co.uk
For an exclusive filmed interview with Kerry Daynes on the cases behind the series — including untold detail on the Ian Stewart story - visit theprofiler.co.uk. Subscribe to the newsletter for case updates, parole-hearing alerts, and early access to episodes.
Credits
• Presented by Kerry Daynes
• Produced by Shearwater Media
• Executive producers: Jeff Anderson and Steve Anderson
• Editing & Music by Rob Warner
Content note
This episode contains descriptions of homicide, the drugging and isolation of a partner, and the discovery of human remains. Listener discretion advised. If you have been affected by the issues raised, speak to Victim Support (0808 168 9111) and the Samaritans (116 123).
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Mehr
Über diesen Podcast
Behind every murder is a motive. From revenge to jealousy, from
greed to control, identifying what drives people to kill is
essential in bringing them to justice.
For thirty years, Consultant Forensic Psychologist Kerry Daynes
has unravelled the minds behind the darkest crimes. Now, in The
Profiler, she takes you inside some of Britain’s most disturbing
murder cases, presenting the full stories with the clarity of a
seasoned documentary maker, but also stepping outside the
narratives to do what she does best: getting inside the mind of
each perpetrator to reveal what made them act the way they did.
More than just true crime, these are journeys into the darkest
extremes of human behaviour — with someone who has actually sat
across the table from killers and studied them up close.
New episodes every week. Cases drawn from the last three decades
of British criminal history.
Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, or visit
theprofiler.co.uk.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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