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	<title>UK-Skeptics articles and commentary &#187; murder detectives</title>
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		<title>The Murder Detectives</title>
		<link>http://www.ukskeptics.com/cms/the-murder-detectives/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Oct 2008 02:09:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>John Jackson</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Psychics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[murder]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[murder detectives]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[police]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[psychic detective]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[seance]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ukskeptics.com/blog/?p=33</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[THE MURDER DETECTIVES AND THE MEDIUM: A TRUE STORY. Emma-Louise Rhodes © 2008. (See: www.emmalouiserhodes.com) On February 26, 1980, the body of twenty year old Elizabeth McCabe was found in a clearing at Templeton Woods outside Dundee. Twenty-seven years later, in October 2007, Vincent Simpson went on trial, charged with her murder. On November 7, [...]]]></description>
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<h2>THE MURDER DETECTIVES AND THE MEDIUM: A TRUE STORY.</h2>
<p class="author">Emma-Louise Rhodes © 2008. (See: <a href="http://www.emmalouiserhodes.com/index.php" target="_blank">www.emmalouiserhodes.com</a>)</p>
<hr style="margin-bottom: 16px;" /><span class="drop_cap">O</span>n February 26, 1980, the body of twenty year    old Elizabeth McCabe was found in a clearing at Templeton Woods outside Dundee.    Twenty-seven years later, in October 2007, Vincent Simpson went on trial, charged    with her murder. On November 7, 2007, the jury at the High Court in Edinburgh    heard that during the initial investigation, detectives took part in a séance    at the house of a local medium, in order to try and find out who had killed    Miss McCabe.</p>
<p>Although police forces across Britain generally deny using psychic mediums,    this incident illustrates the motivation behind such rare involvement (from    a police point of view), as well as with the obvious outcome.<span id="more-33"></span></p>
<p class="subheading">Every Possible Avenue Of Inquiry</p>
<p>On March 13, 1980, at around 8:50 pm, Detective Constable Norman Robertson,    along with an unnamed Detective Sergeant, had attended a séance in a    darkened room with a trance medium in an attempt to shed some light on the murder.</p>
<p>Whilst giving evidence regarding the case, now retired Norman Robertson claimed    that:</p>
<p class="block_quote">(consulting the medium) showed Tayside Police&#8217;s desire    to spread into every possible avenue of inquiry. It was not one which I thought    when I went to it I was particularly hopeful of a conclusion (sic), but it was    something I was involved in.</p>
<p>When asked whose idea it had been to consult the medium, Robertson answered    that he could not remember whether it was the officer in charge of the investigation    or someone else. He described the séance by stating that that they had    held hands around a table and the medium had gone into a trance. Prompted further    by Mark Stewart QC, the retired detective added:</p>
<p class="block_quote">She then gave us information which I doubted seriously    from the outset. It did not go very well&#8230; It was never a serious line of inquiry.    It would not be thought of as leading Tayside Police to a suspect or the accused    in this case …. I am confident, and I am confident my colleague thought    this was not a worthwhile line of inquiry.</p>
<p>Robertson stated that the medium had given details regarding the location of    a vehicle, but that none of the information passed on at the séance from    the medium’s ‘spirit guide’ had been of any use to police.    He stated that one of the reasons they had visited the medium was because witnesses    might find ways such as that to give information to the police, and so for that    reason it had to be tested.</p>
<p>However, Robertson dismissed the efforts as a ‘charade’ which did    not last long. The medium, he stated, was unable to continue and the police    left the séance having gained no valuable information at all.</p>
<p class="subheading">A Shining Example</p>
<p>The defense council had, earlier in the trial, accused Tayside police of ‘extremely    sloppy methods’ and the declaration, almost out of the blue, that they    had consulted a medium in the hope of leading them to Elizabeth McCabe’s    murderer was a very obvious tool in demonstrating this conviction.</p>
<p>Although many British psychics claim to have helped the police in their investigations,    there is very little evidence to back this up. Medium Sharon Neill states that    the police generally deny any psychic contribution that may help them in their    inquiries, asserting:</p>
<p class="block_quote">Unfortunately, the police forces in the UK won’t    admit that they use psychics to help them solve crimes.</p>
<p>In their paper Rhetoric in ‘Psychic Detection’ Ciaron O’Keefe    and Laurence Alison are slightly more objective in their study of the subject,    stating that:</p>
<p class="block_quote">In high profile murder and rape cases there is a pressure    on the police to follow up any leads, however seemingly obscure. Any information    volunteered to the police has to be recorded …. Of the devices examined,    many are associated with methods employed in cold reading—a related set    of techniques known to convey convincingness about advice/opinions, though there    is no substantive evidence within the account. Whether these processes relate    to self or other deception is uncertain, though clarification of their existence    and structure may go some way to exploring the distortions that they may present    to an enquiry.</p>
<p>Interestingly, Tayside Police were among those who did not reply to Eddie Silence’s    letter and subsequent study in 2006, inquiring whether their police force had    ever, or would ever consider, using a psychic medium to aid them in their investigations.(1.)    However, the fact that the force did, twenty-six years previously, use a trance    medium to assist them in a murder inquiry, demonstrates an interesting insight    into the desperate need to find evidence when dealing with such serious and    horrendous crimes.</p>
<p>Unfortunately for the likes of mediums such as Sharon Neill who are keen to    praise the unsung ‘psychic detectives’ who have allegedly helped    police solve numerous investigations, the case of Elizabeth McCabe provides    a shining example of what happens when detectives decide to consult a psychic    medium. The very fact that retired Detective Constable Robertson referred to    the episode as a ‘charade’ exemplifies the nature of the ‘medium    as detective’ along with the waste of police time spent on following up    such leads.</p>
<hr /><strong>References:</strong></p>
<p><a href="../../article.php?dir=articles&amp;article=police_and_psychics.php">The police and psychics</a></p>
<p>BBC News, ‘<a href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/tayside_and_central/7084981.stm" target="_blank">Woods    Murder Police ‘Held Séance</a>’’</p>
<p>Journal of the Society for Psychical Research, Alison L. and O’Keefe,    C., ‘Rhetoric in ‘Psychic Detection’’, Vol. 64, 1, No.    858.</p>
<p>Neill, Sharon, Second Sight, Orion, 2007.</p>
<p>The Scotsman, ‘Murder Police ‘Held Séance’ With Medium’,    John Robertson (8 November, 2007).</p>
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