Ann Myring update - podcast episode cover

Ann Myring update

Jul 09, 202338 min
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Episode description

This is an update episode in which we present some more details and information provided by Ann's son David.

On the 25th of June 1997, 45 year old Ann Myring left her job at Hewlett Packard close to her home in Stoke Gifford, South Gloucestershire. She returned home but the next day her two sons heard that she had gone to visit a health farm for the weekend. On Monday they then heard that she had left their Dad and that she was missing. Ann never returned and she hasn't been seen since. Despite an arrest and a trial, no one knows what happened to Ann Myring.

If you already remember the episode well then please skip to around the 30 minute mark.

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Transcript

Hi, and welcome back to The Unseen Podcast, a podcast dedicated to missing people, unresolved cases, and UK true crime. Today, we're going to be doing something a little different with our episode about a missing person, and we're going to be doing an update episode of sorts. Following on from my episode about the disappearance of Anne my Ring, which was published in April of this year, I had the pleasure of communicating with one of Anne's sons,

David. He spoke to me about the impact that his mother's disappearances had on him and his family, and he added more detail to the initial episode that I did. I wanted to put out an update episode just for clarity and to make sure that I could include the things that David told me. I'm going to add the initial episode to the beginning of this one so that you can either refresh your memories about the case, or so that you can listen

to it if you haven't already. If you have already listened and remember it well, then skip forward to around the thirty minute mark. This episode does not contain any graphic details. However, it does concern a missing person, so listener discretion is always advised. This is the first of these episodes, and today we're covering the nineteen ninety seven disappearance of Admiring from South Gloucestershire. This is a case with so many twists and turns and some developments over the

years, but her disappearance is still a mystery and it remains unsolved. This episode is about a missing person and so does not contain any descriptions of violence, but listener discretion is always advised. Stoke Gifford is a village located in the south of the County of Gloucestershire. In two thousand and one, the village had around eleven thousand residents. However, in twenty years this number has

almost doubled. It's around seven miles from the city of Bristol and there far as an area where many people commute to and from on a daily basis. It's a relatively quiet and peaceful area. However, its proximity to several head offices meant that it was an area where people would travel to for work. One of these couples who had made their careers in and around Stoke Gifford was Brian and Anne my Ring. Brian and Anne were married with two sons,

David and Stephen. Brian worked at the Rolls Royce facility in nearby Filton, Bristol, and Anne worked as a clerical officer at the computer company Hewlett Packard. The couple met in nineteen seventy one when they were in their late teens a pub named a New Inn. They'd hit it off very quickly, and they married and moved to Chevining close in Stoke, Gifford. Together. The pair had their two sons, and it's reported that Anne put her career on

hold to raise her children. Both Brian and Anne were involved with the local community, and particularly in the cub and Scout groups in Filton. In Bristol, the couple were well liked and Anne was known as a caring and thoughtful person who was close to her family and did everything to try and help them. During nineteen ninety seven, Anne and her family were dealing with a very

stressful situation when Anne's mother, Gwendolyn, was diagnosed with throat cancer. Anne was constantly with her and by her side, getting her through the treatments. Gwendolen would later describe Anne as her best friend and not just her daughter. This must have added a great deal of stress. The Myring family. However, Anne continued to look after only her mother, but her family as well. Her son David later described her as a warm and caring mum who always

showed him affection and love. He said she was really caring, always there, intelligent as well. She liked doing crosswords and that a metal detecting she used to find quite a few coins. Stephen An's other son also described her in the same way, stating she was a real kind, caring person. I could speak to her about many things and she was always there for us.

The Myring family appeared to be just like any other family, with teenagers always busy, but also trying to make plans for their own futures when their children flew the nest. By nineteen ninety seven, Anne and Brian were forty four and forty five years old and were enjoying their lives. This so called normal life that the family were living, however, was rocked. In July nineteen ninety seven. The Myring family had been almost ripped apart by an unexpected

incident. Anne had left a family home and hadn't returned, and it had been several weeks since any one in her family had seen her. This was so out of character, and everyone who knew Anne didn't understand where she had gone or what could have happened. She hadn't been reported missing for a few weeks since she had last been seen, and the events surrounding that last day were relatively unclear. That day, Anne Miring headed to work at Hewlett Packard

as she usually did. Her colleagues didn't report anything different about her that day or anything out of the ordinary that she said or did. Anne allegedly told them that she was going to head home and then she was off out for a meal with her husband Brian that night. This of course, didn't ring any alarm bells and sounded like any usual evening to her colleagues. Anne left Hewlett Packard at the end of her work day, and her sons David and

Stephen saw her that night. When she got home. The next day, however, was a different story. They both later recalled that the next morning their mother wasn't there. When they asked where she was, their father, Brian, told them that Anne had gone away to a health farm for the rest of that week and the weekend. While this seemed a little out of the blue, David and Stephen seemed to accept this explanation until the following morning,

when the weekend had ended and their mum had still not returned. At this point, Brian told his sons that Anne had actually left him and there had been problems with the relationship. This shocked David and Stephen, as they hadn't been aware that anything was wrong, especially to the extent that their mother would have left the family home. David later commented on how he felt at the time hearing this new piece of information. He told the Independent newspaper,

Me and Steve were really shocked. We didn't think anything was going wrong with the relationship. Apparently they had been arguing quite a lot that week and going out on regular drives to chat about it away from us. I think it was about money. The fact that their parents were having problems in their marriage wasn't the most shocking part. It was the fact that Anne had simply left the home and then behind without contacting anyone at all. This seemed so unlike

her and couldn't really be explained. When Anne hadn't returned, she was officially reported missing to the police. Brian later stated that he didn't report her missing straight away as he thought she had left him. It was only when a family member also noticed her absence that they officially reported her missing. Brian had contacted the police about her disappearance, However, this was done informally and an

official report had not been made before this point. The police were able to establish that she had last been seen on the twenty fifth of June, and they attempted to figure out where she could have gone next. They had established that Anne had driven her Voxhall Carlton car home and that the car remained there despite Anne's absence. They also discovered that Anne had already booked off the next

day, Thursday, the twenty sixth of June. When police looked into her bank account activity, they discovered that Anne had not accessed her account or used any credit or debit cards, and she had also not picked up four hundred pounds in wages that she was owed from her job. If she had vanished of her own volition, then why had she not told anyone where she was

and how was she going to live her life without contacting them. When her belongings were checked, heard that she had taken some of her belongings, like some clothing. However, there were some odd features particularly the fact that she had not taken her makeup, her jewelry, and seemed to have left behind nine single shoes. The police were not convinced that Anne would have just walked away, and neither were her family. Anne's younger sister, Jane, spoke

to the press at the time that Anne went missing. She stated, We're all very worried about Anne and just want to hear from her. It's very stressful. Our mother has had an operation for cancer and this isn't helping her recovery. We're a very close family and it's very out of character for Anne not to keep in touch. She was devoted to her boys. She has never left home like this before. We have no idea why she has disappeared, and there is nothing obvious that would make her go, and she's never

done it before. We just believe that she was unhappy. We have no clues as to where she is. The fact that Anne's mother had had an operation and Anne had not checked in to see what the results were was also alarming, given how close Anne and her mum were and how hard she'd been working to look after her after her cancer diagnosis. Anne's family contacted the missing person's Bureau for help in trying to locate her, and they supported the family

by printing hundreds of posters and flyers with Anne's information. These were distributed in the hope that someone had seen her and could help. Her disappearance was so strange and so unlike her that no one understood what could have happened. Brian made an appeal to the public about his wife, saying their sons were missing her terribly. He said, I would like to appeal to Anne to get in touch with their children. We're coping okay, but the boys are desperate

to hear from her. It appeared that Brian and his children were hoping that Anne would return home and that there would be some reasonable nation for why she had disappeared. Over the next several months, there would continue to be some hope that Anne would return. However, as the weeks then months passed, this was a harder and harder to believe. There were no known reasons why Anne would leave, and particularly why she wouldn't tell her children where she was.

Her family and the police were increasingly worried about her safety. By October nineteen ninety seven, Anne had still not returned, and it was this month that there was a new development in the case. Regional and national newspapers reported that there had been two arrests made. The articles described how the arrests had taken place at Chevening Close in Stoke, Gifford. The arrests had been made at the Myring family home. Brian Myring and a woman had been arrested in

relation to the murder of Anne my Ring. This shocking development was unexpected and raised many questions for those that heard about it. One of the main questions was who was the woman who'd been arrested with him at his home. This would become clear and the woman's name would be revealed as Teresa Kempster, who was thirty eight at the time. It would turn out that Brian and Teresa were having an affair and that they had been for the previous two years.

Teresa was also married, and the pair had met at the Cubs and Scouts group that the couple were involved with. This relationship was apparently quite well known to other people who knew the couple, and Anne had found out about it. However, she seemed to be one of the last people to know about this affair. It was reported that despite knowing about the affair, Anne was happy to stay with Brian and wanted to make it work. Anne's mother stated

that Anne idolised Brian. The shocking news that Brian had been arrested and that he was also having a long term affair during his marriage to Anne was sensational and articles began to come out about the evidence that the police had against Brian and even possibly Theresa Kempster. Police soon let Theresa go without any charges, but they did formally charge Brian Myering with the murder of his wife. Many people speculated about what the evidence exactly was to charge Brian, and the fact

they hadn't yet found Anne was something else concerning about the case. If Brian had murdered her, where was her body? Nobody. Murder trials are particularly difficult to take to trial due to the lack of evidence to prove anything either way. The police, however, had decided to take this case to trial,

and it would turn out that the evidence was entirely circumstantial. Brian Iiring's trial did not end up taking place until November of nineteen ninety nine, and in the time in between, Anne's family were trying to get to grips with the news. That police believe that Anne had been murdered, and most importantly, they didn't know where her body was. In December of nineteen ninety seven,

Anne's family and the Avon and Somerset Police spoke to the press. Anne's sister Jane told the grief that they were feeling at not being able to put her to rest or knowing what happened. She said. On Christmas Day, it will be six months since her disappearance. The family have accepted that she's no longer alive and that the police are searching for her body. At this most difficult time of year, we're looking for any news that will locate Anne's

body. It will help us greatly if she's brought home to her family so that she can be properly laid to rest. We can't grieve as we have nothing to grieve over. Yet this feeling of limbo must have been even more excruciating given that they believed that Anne had been murdered. Avon and Somerset Police spokespersons said at this time of year, families come together and its common practice

for them to go out on walks in the countryside or beauty spots. We're asking people while They do this to keep an eye out for clothing scattered about in beauty spots, or possibly an abandoned suitcase. By this point, Brian Myern had been released on bail pending his trial for her murder, and police were hopeful, but by the time that that came around, they may have located Anne's body. During the summer of nineteen ninety eight, police searched several

areas to find her. They knew that she was a keen rambler and that she enjoyed the countryside, and so they began to focus their attention on these kinds of areas. They searched the area of tog Hill, which is a picnic spot around fifteen miles away from Anne's home. They searched the area for around four days before moving the search to Woodland in the area of Wick,

less than two miles from tog Hill. Many of her favorite walking areas were checked, and at the end of July it was confirmed that an area close to the Gloucestershire Force Area was going to be searched. Shortly after this announcement of further searches, Brian Myering was in court at a hearing he pleaded not guilty to the charges of murder. His trial eventually took place in nineteen ninety nine, and the prosecution set a case out where Brian Myering intentionally set out

to murder his wife due to his obsessive affair with Teresa Kempster. They alleged that he wanted to get Anne out of the way so he could pursue this relationship, and this was a substantial motive to murder her. The defense stated that they had no evidence that Brian had killed his wife or that she was even deceased. More insight into Anna Brian's relationship was gained at the trial, with Brian stating that Anne had been siphoning money out of their joint account before

she went missing and that they had been arguing about this. Brian stated that Anna had taken around fifteen thousand pounds out of their account and that she had made a withdrawal of around nine hundred and twenty pounds before she went missing. The prosecution, however, led by Paul Chad QC, said this was untrue and actually CCTV footage showed that this transaction was made by Brian Myering himself. Paul Chad explained it became clear to the police that the only person to benefit

from her disappearance was her husband. This was a carefully schemed murder of his wife. He also stated that myering had got to the end of his tether when it appeared that Anne was not just leaving him, and stated that they had gone for a drive on the evening of the twenty fifth of January and they argued out of earshot of their youngest son. He said that the argument had not been resolved and that Anne told him that she was leaving him.

During the trial, the jury also heard that Brian had been in possession of Anne's bank card. Teresa Kempster took to the stand to give some insight into their relationship. She said that her husband had found out about the affair and had attacked Brian when he saw them in the car together, and had also found out after seeing them meet at a service station. Reportedly, Brian had denied having an affair when approached by police initially, then admitted to it later

on. The prosecution set out that they had checked on hospitals and solicitors and all lines of inquiry exhausted when trying to locate her, suggesting that it was obvious that she was no longer alive. They also explained that Anne had left too many of her belongings behind, including a treasured family heirloom, and that she had booked a holiday and a hair appointment, implying that she hadn't planned to leave. On his part, Brian Myering denied all the allegations against him.

He explained that he had noticed that Anne was taking money out of the account, and he had confronted her about it on the car journey, saying

he believed she'd taken it out. When asked by Antony Arledge, QC defending did you kill your wife in the course of that journey or at any other time, Brian replied no. When he was questioned about why he'd delayed in telling authorities that she was missing, he said that he didn't want to worry her mom about her disappearance, as she was having an operation and he was

convinced that she had just left him. Towards the end of the trial, the prosecution made some admissions to the defense, saying that Brian Myering had co operated fully with analysis of his bank accounts and forensic examination of his clothing and vehicles. They also stated that four of Anne's bank cards had never been found, and searches had found no trace of Anne. There was no forensic link to Brian, and Anne had not been recovered, and so there was no

concrete evidence that she was dead. The case against Brian was circumstantial and it was unclear how it was going to conclude. The jury took the case and within just two and a half hours they were back with a verdict. They found Brian Myering not guilty of the murder of his wife. Brian was visibly relieved at the news and was pleased with the result. Outside court, Detective

Chief Inspector Jeff Anderson said the case was still open. He said, this has been a difficult investigation and unusual circumstances, and as far as we're concerned, and my Ring is dead, we would welcome any information which might lead to the whereabouts of her body so that her family might finalize their grieving process. The outcome of the trial was disappointing for the police, who had taken this as far as they could with the circumstantial evidence that they had. It

must have also been very distressing and confusing for Anne's family. Anne's brother Mark told the press in the days after the acquittal. Listening to the evidence has been hell. At times it has been too much to bear. They not guilty verdict means the story is not closed. He also stated that the family had known for a while that Anne was dead, but that they now needed

to find her body to find closure. Anne's sons must have also been going through the worst time of their lives, given that their mother was missing and their father could have gone to prison for her murder. David and Stephen, as well as their father, spoke to the Independent newspaper in two thousand,

three years after Anne's disappearance and a year after Brian was acquitted. Brian gave the paper a statement which read, I was very surprised I was arrested as there was no forensic evidence at all, no history of violence, and there had been several sightings of Anne around the country, with three in an area that Anne knew, although myself, David or Stephen had not been told of any sighting. I suppose the worst thing is the two years I spent away

from my family on bail. David was only fifteen going into his final year at school, and for some four months I was not allowed to see or talk to him. This initial period was very traumatic for myself and for David. David and Stephen stated that they do not believe that their father had anything to do with their mother's death, and described Brian saying, we couldn't imagine anyone like him ever doing something like that. He's never hit us, never

shown any violence towards anybody. Really, He's really nice. I just don't think it's feasible. Stephen is equally adamant. I'm the best person at winding anybody up, and Dad has never ever raised a hand. He's quite mellow. Actually, he's got a good sense of humor as well. It never, ever, not once entered my mind at all. David, Stephen, and Brian explained that they believe that Anne is still alive and don't accept that she has died. They hoped that they would see her again and that she

would get in contact. David stated, we're all encouraging each other to try and do as much as we can to try and find her. I'm not bothered about her reasons. I'm more concerned about her making contact. If she came back, I wouldn't even ask where she'd been. I would just be crying. I'd be so happy. I would rather take the positive approach. There is lack of evidence both ways, but I'd rather be more positive. I'm always going to believe that she's alive. There has never been any significant

evidence as far as I'm concerned, to say that she's dead. Brian also said, I would like to say to Anne, come back. I know it means facing up to a lot, but the boys miss you a lot. Although we shall never be together, the first twenty years of marriage was very good and I'd like to know that you're all right. Stephen explained that he's gutted by his mother's disappearance and that he still wears her gold necklace, and since she disappeared, he had had a daughter and he'd given her the

middle name of Anne. He said, with my job, I'm out on the road on my own, driving about, and you've got to think about something. Unfortunately, it always seems to be about my mum and where she can be. I do still cry about it. There's no doubt that Anne's disappear had an incomprehensible effect on her sons and her whole family. But when Anne's mother Gwendolen was spoken to for the same article, she had a different

outlook on her daughter's disappearance. She believed that Anne had been murdered and that she was not just going to walk back through the door. She stated David was the apple of her eye. She would never have walked out on those boys. Ever. She'll never come back. She's dead and that's all there is to it. I had cancer five and a half years ago, and there's no way my daughter would not have looked after me. We were like that. She was my best friend, not just a daughter. She would

come and take me out once a week, sometimes twice. She idolized her husband. I'm not very happy about them wanting their mother to come home when it's absolutely impossible. I think it's very sad. She was my daughter, she was my flesh and blood. Gwendolen by this point in two thousand, had lost her voice box due to the spread of cancer and had to use

a voice and hancer. She was described as being visibly angry about the situation and its stated in the article that the two sides of the family now no longer speak. This is such a sad story, and the fact that Anne's close family has been ripped apart by not only her disappearance, but also by

the trial and then acquittal of Brian. In the years following the trial, David and Stephen continue trying to locate their mother, with a poster campaign in areas where Anne had links to and a feature in Big Issue magazine to appeal for her return. At the time, Detective Chief Inspector Jeff Anderson from Avon and Somerset Police, who was leading the investigation, stated that they believe that Anne was dead. Told the Independent newspaper does a woman leave home leaving nine

single shoes, all her makeup, her jewelry and all her money. Her mother was ill with cancer and she was very supportive of that. She was very supportive of her children. There was a huge amount of circumstantial evidence that suggests this woman had not left that home on her own volition, carrying two suitcases with all her belongings. Police have remained convinced that Anne is dead and that they were looking for her remains. However, these have never been located.

It would appear that her bank accounts remained untouched. However, seven years after she disappeared, a sighting of someone fitting her description in Leeds was reported. David and Stephen ups the poster campaign in the area. However, this did not locate Anne or figure out if this sighting was her. While doing the podcast, all of the cases are tinged with sadness as they're all unsolved,

but sometimes some cases really affect me. This is one of them, and I think it's because of the damage that has been done to Anne's family as a result of her disappearance, Brian's trial and later acquittal. Her family seems to have been broken beyond repair by it, and while there hasn't been many updates and articles since two thousand, it's clear that the opinions and thoughts of all the family members are very different. David and Stephen want to remain

hopeful that their mother did just walk away and was alive. However, police and anne side of the family believe that she is no longer alive. The questions that remain are numerous. What happened to Anne that night? Where did she go, why did she not take any useful belongings with her, Why has she not touched her bank accounts, and why did she leave her car?

All of this is unclear, and I completely understand and her son's desire to remain hopeful the facts We do know, though, is that Brian Myering has been acquitted of all charges, and that police still maintain that Anne is dead and that they are on the recovery for her remains. Since her disappearance, nothing has been found to pinpoint where she is or what happened to her. Anne is still missing, and her disappearance and potential murder is still unsolved.

Without her body, there does appear to be a little chance of any progress being made, or without any more sightings, her location will be tricky to figure out. I really do hope that her family can finally get some closure and that soon there will be some information or evidence forthcoming. They deserve answers, and David and Stephen deserve to know what happened to their mom. If you know anything about the disappearance of Anne my Ring in nineteen ninety seven,

then please contact Avon and Somerset Police at one oh one. After the release of the episode, David got in touch with me about it. I always appreciate when this happens, and I want to thank David for taking the time to speak to me. In all of my episodes, I do say that I'm only using known facts that have been reported in the media, and so I know that there's always more to everyone's story, and so it's always good to get firsthand information from those close to the person or to the case.

David wanted to add some more detail about the events leading up to his mum's disappearance, and wanted to explain that Anne leaving the evening before was not the only possible scenario and that it was just as if not more, likely that she left the next morning. David explained that it has been difficult to get the right kind of attention for his mother's case, and this is something

which is been echoed by other families that I have spoken to. David explained that he last saw his mum on the evening of the twenty fifth of June, and that this was before she went on a drive with his dad. Much was made of this car journey that night, particularly at trial. However, David told me that nobody actually saw either of them return, as he had already gone to bed and his brother Steve had come home late that evening.

He explained that his brother was always the first to get up and leave the house and that this was the same that morning. David said his dad was the next to leave, and before he left, he told David not to disturb his mother as she wasn't feeling well and was still in the bedroom. His dad then took the car and went to work, saying that he had taken the car as he didn't want and to take it if she were to leave him. David said that he then just went to school as usual.

He explained to me that this is the moment that we're forever hard on him, as if he had made the decision to check on his mum that morning, a lot of things could be resolved by now. He explained that because he didn't check on her that morning, it was completely feasible that his mum was in the bedroom at that time, and that she then had all morning to leave the home before David returned for his lunch later in the day. This, of course, would affect the known timeline for Anne's disappearance.

David also wanted to address the fact that there hadn't been any sightings of Anne in the area at the time. He explained that as Anne hadn't been reported for twenty four hours, he wouldn't necessarily expect that anybody would have noticed or remembered her. He referred to bus drivers, taxi drivers, and those at Bristol Parkway train station, saying that after this time had elapsed, they may

not necessarily remember her. He also added more detail, saying that you can exit Chavening Close where Anne and the family lived, on foot and be out of view within thirty seconds, suggesting that Anne could easily have left the family home and have been out of sight of people that would recognize her very quickly. Therefore, it would make sense that there were no sightings of her in

the area that she lived. The last thing that David wanted to mention was that there were some indications that there may have been something bothering Anne in the lead up to her disappearance. He explained that her colleagues at Hewlett Packard had reported that Anne had been snappy at work on the twenty fifth, and that this had been out of character for her. This is of course important information, given that this was unusual for her, and anything out of the ordinary

is always necessary to look into. It's clear that Anne's disappearance is certainly not straightforward, and there are many things that are unknown, but also many situations that could be plausible. David expressed his sadness about his mother's disappearance and how it affected them as a family. He explained that they were still young at the time and that he and his brother never felt fully supported. He said that after she disappeared, many people that they knew turned their backs on them,

including many of his mother's friends. He stated that he knew this is not what his mother would have wanted and that she would have been extremely upset about what has happened. Since this is the sad reality of what is left behind when something like this happens, and I really appreciate David sharing this with me, as it isn't something that is often discussed when speaking about missing people. Anne's family have been left without the answers they need, but also without

the support that they also needed over these years. The heartbreak of their mother being missing and also losing the life they knew and many people close to them must have been devastating, and I do really feel for David and his brother Steve. This is the reason I created the podcast, and speaking to families of missing people is so important to me. I say it all the time in my episodes, but families deserve to know what happened to their loved ones,

and there are so many people impacted by these cases. I again want to thank David for speaking to me and clarifying some of these points about his mum's disappearance. I hope the family do eventually get answers to what happened to Anne, but if you do know anything, then please contact police on one oh one and let them know the information that you have. Thank you for

listening to today's episode. If you'd like to support the podcast further, then you can on Patreon and contribute to the exclusive polls to get extra bonus episodes every month. You can also get access to new episodes early and add free. You can use the links in the show notes to visit Patreon and see what we offer. You can also support us by reviewing the podcast wherever you listen, including Spotify, and also just share the episodes. You can subscribe

on YouTube and follow us on social media. As always, I'm Caprice and this has been unseen

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