Deborah Steel - podcast episode cover

Deborah Steel

Feb 04, 202420 min
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Episode description

In the early hours of the morning on the 28th of December 1997, 37 year old Deborah Steel left the Royal Standard pub in Ely where she was the landlady. She was heading to her home around a mile away. She would never contact her family or friends again and no one has seen her since. In 2014, her missing person investigation would be reclassified to a murder.


If you have information about this please contact:

Police on 101

Crimestoppers: 0800555111

Cambridgshire police: https://www.cambs.police.uk/ro/report/ocr/af/how-to-report-a-crime/


Important information provided by:


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cambridgeshire-29252566


https://www.elystandard.co.uk/news/22765353.police-appeal-help-solve-case-ely-landlady-went-missing-20-years-ago/


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cambridgeshire-64002245

https://www.cambridge-news.co.uk/news/cambridge-news/deborah-steel-missing-ely-landlady-14066874

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cambridgeshire-32378089


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cambridgeshire-29252566


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cambridgeshire-29043818


All contemporary articles: https://www.findmypast.co.uk/


Music by: dl-sounds.com

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Transcript

Hi, and welcome back to the Unseen podcast podcast dedicated to missing people, unresolved cases and UK true crime. Today, we're going to be discussing the disappearance of thirty seven year old Deborah Steel in Ely in Cambridgeshire. In nineteen ninety seven. The popular pub Landlady disappeared after a shift and has not been seen since. Her family want answers to what happened to her. As Deborah's disappearance is still unsolved. This episode is about a missing person and does not

contain any graphic descriptions. However, listener discretion is always advised. The Royal Standard Pub is located in Ealy in Cambridgeshire. Eely is a city which is well known for its large and decorative cathedral and its proximity to both Cambridge and London. The Royal Standard Pub was located in Ealy, just a stone's throw from the famous cathedral. The pub has been an integral part of Ealy life for hundreds of years and is one of the oldest buildings in the area of

four Hill. It started out life as a one room public house in around the fifteenth century. The pub is still going strong today and is listed as one of the most popular places to eat and drink in that area. In nineteen ninety seven, thirty seven year old Deborah Steel and her partner Brian McDermot were running the pub and had been for three years. Deborah was a very

popular landlady. Her family described her as very bubbly, a friendly and outgoing person, the perfect person to run a pub, and by all accounts, Deborah and dried her work. She was hard working and aspirational, and during the later hanme of nineteen ninety seven is reported that she had secured financing for a new catering business which she wanted to set up. Things seemed to have been going well for Deborah and so during the Christmas period that year she would

have been busier than ever. Deborah and Brian had split up in August of nineteen ninety seven, however, they were both still running the pub and it appeared that they were still living together during that period of time. On December twenty seventh, nineteen ninety seven, Deborah worked a shift at the pub as she planned to do, and then it reported that her original plan was to stay overnight at the pub. However, this is not what she decided to

do. Deborah was seen leaving the Royal Standard Pub around one am that morning after finishing work. Deborah and Brian lived around a mile away from Ealy in the long Fields area, and it's believed that this is where Deborah headed in the early hours of the morning on the twenty eighth of December. The next morning, Brian woke up and found that Deborah's bed had not been slept in. However, as Deborah had been due to stay overnight at the pub,

this may not have struck him as unusual. When Deborah had still not returned after a couple of days, is reported that Brian believed that she may have gone to visit friends in London unannounced, as this is something she had done before. Her family, however, knew that when she was still missing over the New Year period, something must be wrong. She had not been in contact with anyone and she had failed to turn up to work, which was

not something that Deborah would have done. She was responsible and did not let other people down. Her family feared that something must have happened to her, and they contacted the police on the second of January to report her missing. Police began making inquiries into her disappearance and they put out an appeal around two weeks after she'd last been scene. A police spokesman stated, we're keen to trace Deborah to know that wherever she is, she is alive and well.

A description of Deborah was also issued. She was described as white, five feet six inches tall and of a medium build. She had ash blonde, long hair and brown eyes with a fair complexion. When she was last seen, she was thought to be wearing brown jeans, brown boots, a dark colored raincoat, and had possibly been wearing a yellow top. The fact that Deborah had just seemingly disappeared into thin air was concerning and so unlike her that

her family didn't know what to think. They knew that she would always contact them, and so the fact that she hadn't was the most worrying part. The police had to try and figure out how far she had got on her journey home and whether she had in fact made it back had something happen to her on the way home. It reported in Cambridge Alive that there were some odd things found at her home that in some ways suggested that she'd made it

back there. That night. When police searched the home, they found that Deborah's keys were in the house, along with her mobile phone and all of her jewelry, which she normally wore. The jewelry was something that made her family think that she had actually made it home. Her half sister, Virginia Seca, told Cambridge Alive in this article, I think Deborah left the pub and I do believe she went home to her house in Italy before she went

missing. I believe this because police found her jewelry, which she never took off unless she was going to sleep. She used to wear my mum's engagement ring on a gold chain around her neck. She never went anywhere without it. This same chain had been found in the home. If something had happened to her on the way home, why were her keys and phone along with the jewelry she wore daily if found in her house. This was something that

it appeared no one could reconcile. There were other aspects of the case which also seemed important. In her home, there were two wineglasses which looked to have been recently used, but had not been cleaned. Her family stated that this was out of character for Deborah, who would usually have cleaned up after herself. It's also reported that clothing and a sports bag went missing from her home, and that police found a London Tube map with three stations on it

underlined. Police chased up this lead and obtained video footage from each of the name Tube stations in the hope that they would see Deborah on one of them. This lead didn't appear to have gone anywhere. Her family also did not think that Deborah would have got on public transport by herself. Her sister stated, I know police found a map with some undergrad stations on, but she wouldn't have got a bus or a train on her own because she had anxiety

issues and suffered from panic attacks. She also couldn't drive. If Deborah hadn't got on public transport, then where could she have gone, Given that she didn't drive and couldn't have just gone somewhere completely independently, This was another big question in the case. The police had some evidence that that night Deborah walked a short distance to a restaurant named Almonry, and it was here that she

was picked up by a taxi driver, probably someone that she knew. The other big question is, of course, what was her motive for leaving. Deborah was looking forward to her future and she had plans for it. She had just got financing for a new business that she was setting up, so why would she want to leave this behind. It reported in various articles that Deborah had left the pub that night, possibly after an argument. However this

has not been expanded on in the reporting. Who this argument was with or why it happened isn't clear. Whether this had anything to do with her disappearance is also unclear. Police did not have a lot of information to go on in the days and weeks following her disappearance, and her family held out as much hope as they could that she would be found alive and well. Deborah, however, did not contact anyone after her disappearance, and in the three

weeks since she'd been missing. There was a possible sighting of Deborah reported close to the cathedral, but there was never confirmed to be her. Fliers were distributed and her description was given to the public in the hope that someone saw her. At the end of January nineteen ninety eight, the Cambridge Evening News reported that there was a new lead. Witnesses had noticed a white man who drove an old white Volvo a state car who had been seen visiting Deborah's house

on two weekends in October. He was in his late thirties and Detective Superintendent John Cummins, who was leading the investigation, described him as a new associate of Deborah's and they were keen to speak to him to see if he could help them. Police helicopters were also deployed to aid in the search, as

well as a ten officer team. Despite a thorough search of both the house and pub by officers, helicopter searches, and appeals from Deborah's family, by March nineteen ninety eight, the police was still calling her disappearance an absolute mystery and they were drawing a blank. In the months that followed, police continued to monitor her bank accounts, and despite a large amount of money being put into her bank as a result of financing for her new business venture, none

of it had been touched. By July nineteen ninety eight, Detective Superintendent Cummins stated that he feared the worst for Deborah and the fact that she had not used any money was a concern. He said it was unlikely that she had decided to just disappear, and that they were not pursuing that as a line of inquiry vanishing completely, he said, would take a certain amount of planning

and was something that someone would not be able to do easily. Brian, Deborah's former partner, told the press at the time, the regulars miss her. She's a character behind the bar and in her own riot. I don't care if she doesn't phone me, but I want to know that she's our riot. Deborah's father also spoke to the press in August of that year, stating that he was losing hope that Deborah would be found alive. He said, it's gone on so long. We haven't given up hope, but things

aren't looking good. When we didn't get birthday cards, we decided that was it. I've never known her to take off. This statement was echoed by other members of Deborah's family, with her sister stating that she knew after a few weeks of her not contacting family that she was not of this world and

that something must have happened. It appears that police also believed this, and while the family have praised police for how long they kept the investigation going, they could find little evidence that Deborah was alive and well living somewhere else. This is the way that The case would stay until twenty fourteen, when Cambridge Police decided to reopen the case. When the case was reopened, it was

also reclassified from a long term missing person case to a murder inquiry. Police then began to run a murder investigation and this involved searching the garden and the property where Deborah had previously lived in Longfields, which reported The excavators peeled back the garden at the property and all saw the patio at the Royal Standard Pub in an effort to find some sort of evidence in the crime. They also

reinvestigated leads that had come in during nineteen ninety eight. There were three arrests made during the investigation. Three men from Ealy aged fifty, seventy and seventy three were all arrested. However, they were released without charge. In twenty fifteen, police appealed to anyone that used to go in the Royal Standard Pub

or knew any information about Deborah to come forward and help the investigation. Police were hoping that they would find some new information about Deborah's disappearance and made clear in twenty seventeen that they believed that she came to some harm when she left the pub in the early hours of the twenty eighth of December. They stated that they still wanted to make contact with the taxi driver who may have given Deborah the lyft that night, and we're eager to establish what had happened.

Detective Chief Inspector Adam Gallop of the Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Hertfordshire Major Crime Unit said, if you live in the UK, you leave a footprint somewhere. It's very difficult to disappear. There is no sign that Debbie is alive. She had plans in life, she had aspirations. I really believe that she was murdered and her body concealed somewhere within easy traveling distance of Ealy. This must of course been devastating news to Deborah's family, but it does not appear

to be something that they didn't already believe themselves. Her half sister, Virginia Seca, stated, I last spoke to her a few days before Christmas. We didn't get to speak to each other on Christmas Day because we were both so busy. She was going to come and visit me between Christmas New Year. A friend was going to drive her to come and stay with me, or I was going to pick her up. I still buy her a Christmas present every single year. Without a body or evidence, there's nothing. It's

a case of relying on Chinese whispers. But I know somebody must know something. Twenty years is a very long time to wait. I'm hoping that reopening the appeal to find out what happened to her will prick somebody's conscience. I'd like the people of Ealy to search their souls and hearts, and if they have any suspicions, they must go to the police with them. Sadly, I do believe she was murdered. There have been arrests, but nothing has

come of them. She also talked about how sad it was that her father died before finding out what happened to Deborah. It's very sad that our father went to his grave without laying Debbi to rest. His last sentence to me was find out what happened to her. It must have been horrible for him. It's bad enough if you lose a child, but to never know what happened to them. I don't want to go to my grave not knowing the truth. I do believe the secret to what happened to her lies in ealy

somewhere. Sadly, Virginia died in twenty twenty one, also without finding out what happened to her sister. Their other sister, Sam told the BBC in twenty twenty two, I was with Jeanie at the end and promised her I'd keep on trying to find the truth. You don't just disappear, even after twenty five years. Someone knows what happened. Our dad went to his grave without answers, and I think that broke Jeanie's heart. Now she'll never find

out either. I hate this time of year, especially with Genie gone and with Debbie. We haven't got closure. We have no body to bury it and no place to go to remember her. We always hold on to home. All we hope for is closure. I think we know what the outcome is, but we want it in black and white. It's so evident that Deborah's disappearance has caused so much heartache for her family, who just want to know what happened to her in nineteen ninety seven. She was much loved and

cared for, and her family were left heartbroken when she went missing. The family have praised the police for their management of the case. And the effort that they have gone to to find Deborah. I really do hope that information or evidence comes out in this case, and it's not too late for someone with information to come forward. Someone must know what happened to Deborah in the

early hours of the twenty eighth of December nineteen ninety seven in Ealy. If you know anything about her disappearance, please contact one oh one or the link to Cambridge of Police in the show notes, or you can contact crime Stoppers anonymously on eight hundred five five five one one one. 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 exclusive polls to get extra bonus episodes every month.

You can also get access to new episodes early and ad free. You can use the link 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 our ways. I'm Caprice and this has been unseen sh

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