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Yvonne Laker

Mar 03, 202429 min
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Episode description

In the afternoon of the 29th June 1964, 15 year old Yvonne Laker was travelling on a train from Southampton back to her boarding school in Maidstone. After being waved off by her Grandad she set off. Part way through the journey, Yvonne's body was found in the toilet in the compartment. Her throat had been cut with a glass bottle. The awful scene was hard to believe as is the fact that her murder is still unsolved.
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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 exploring the murder of fifteen year old Yvonne Laker in nineteen sixty four. Her murder, which happened while she was traveling on a train, shocked to the country, given that Yvonne was just fifteen years old and what happened to

her in broad daylight was so brutal and unnecessary. Despite the outrage that everyone felt, her murder was not solved and still remains unsolved to this day. This episode is about the murder of a child and so listener discretion is advised. Basingstoke Train Station was built to serve the town of Basingstoke in the County of Hampshire. It lies between Southampton, Winchester Reddin and is also around forty

eight miles from London. On the twenty ninth of June nineteen sixty four, a routine train service between Southampton and Reddin pulled into Basingstoke station at just before four point thirty pm. This was a service which regularly passed through Basingstoke and passengers both got on and off at the station. One of the passengers that

got on at the station was twelve year old Michael's sap. He had been spending the day train spot in. He got on the train and when he entered one of the compartments, he later recounted that he noticed that the toilet door was open. He spotted what he described as the legs of a lady, and then a pool of blood all over the floor. Michael immediately shouted

into another compartment and told them what he'd seen. Another passenger pulled the communication card and Michael quickly made the decision to jump back onto the railway track and run back to Basingstoke station. The train had just pulled out of the station and he made his way back to try and locate a doctor. This was an emergency situation and Michael thought very quickly on his feet. Police and emergency

services were immediately dispatched to the scene. It reported that when police initially looked into the toilet in the compartment, the scene looked as though it could have been a suicide. However, it soon became apparent that this was not at all what it was. The police found the body of a young woman in the toilet of the train compartment. She had evident severe injuries to her neck. The postmartem that was later conducted by doctor Keith Simpson established that the woman

had died from shock and hemorrhage due to her throat being cut. This was a brutal attack and it was clear that whoever had committed it was extremely dangerous. It did not take long for the police to establish who the victim was, given that her belongings were still in the compartment. The young woman was found to be in fact a child, fifteen year old Yvonne Laker. Yvonne had boarded the train at Southampton and was on her way back to Maidstone Catholic

Convent, a Catholic boarding school. Yvonne's parents, Sergeant Peter Laker and her mum Ursula, were living in Singapore, along with Yvonne's younger brother Robert. Her father was a sergeant in the RAF and both Yvonne and their other son, Christopher, were at boarding schools in the south of the UK. Thirteen year old Christopher was at a school in Oxford. Discovered that Yvonne had been staying with her grandparents in the area of Barton on Sea, a Coastal village

in Hampshire. That morning, her grandfather, Major Cyril Laker, had dropped Iton off at the train station in Southampton. She had boarded at three twenty five pm that afternoon and the train had left Basingstoke station at four twenty eight pm, with her body being found shortly after this. The police was shocked by the brutality of the crime and the brazen nature of it taking place during daytime with other people on the train. How had this happened? There was

hope that someone must have seen something important or relevant during that time. Early on in the investigation, police were interested in trying to establish when on the journey this murder had taken place. The train was evacuated after the discovery of the body, and the remaining passengers were transferred to a relief train. This allowed police to look more carefully at the crime scene, and they also searched the train tracks. A beret and some shoes were discovered on the tracks near

the station of Mitchell Deva, north of Winchester. This they thought could initially point to where the murder may have taken place on the journey. These items were later identified as belonging to Yvonne. The journey between Mitchell Dever and Basingstoke would have taken around twenty minutes. The compartment that Yvonne was traveling in was crucial to the police investigation, and they concentrated their efforts to trying to find

as much evidence as they could. The working theory was that Yvonne may have been initially attacked in the compartment and then her body had been dragged to the toilet where her throat had been cut. This was a murder with such vas violence that nobody could comprehend, particularly when the victim was only a child. Detective Chief Superintendent Walter Jones, who was leading the investigation, described the murder to the press as the work of a maniac, showing his level of shock

and disgust at what had happened. There were some very important pieces of evidence found in the compartment which police wanted to immediately find out more about. On the seat behind where Yvonne had been sitting, police found a brown paper carrier bag. When they looked inside the bag, they discovered what looked to be the remains of someone's lunch. Given that police were working on the theory that Yvanne's attacker had been in the compartment and had been sack close to her.

They were very interested in this. Inside the bag they found a bread roll, a lettuce and cucumber sandwich, and a half eaten packet of biscuits. The pack it had been the brand Saint Michael, meaning that they came from the shop Marx and Spencer. Police believed that this bag and its contents were very significant and so they appealed for anyone that had been on the train to come forward if they believed that they had seen someone eating this particular packet of

biscuits. They also appealed to the public and one headline from the time read did you pack the Killer's lunch? Police explained that they believed there was a wife, a mother or a landlady out there who packed this man's lunch and that they may remember it and make the contents of it regularly. They believed this as the brown bag looked as though it had been folded many times, as though used a lot. Police even went so far as to trace the

bread wrapper that was inside the brown bag. This came from Midland made Farmhouse Bread, which originated from East Midland Cops Operative Bakery at Langley Mill in Derbyshire. The mill told police that they distributed to long Filton, Ilkston, Langley Mill, Ripley, Derbyshire, Grantham, Lancashire, and Selstone, Nottinghamshire. This could help them to narrow down who this lunch had belonged to and perhaps

who was in the compartment with Yvonne. Police had also found some fragments of green glass, both in the compartment and on the track outside the train. This they believe came from the glass bottle which was used to murder Yvonne. This glass bottle was found through investigation to have come from a sherry bottle due to the markings that had been left on it. This was also crucial information. Through investigation, police were able to establish a timeline for Yvonne's murder.

She had set off on the train at three twenty five pm and had been seen off by her grandfather. There was reportedly no one else in her compartment at that time. At three point fifty eight, the train left the Winchester stop and police believed that this may have been where the killer had got onto the train. At four oh eight pm, the train stopped at Mitchell Deva and witnesses that were on the train had told police that there was no man

left in the compartment at that point. The train then carried on to Basingstoke and it was then that police believed that Yvonne was killed, and she was then found as the train pulled out of Basingstoke at four twenty eight pm. They were actually dealing with quite a tight timeline for when this could have happened, and this should have made the investigation easier. However, the lack of

witnesses who actually saw anything suspicious that day made this difficult. Despite this, it appeared that police had made good progress with the investigation and in just over a week they had made an arrest. It's reported that on the eighth of July, the police had arrested a twenty seven year old man for Yvonne's murder. It was revealed that this man was an unemployed farm worker named Derrek Pie. I'm very excited to speak to you about the sponsor of today's episode,

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and use code unseen fifty to get fifty percent off. That's code unseen fifty at factimels dot com. Slash unseen fifty to get fifty percent off. Thank you for listening to this sponsor and for supporting the podcast. Derek Pie was a married father of three and so when he attended his first court hearing,

there was a lot of interest in him. What was the evidence against this unassuming husband and father and why did police believe that he had killed ivonn Officers covered his head so that the crowds of people could not immediately get a look at him. However, in the subsequent pre trial hearings that followed, a lot more information about Pie would be revealed. It was discovered that Derek Pie had arrived on the police's radar after he had been taken into custody on a

different charge. On July the second days after Yvonne's murder, Derrick had knocked on the door of his neighbor, missus Elizabeth Stewart Naedler, at high Point, Ditton Hall, Farnham in Surrey. She stated that he looked a mess. The left side of his face and his left hand were covered in blood, and his shirt was bloodstained. He told her that he'd been hit by

a car that had failed to stop and he needed some help. She agreed to take him to Farnham Hospital. On the way to the hospital, he got out of her car to use a phone box, which he told her he was using to ring his wife. He then used the phone box in the backyard of the pub. He left that yard and used another phone box across the road. After using this phone, he then reportedly just walked off down the road. This was an odd occurrence for someone who was so desperate

to get to the hospital. However, it would turn out that what he had told his neighbor was not true story, as a few days later he was arrested on charges of taking and driving a car. It turned out he had taken someone's car, driven it away, and driven into a telegraph pole. He was not hit by a car, which is what he'd stated it was. While in custody, however, that a link between Pie and Yvonne's

murder was established. A police officer later testified that he found Pie crying in his cell while in custody, and he told this officer that he had seen someone dragging Yvonne Laker through the compartment and that he was there that day on the train. He said he had entered the compartment with Yvonne and another man. He went to the toilet and when he came back, Yvonne was leaning on the man. The man told Pie that Yvonne was sick and then proceeded

to take her to the toilet. They were then in there around two to three minutes. When the man emerged, Pie said he asked if the woman was okay, and the man told him it's none of your business. Police believed that this account was untrue and actually Pie had been the person who had killed von that day and he had put himself in that compartment with her.

They did concede that they had no scientific evidence to prove this. The prosecution at these hearings did present some evidence, however, that was not just circumstantial. Michael Isaac's, a Scotland yard scientist, testified that he had found a tiny fragment of green glass in the right hand pocket of a soue owned by Derek Pie. Mister Isaac said that he examined hundreds of fragments and pieces of green glass found by detectives on the train and on the railway track. He

had built up the base of a bottle with some of these pieces. The pieces showed the letters GBC, which were Roade numbers on all bottles of the brand Quest, which was a sherry bottle. The fragment in Pie's pocket was only just visible to the naked eye, and so he could not say for deafinite that it came from the same bottle. Police officers who searched Pie's home explained that they had found some Quester sherry bottles and confirmed that they took the

suit from his home. In the end, Pie had been interrogated for thirteen and a half hours, and for his part, he denied having anything to do with the murder and stated that the only thing he did was holed the toilet door open for the man, he did not murder her. Despite his denials, he was committed to trial in September. Pie's defense team told the judge they didn't think they had enough time to prepare for a trial beginning in

November. However, the judge disagreed and the trial continued as planned. While these hearings were taking place, Yvonne's family were coming to terms with her unnecessary loss. Her funeral took place at New Milton in Hampshire. However, her family were determined to keep this as private as possible and wanted to grieve without the crowds of onlookers who often do appear in high profile cases such as hers.

During Derrek Pye's trial, a ticket collector who had been on the train that day confirmed that he had seen him and that he had indeed been there on that day that Yvonne had been murdered. This, however, did not help too much, as Pie admitted he was on the train, but he

said he'd seen another man in the compartment. The ticket collector did also confirm that there was another man in the compartment at one stage, but he didn't know if this other man had got out earlier, and therefore this would have left Pie and Yvonne alone. This witness testimony was of course jumped on by the defense, who stated that this proved if someone else was in the compartment

and raised reasonable doubt that Derek Pie had committed the murder. During the trial, the bold move of taking the judge and the jury to the train compartment where Yvonne had been killed was made. The prosecution questioned Pie, stating that he could have heard about Yvonne's murder in the newspaper and produced a daily Mirror paper from the thirtieth of June, where it outlined the train that she traveled

on and showed a picture of her. This implied that Derek had plenty of time to come forward with the information that he knew, but he didn't. Pie stated that the Mirror was his usual paper, but that he didn't normally read about murders, so he wouldn't have seen it. Another odd piece of information that came out during Pie's questioning is that he'd noticed that there was glass on the floor in the compartment and that he thought this was quite dangerous and

admitted to throwing a piece of it out of the window. Other witnesses were also called, including a man named Ronald Bridges who was working in his tractor cutting a field of hay around four thirty pm close to the route between Mitchell dev and Basingstoke. He said he's Sarah man he presumed was walking from the railway tracks. He was of adverage height in his twenties, with brushed back

hair, wearing a dark jacket and trousers. He thought the man was carrying something but he only took a quick glimpse, so wasn't sure it reported quite a few people use that route and so it wasn't that unusual to see someone there. Another witness called Joseph Discipline also Sarah Man, around thirty two to thirty five years of age, standing around a quarter of a mile from the railway tracks. Derrick Pye's trial lasted seven days and the jury deliberated for six

and a half hours before returning with the herm verdict. Derek Pye was acquitted of murdering Yvonne Laker. It was clear that the prosecution had not proved guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. This was not the end of the stories for Derek Pie, however. The judge stated that this case attracted the utmost revulsion and horror, and despite the fact that Pie had been acquitted of Avonn's murder, he had two further indictments against him which he would have to stand trial for.

His defense team argued that he had already spent four and a half months in prison on the murder trial and that he should be allowed to go. They alluded that the charges were something to do with Pye's wife. However, the judge said, I was not thinking of the charge concerning her, I was thinking of the charge concerning arson. It's reported that Pye had set a light a barn, broke into a house in Basingstoke and set fire to furniture.

He was convicted of those three charges, but acquitted of the charges of setting fire to another three barns in the area. He was sentenced to serve eighteen months in prison for these offenses. Pie's wife, Irene, stated that

she would stand by him and wait for him to get out. This was a very strange set of events, and while Pie was acquitted through lack of evidence of Yvanne's murder, it was clear that he did have a criminal past, which included setting fires, stealing cars, and possibly some charges involving his wife. This verdict left Ivan's case back at square one. What had looked like a promising lead in the beginning turned out to be the opposite. So

the question was where did they go from here with the investigation. In the years that followed, police did continue to try and solve the murder and appealed for information from people who may have been on the train, and tried to track down as many leads as they could. However, this proved fruitless. Strangely, Yvon's was not the only murder to have happened on a train. In the years that followed, other murders took place, which served to put

Yvonne's case back in the headlines. In April nineteen sixty five, thirty one year old Enid May Wheeler, aged thirty one, was found dying on the railway line between Aldershot and ashe Vale on the Surrey Hampshire border. She later

died of her injuries. It was later found that Patrick Jenner, a laborer, had been arrested for the murder of Enid May Wheeler and had been caught through bloodstains and fibers on his clothes, a tie clip found near the body, a knife discovered near the track, as well as a palm print in the compartment. While her crime got solved, it again drew attention to Yvonne's

case that remained unsolved. Another murder also took place In September nineteen sixty five, A twenty three year old woman was found dead on a train from Bogna, Regis in Sussex to Victoria in London. She was discovered in the front compartment of the train that had left Bogna, Regis some time after four o'clock and got into Gatwick Airport at five thirty one pm. Two special coaches were attached to the train at that point, and it was then that the driver

looked into the compartment and saw the body under the seat. Twenty CID men, led by Detective Superintendent John Place, went to the scene and found signs of a desperate struggle. Blood was splashed all over the compartment and she had had her throat slashed. This was a worry for investigators who now had their third train murder in eighteen months. Why was this happening and how did it keep happening without people witnessing it. The victim was identified as Patricia Willard,

a trainee teacher. Michael Gillis was eventually convicted of the murder, and he stated that he killed Patricia because she was showing too much leg on the train and that all the hate and resentment I had for women came to my head. They had gone past the point of no return, and I do not remember what happened between this and stabbing her in the throat. Gillis was convicted of manslaughter on account of diminished responsibility due to an abnormality of the brain at

the time of the murder. Patricia and Enid's murders were solved and they did receive some justice for what happened to them, but unfortunately Yvonne has not, and to this day, Yvonne's murder has not been solved. The case is nearly sixty years old and police did not seem to have been any closer to finding out who killed her. It isn't clear if police believe that they did have their man with Derek Pye and therefore did not look much closer at anyone

else, or just that other suspects did not emerge in the investigation. It would be interesting to note if either of the other suspects in the other murders were looked at after their convictions. Ivan's case has become part of history with no real investigation having taken place. Since it is a very cold case now this many years later, there is always some hope that Ivan's case will be

solved, and I maintain this hope for her and her family. If you know anything about the murder of Yvonne Laker, then please contact police on one oh one. Thank you for listening, and thank you so much to Factor for sponsoring today's episode. Remember, if you're in the US, head over to Factor and use the code Unseen fifty for fifty percent off your order.

Please see the link in the show notes for more information. 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 in ad free. 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 always, I'm Caprice and this has been Unseen the sh

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