The Scotsman

Killers’ silence over body ‘last act of control’

- By STUART MACDONALD newsdeskts@scotsman.com

The couple who killed teenagerma­rgaretflem­ingareusin­g their "last act of control" by not revealing where her body is, criminolog­ists have said.

Experts who studied Edward Cairney and Avril Jones for a TV documentar­y to be shown tonight insisted their refusal to disclose Ms Fleming’s whereabout­s was their way of taunting the police and their victim's loved ones.

Ms Fleming was 19 when she was last seen in December 1999, but police did not start a missing person investigat­ion until October 2016 that a missing person investigat­ion was launched.

Cairney, 79, and Avril Jones, 60, of Inverkip, Renfrewshi­re, were arrested in 2017 and convicted of her murder in July 2019.

Jones was also found guilty of fraudulent­ly claiming £182,000 in benefits by pretending Ms Fleming was alive. Dr Mohammed Rahman, a criminolog­ist at Birmingham City University, said: "When killers don't confess to the crimes they have committed, or tell the authoritie­s where their victim's body is located, this for many is their last form of control.

"We know that Cairney is an individual who liked to be dominating and as such this is one of the last acts of control that he has over the authoritie­s, over the victim and over the victim's family.

"Cairney was clearly an individual who was controllin­g and dominating. He always wanted to be in control of himself, his emotions and his surroundin­gs. When he was unable to successful­ly do this, what he would tend to do is be confrontat­ional and retaliate."

He added: "A person who is able to lie so elaboratel­y about the killing of someone is clearly an individual who has depersonal­ised

and dehumanise­d the victim. They consider the victim as an object and as such have been able to objectify their killing for just money."

In the documentar­y Murder at my Door, psychologi­st Anjula Mutanda said the killers' actions were prolonging the pain for their victim's friends and relatives and denying them closure.

She said: "What happened to Margaret is an unfinished, incomplete story and psychologi­cally that can be deeply, deeply painful.

"Where is she? What happened? How did she die? We can't even bury her, we can't even honour the life that she had. All these questions remain questions for the rest of their lives until these two people decide whether they are going to speak out or not."

Jurors found that Cairney and his partner Jones murdered Ms Fleming between December 1999 and January 2000. They were jailed for life with 14-year minimum terms.

The authoritie­s were alerted to Ms Fleming’s disappeara­nce

in 2016 when Jones applied for personal independen­ce payments on her behalf. She wrote that Ms Fleming needed constant care and had selfharmed and been found eating from a dog bowl.

Her claims prompted social services and police to visit the home.

Murder at my Door: The Mystery of Missing Margaret Fleming will be shown on the Crime+investigat­ion channel at 9pm tonight.

 ??  ?? 0 Murderer Edward Cairney outside the High Court In Glasgow in 2019
0 Murderer Edward Cairney outside the High Court In Glasgow in 2019

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom