Carmarthen Journal

Farm deaths case set to reopen with ‘serial killer link’

- ROB HARRIES Reporter robert.harries@walesonlin­e.co.uk

POLICE refuse to rule out a potential link between the deaths of a brother and sister whose bodies were found in Pembrokesh­ire more than 45 years ago and one of Wales’ most notorious serial killers.

Martha and Griff Thomas were found dead at Ffynnon Samson – the farmhouse they lived at together – in the village of Llangolman in December 1976.

An inquest held the following year concluded that Mr Thomas had killed his sister after a row and then died after setting himself on fire. It was therefore widely accepted that nobody else was involved in the deaths, or in the fire that was started inside the house.

However, speculatio­n has circulated for decades that a third party may have been involved.

This speculatio­n intensifie­d in the years that followed when brother and sister Richard and Helen Thomas were killed in their home at Scoveston Park before it was set on fire in December 1985. Chillingly, that happened around 20 miles from where Martha and Griff Thomas were found dead.

The man responsibl­e for the Scoveston Park murders was serial killer John Cooper, originally from Milford Haven, who was jailed for life in 2011 for a raft of crimes including four murders in total.

Cooper has famously been nicknamed The Game Show Killer because he appeared as a contestant on ITV’S Bullseye in the late 1980s in between two sets of murders of which he was later convicted, and footage from the episode was even used years later to bring him to justice.

Last week, Dyfed-powys Police confirmed that it would re-open the Ffynnon Samson case because “significan­t developmen­ts have been seen in forensic science over the last 40 years which may provide additional informatio­n even in cases of this age”. When pressed on whether there could be a link between the deaths and serial killer Cooper – who has consistent­ly been linked with other murders aside from the four he was convicted of – a spokeswoma­n for the force did not rule out a potential link, saying: “We are reviewing what limited material we have and we will keep an open mind as we are led by scientific examinatio­ns.”

Hefin Wyn, editor of the Welsh-language and Pembrokesh­ire-based newspaper, Clebran, which has long campaigned for a re-opening of the Ffynnon Samson case, said it was a positive sign that police were now looking at material again, and that they believed Gruff Thomas, who had lived in Llangolman all his life, was innocent and not responsibl­e for his sister’s death.

“We have discussed the contents of the original police report submitted to the inquest with several experience­d ex-policemen, who have been involved in solving serious crimes, and they are of the opinion there are obvious questions that need to be asked regarding the nature of the original investigat­ion,” said Mr Wyn.

“We continue with our campaign to clear Gruff Thomas’s name, who was deemed to have murdered his sister, and we insist not enough attention was given to the likely theory that a third person was responsibl­e for the crime. There is a glimmer of hope that some evidence can be found to prove what all those inhabitant­s who knew the brother and sister sincerely believe that they had not attacked each other.”

 ?? ?? Serial killer John Cooper.
Serial killer John Cooper.

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