MURDER APPEAL - Catch Linda 'Lyn' Bryant killer

Unsolved murder: can you help us catch Linda 'Lyn' Bryant's killer?

 

In one of the longest running murder investigations in the history of Devon and Cornwall Police, detectives are looking to catch the killer of Cornish mum, Linda ‘Lyn’ Bryant.

The 40-year-old was killed on Tuesday 20 October 1998 as she walked the family dog in quiet rural lanes near her home in Ruan High Lanes on The Roseland.

Her body was found in a field gateway between Ruan High Lanes Methodist Chapel and Treviles Manor. She had been stabbed a number of times in a prolonged attack.

Detectives remain convinced that someone holds vital information that could help to apprehend her killer.

Can you help?

Please tell us what you know on the Police Major Incident Public Reporting Site

Or tell CrimeStoppers what you know.

Linda Bryant

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Linda Bryant

Since 1998, the family of Lyn Bryant have lived with this terrible loss and uncertainty. However, time has not diminished our commitment to bring the killer to justice and to give the family some peace.

Despite the time since the murder, we remain convinced that someone knows what happened to Lyn and for some reason they have never come forward. Allegiances may have changed with the passage of time and those who found it difficult to talk to police may now feel able. Now is the time to contact us.

Advances in DNA have enabled police to produce a partial DNA profile which is believed to be that of the killer. Since October 2016, officers have been retaking DNA samples from people across the UK to check them against the partial profile.

Some are selected from the National DNA Database while others are being drawn from 6,000 individuals who gave DNA to the original enquiry. So far 224 samples have been retaken and tested.

A 20th anniversary appeal in 2018 generated more than 200 messages from the public, providing 60 new actions or enquiries.

In the last five years detectives have completed 450 enquiries and actions as part of the long-running investigation. Of those, 112 were DNA samples taken for comparison.

The case is constantly reviewed against new scientific techniques, the national DNA database and intelligence systems. Every piece of information received from the public is thoroughly investigated.

The discovery of the partial DNA profile was a significant step forward. We now need the public to give us the name of anyone they suspect had involvement in Lyn’s death so that we can match the DNA.

The death of the mum-of-two is one of the largest and longest running unsolved murder enquiries carried out by Devon and Cornwall Police.

In 1998 police pieced together Lyn’s final movements, including critical witness reports of three unknown men seen in the area at the time.

The three remain unidentified -

  1. a man seen speaking with Lyn at the chapel,
  2. a scruffy bearded man in a small white van
  3. and a man walking in a nearby field.

The van has never been traced and all three men have never come forward.

The sightings remain a key part of the investigation into Lyn’s murder.

 

White van sighting

On the morning of her death Mrs Bryant went to work as a cleaner at a local house and visited her parents who lived nearby.

Around 12.45pm, she drove her grey Ford Sierra to former Harris Garage at Tregony but they were out of fuel. She drove on to Chenoweth’s garage at Ruan High Lanes and bought fuel and groceries.

A white van driven by a heavy-set man in his 50s with a full scruffy beard pulled on to the forecourt. He remained in the van but appeared to follow Lyn when she drove away. The van had been seen in the area in previous days but neither the man nor the vehicle were known to locals.

More than 6,700 similar white vans have been traced and eliminated over the course of the investigation.

Why has this man never come forward despite repeated appeals? If anyone remembers him or the van then we would still very much like to hear from them.

 

The man at the chapel

The Chapel

Lyn returned home after the garage and had lunch with her 19-year-old daughter Erin. They talked about Lyn’s upcoming 41st birthday and watched Emmerdale.

Just after 1.30pm Lyn set out on her regular walk with Jay, the family’s tan and cream-coloured pet lurcher. She took her often-walked circular route from Ruan Lane opposite her home.

Due to wet weather, she was wearing a brown Barbour-style wax jacket, a blue jumper, jeans and walking boots; she walked the dog habitually every afternoon, whatever the weather.

Several people who knew Lyn saw her in the quiet lane heading towards Ruan High Lanes Methodist Chapel, now a private home.

A motorist passed by between 1.45pm and 2pm and spotted Lyn talking to a man at the junction by the chapel.

The man was around 5ft 9ins tall, of slim build, and was wearing light-coloured clothing, possibly a light grey top and trousers. He had no other distinguishing features. The sighting is critical because this is likely to be the last time that Lyn was seen alive. Again, despite repeated high-profile appeals, this man has never come forward.

Do you know who this man was? If so, please contact us.

 

Lyn’s body found

The gate

Shortly afterwards, at 2.30pm, Lyn’s body was found in the field gateway by a woman driving from her holiday stay at the manor. She immediately raised help and returned with a local farmer who recognised Lyn.

Police and ambulance were called at 2.34pm and the air ambulance arrived at 2.50pm but, sadly, Lyn died at the scene.

There had been no attempt to conceal her body and she was left lying in the gateway. She had suffered knife wounds to her back and neck, and a fatal stab wound to her chest.

We know that she must have fought against her attacker. Her clothing had been disturbed which leads us to conclude that this was a sexually-motivated murder. The weapon, believed to be a single-edged blade such as a penknife or a small kitchen knife, has never been found.

Have you seen the weapon, or do you know of its whereabouts? Please contact us if you have any information about it.

 

The man in the field

The next critical sighting was between 2.45pm and 3pm when another local farmer spotted a man randomly walking across a field near to the murder scene.

This was very unusual as this field does not have a footpath and was not generally used by walkers. He is described as being in his mid-30s, of medium height and medium to stocky build. He has short dark hair and is wearing a light-coloured top, possibly a sweatshirt, and darker-coloured trousers.

Was he connected to Lyn’s murder and was he the same man from the chapel? He is another man we need to trace. Please get in touch if you know who he is.

 

Blue fibres

A vital piece of evidence was the presence of vivid blue polyester cotton mix fibres, commonly used in polo shirts and sweatshirts, which were found on Lyn’s body.

They are believed to have been left by the attacker as they did not match anything belonging to Lyn or her home.

Lyn must have spent some time in contact with her attacker during a struggle in that muddy gateway. Lyn’s clothing was left mud-splattered.

Did anyone return home with mud or blood on their clothes, anxious, and not wanting to speak about why they were in that state or where they had been? We would be very keen to trace anyone who matches that description.

 

The glasses

The glasses

Lyn was wearing tortoiseshell glasses at the time of her death, but these were not found during a fingertip search of the crime scene and surrounding area.

Four months later, on 2 February 1999, the glasses reappeared on top of the mud in the gateway.

The reappearance of Lyn’s glasses remains a real mystery in this case. Why were they put back there? Were they found by somebody and returned to the scene or were they put there by the murderer?”

Any information about how and why Lyn’s glasses were returned could be vital. If you know anything, please contact us.

 

Local connection

Detectives remain convinced that the offender had a local connection due to the isolated murder location.

Lyn’s walking route took her from the A3708 Tregony to St Mawes main road into a very remote rural area. It is not an area that you would expect someone to just happen upon. It is more likely that someone had a reason to be there, whether through work, family or another connection. For this reason, we believe they were local at the time.

 

Community in shock

Linda Byrant with Jay

The murder shook the close-knit community of Ruan High Lanes and prompted Operation Grenadine, one of the Force’s biggest murder enquiries.

Over the course of the enquiry, officers have traced 1,600 people to establish their whereabouts at the time, taken 7863 statements, completed 3,144 house-to-house forms with locals, and traced and eliminated 6,573 vehicles. 

All males aged 14-70 and living within a one-mile radius of the murder were traced and their movements on and around 20 October 1998 investigated. Officers traced all males who had passed within a one-mile radius of the scene between 9am and 4pm on the day of the murder.

Police continue to call on people to come forward with critical information, however small, that they may have withheld at the time, possibly due to divided loyalty or half suspicions.

Lyn lived in Ruan High Lanes her whole life and was very popular with so many people. She was a wife, mother, and grandmother, and loved family life. She would have felt extremely safe in that area and walked for miles each day with her dog around the quiet lanes.

For her life to be taken in such a brutal and horrific way is extremely sad. Her family have never found peace knowing that the offender remains free – 25 years have gone by, but this has not lessened the pain of what happened to her that awful day.

 


She was a lovely lady - very popular, friendly and very sociable. She had time for everybody. She was really family-orientated; her children and her husband were the most important things to her, and she was really looking forward to having more grandchildren.

Lee Taylor - Lyn’s daughter

Can you help?

Please tell us what you know on the Police Major Incident Public Reporting Site

Or tell CrimeStoppers what you know.



 

Timeline: Tuesday 20 October 1998

Time What she did

AM

It is a normal working morning for Linda Bryant in the quiet village of Ruan High Lanes, the place she has lived her whole life.

She goes out to do some cleaning work at a local house. She makes a brief visit to her parents who live nearby and then returns home.

12.45pm

Lyn drives her grey Ford Sierra to the former Harris Garage at Tregony [now Roseland Garage] but finds they are out of fuel.

1.05pm

She drives onto Chenoweth’s garage at Ruan High Lanes where she buys fuel and some groceries.

A white van driven by a heavy-set man in his 50s with a full scruffy beard pulls onto the forecourt. He remains in the van but appears to follow Lyn when she drives away. The van has been seen in the area in previous days but neither the man nor the vehicle are known to locals.

She returns home and sees her daughter Erin, 19. They have lunch and watch Emmerdale [broadcast between 1pm and 1.30pm].

1.30pm

Shortly after 1.30pm Lyn sets out on her regular walk with Jay, the family’s brown and cream-coloured pet lurcher dog. She takes her usual and often-walked circular route, beginning at the lane opposite her home.

A number of witnesses, including people who know Lyn, drive by and see her walking along the main lane towards Ruan High Lanes Methodist Chapel.

1.45-2pm A motorist sees a woman who must be Lyn with Jay talking to a man at the junction by the chapel. He is around 5ft 9ins tall, of slim build, and wearing light-coloured clothing, possibly a light grey top and trousers. This is the last known sighting of Lyn.
2.30pm

Lyn’s body is located lying in the gateway to a field on a lane between nearby Ruan High Lanes Chapel and Treviles Manor. She is found by a woman who drives up the lane from her holiday accommodation at the manor.

She seeks help from a local farmer who recognises the body as that of Lyn Bryant.

2.34pm A 999 call is made and police and ambulance are quickly dispatched
2.50pm The air ambulance arrives. Lyn is pronounced deceased at the scene
2.45-3pm A farmer sees an unknown man walking in a nearby field which is very unusual. He is wearing normal clothing and shoes and heading away from the murder scene. He is described as being in his mid-30s, of medium height and medium to stocky build. He has short dark hair and is wearing a light-coloured top, possibly a sweatshirt, and darker-coloured trousers.
2 Feb 1999 Lyn’s missing tortoiseshell glasses are found on top of the mud in the gateway where her body was found four months before. They have only been there for a brief time and there is no explanation as to how they came to be there.

 

 

 

 

Linda bryant's car

 

 

Police prescence at the crime scene

 

The crime scene

 

Lyn Byrant newspaper clipping

 


 

The investigation: 25 years

Operation Grenadine

Date What happened
20 OCTOBER 1998 Operation Grenadine is launched after the body of 40-year-old mum-of-two Linda ‘Lyn’ Bryant is found. She had been stabbed in a prolonged attack and her clothes had been disturbed. House-to-house enquiries begin along with an extensive search of the scene.
21 OCTOBER 1998

A press conference is held at incident police headquarters in St Austell. Detective Superintendent Chris Boarland, who is heading the investigation, makes a public plea for information.

27 OCTOBER 1998 A police reconstruction takes place in Ruan High Lanes, re-enacting Lyn’s last movements in an attempt to jog the public’s memory.
29 OCTOBER 1998 A man with a white van similar to the one seen at Chenoweth garage before the murder is arrested in Cornwall. He is later released and eliminated from the investigation.
30 OCTOBER 1998 Lyn’s daughters Lee, 21, and Erin, 19, issue a family statement and attend a press conference to ask for the public’s help.
2 NOVEMBER 1998 Police say they are still looking for Lyn’s tortoiseshell glasses which she was believed to have been wearing at the time of her death. Detectives reveal that three men have been arrested to date and all eliminated.
3 NOVEMBER 1998 BBC Crimewatch arrive in Cornwall to reconstruct the last movements of Lyn Bryant.
12 DECEMBER 1998

The funeral of Lyn Bryant is held at Penmount Crematorium in Truro. More than 300 people attend.

JANUARY/FEBRUARY 1999  Police send out letters to hundreds of Maestro van owners to trace the driver of the white van seen on the garage forecourt. Hundreds of van drivers are stopped and questioned in Devon and Cornwall.
2 FEBRUARY 1999 Lyn’s missing glasses mysteriously reappear placed on top of the mud in the gateway where she was killed. They are found by the same farmer who found Lyn. The scene was intensively searched at the time of the murder and the gateway regularly used by the farm. Police say they could have been replaced by the killer or a member of the public who found them.
APRIL 1999

The first full investigative review of the case is conducted by police under the name Operation Hermitic.

12 OCTOBER 1999 More than 300 calls come into the police following a renewed appeal on BBC Crimewatch.
4 APRIL 2000

Police reveal that they have interviewed a 33-year-old man after his arrest for two murders in Norfolk. He was later ruled out.

OCTOBER 2000 Lee, Lyn’s daughter, makes a fresh appeal for information from the public.
MARCH 2002 A second full investigative review is undertaken by police under Operation Hermitic II to ensure all intelligence and evidence is captured and examined.
2007 An independent forensic review on the key evidence is conducted and checked against any scientific advances.
OCTOBER 2008 A 10-year anniversary public and media appeal is launched with the help of Lyn’s family.
2015

A further forensic review, codenamed Operation Pentagon, takes place. Police go back to basics and review hundreds of exhibits with forensic scientists.

MAY 2016 Detectives have a major breakthrough in the case when a partial DNA profile is developed thanks to the 2015 review - it is believed to belong to the killer.
OCTOBER 2016 A team of detectives begin retaking DNA profiles from the 6,000 people around the UK who originally gave their DNA at the time of the enquiry.
OCTOBER 2018

A 20-year anniversary appeal is launched. Police ask the public to come up with names of suspects to match against the DNA evidence. Police reveal DNA samples have been retaken from 130-140 people both locally and around the UK so far.

The appeal generates more than 200 calls and messages, providing detectives with 60 new actions and enquiries. All lines of enquiry are being pursued.

OCTOBER 2023

A 25-year anniversary appeal is launched by police. The public are urged to provide names and any information that they may have withheld over the years.

 

Investigation timeline

  • 20 OCTOBER 1998 -Murder of Linda Bryant
  • 2 FEBRUARY 1999 - Lyn’s glasses found at scene
  • APRIL 1999 - First full investigative review - Op Hermitic
  • MARCH 2002 - Second full investigative review - Op Hermitic II
  • 2007 - Independent forensic review
  • OCTOBER 2008 - 10-year anniversary public appeal
  • 2015 - Forensic review – Op Pentagon
  • MAY 2016 - Partial DNA profile developed
  • OCTOBER 2016 - Team of detectives begin retaking DNA profiles nationally.
  • OCTOBER 2018 - 20-year anniversary public appeal
  • OCTOBER 2023 - 25-year anniversary public appeal

Senior investigating officers

There have been six senior investigating officers [SIO]:

  • D/Supt / ACC Chris Boarland
  • DCI Martin Orpe
  • D/Supt Michele Slevin
  • Retired D/Insp Stuart Ellis
  • DI Steve Hambly
  • DI Rob Smith [current SIO]

Facts

  • Overall cost of investigation exceeds £2 million.
  • All males, aged 14 to 70, living within a one mile radius of the murder in 1998 were traced to investigate and corroborate their movements on and around 20 October.
  • All males passing within one mile radius of the scene between 9am and 4pm on 20 October 1998 were traced, seen and their movements investigated and corroborated.
  • (442 males were dealt with in this process)
  • In total over 1,600 people have been traced and investigated to ascertain and corroborate by independent means their whereabouts and movements during the relevant times.
  • Officers completed 3,144 house-to-house enquiry forms with people living in the area.
  • Officers traced 6,573 vehicles and their owners contacted.
  • The investigation account database contains 32,398 people – 7,863 statements have been taken and 8,215 exhibits are held.
  • Detectives continue to work to obtain and submit new DNA profiles from relevant individuals in an effort to identify the offender. More than 220 DNA samples have been re-taken in the last five years.

Can you help?

Please tell us what you know on the Police Major Incident Public Reporting Site

Or tell CrimeStoppers what you know.

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