
REVIEW: Solve-Along-A-Murder-She-Wrote at Eden Court was an evening of unadulterated fun and nostalgia
As a crime reporter for the Press and Journal, it seemed only right that I should be the one to join a gang sofa sleuth's as Solve-Along-A-Murder-She-Wrote returned to Eden Court in Inverness.
Despite the fact that the show has been here before, I was a first time 'Fangela' – the term coined by show creator and Murder She Wrote (MSW) superfan Tim Benzie for those enthusiastic enough about the long-running cosy-crime drama to join his audience.
After collecting a goody bag on the way into the OneTouch Theatre, I felt a frisson of excitement run though the auditorium as the famed Jessica Fletcher – protagonist of the popular 80s and 90s show – flashed on the screen.
As the familiar strains of the opening credits rolled, host Tim Benzie began what would be a whirlwind tour through Fletcher's fictional world, all tied together by the evening's chosen episode – Paint Me a Murder, first aired in 1985.
His MSW montage recreation endeared him immediately to the audience, who proved themselves more willing than many I have seen at the Highland venue to join in with interactive interludes.
The show was perfectly pitched for all to enjoy – from the clueless newbies (there were a couple among our number who confessed to never having seen an episode) to the die-hard Fangelas (who battled it out during a hilarious Cabot's Cove quiz).
Choosing between watching the show as the mystery unfolded or keeping an eye out for our host's affectionate on-stage antics was tough – so seriously were we taking our role as the operators of the 'suspiciometer' ranking the key players' likelihood of having committed the crime.
And when the denouement denoued, the only disappointment was that our evening was almost over – bar an enthusiastic singalong with Benzie's self-penned MSW theme tune; a tongue-in-cheek masterpiece that hit all the right notes, even if we didn't.
Solve-Along-A-Murder-She-Wrote was an evening of unadulterated fun and nostalgia, reverent to the late Angela Lansbury and her art, and recognisant of her fun-loving fandom.
Tim promised us a new episode if he is able to return to the Highland capital, and I for one can't wait to see what more he has in store.
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REVIEW: A Scottish Comedy Collective at Eden Court
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
The Orkney Assassin unmasked: How schoolboy, 15, escaped justice for 14 years for racist point blank execution of Indian waiter - and whose parents STILL believe 'real' killer is out there
New details have been revealed about a schoolboy who swerved justice for 14 years after his racist murder of an restaurant waiter. Michael Ross went on to be hailed for heroics in the first Gulf War as he served as a Black Watch sergeant. He joined the famous Scottish regiment at the age of 17 and progressed through the ranks, eventually becoming the sergeant of a sniper platoon - and his service included a tour of duty in Iraq in which comrades were killed. But he remained free for years before being jailed for the shooting to death at point blank range of Shamsuddin Mahmood at an Orkney Islands restaurant in Scotland. Ross was finally brought to justice when jailed for life, aged 29, in June 2008 - found guilty of carrying out the killing as a 15-year-old teenager. Now a new investigation has shed new light on Ross, as he and his family continue to say he was wrongly convicted. He was ultimately found guilty of what was described as a 'savage, merciless and pointless' murder of Mr Mahmood. Yet his parents are continuing to insist he is innocent and the 'real' killer remains on the loose, as suggested in a new Amazon Prime Video documentary about the case. Ross is seen here as a 29-year-old defendant outside Glasgow High Court in June 2008 The killing of 26-year-old Mr Mahmood came on June 2 1994 when a masked man walked into the Orkney Islands' only Indian restaurant and 'executed' his victim before calmly walking away. Ross's trial in 2008 heard that, as a youth, he harboured extreme racist views that drove him to hunt down and murder one of the island's few Asian residents. he became the main suspect just months after the murder, but police did not have enough evidence to charge him. The breakthrough came when a new witness walked into Kirkwall police station in 2006 with a note saying he had seen the killer in public toilets on the night of the murder brandishing a gun and identified him as Michael Ross. Ross's lawyer Donald Findlay, defending, insisted it was unthinkable for a 15-year-old to have committed such a crime, suggesting the killing bore all the hallmarks of a 'professional hit'. But at the end of a six-week trial, jurors took just four hours to find Ross guilty of murder by a majority verdict. Ross was subsequently sentenced to life behind bars with a minimum of 25 years. He insists he is innocent of the killing - and last month told the Orcadian newspaper that he was 'doing a 25-year life sentence for something I didn't do'. His parents have also rallied to his defence in the new documentary called The Orkney Assassin that will be made available on Amazon Prime Video this Sunday. Promotional material ahead of the broadcast suggests there is still 'a shadow of doubt still lingering and dividing opinion in the Orkney Islands to this day'. Speaking to the programme-makers, Ross's mother Moira Ross recalls the moment she asked the then-teenager whether he was a killer after his initial arrest. She says: 'I remember him coming home with the detective and he went up to his room and sat there, and I did go up and ask him. 'I said, "Did you shoot that man?" - and he said, "No". I just can't get over the look on his face when I asked him that.' Mr Mahmood had been living on the Orkney Islands for just six weeks before his death and was planning to return home to Bangladesh to wed his fiancée. His brother, barrister Abul Shafiuddin, paid tribute at Ross's 2007 trial, saying of Mr Mahmood: 'He was our baby brother and at least we know the person who killed him will be punished.' Ross was also found guilty by majority of attempting to defeat the ends of justice by disposing of the murder weapon and changing his clothing. During the trial, it emerged that his policeman father Edmund Ross had been jailed for hampering the investigation by withholding crucial evidence. Advocate depute Brian McConnachie QC, told the court the prosecution's case against Ross was based on 'compelling, unanswerable' circumstantial evidence. When the guilty verdict was announced, Ross leapt from the dock and tried to escape before being led to the cells - having been wrestled to the ground by a court official. He had been one of 12 soldiers decorated for outstanding service in Iraq in 2005 and was even mentioned in dispatches for showing bravery following two improvised explosive attacks in north Babil. Yet his downfall eventually came when a new witness walked into Kirkwall police station in 2006 with a note saying he had seen the killer in public toilets on the night of the murder, brandishing a gun - and identified him as Michael Ross. Ross had been questioned as a 15-year-old in relation to Mr Mahmood's death, after two witnesses had suggested they saw him wearing the same balaclava and dark clothing as the murderer in woodland a fortnight earlier. But he was only charged with lying to police and interfering with a witnesses, receiving a four-year jail term in 1997. His eventual murder trial was told now the anonymous letter writer, later named as William Grant, told of seeing Ross in public toilets near the restaurant, clad in balaclava and dark clothes, on the night of Mr Mahmood's killing. Jurors also heard that Ross had told a fellow army cadet as a schoolboy that 'blacks should be shot' and had textbooks scrawled with swastikas, SS symbols and slogans suggesting 'death to the English'. His father Edmund Ross tells the new Amazon Prime Video documentary: 'I didn't believe it. 'I knew my son for all that years and he never showed any tendencies or anything like that that I would expect him to go out and shoot anyone.' The Orkney Assassin: Murder in the Isles is being made available to Amazon Prime Video viewers in the UK and Ireland on Sunday 8 June.


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE How Britain's most dangerous female inmate chopped off a prison officer's FINGER to use in failed escape: Serial killer's life in 'monster mansion' jail where she is kept in total isolation to stop her claiming more victims
Joanna Dennehy chillingly described killing as 'moreish and fun' while being questioned by police for three murders. The 42-year-old went on to become one of only four women in the UK to be sentenced to a whole life order – meaning she will die behind bars. But today, she continues to pose such a threat to staff and inmates that keeping her in total isolation is the only option to stop her claiming more victims, according to a former prison governor who has studied her case in detail. During a 10-day killing spree in March 2013, Dennehy stabbed her 31-year-old lover Lukasz Slaboszewski to death before killing her housemate John Chapman and her landlord Kevin Lee. After dumping the three men's bodies in ditches across Cambridgeshire, she travelled 140 miles to Hereford with an accomplice, Gary Stretch, where she randomly stabbed two dog walkers, Robin Bereza, 64, and 56-year-old John Rogers. In 2014, a judge sentenced Dennehy to die behind bars, calling her a 'cruel, calculating, selfish and manipulative' serial killer. But the threat she poses is far from over, with the psychopath now considered Britain's most dangerous female prisoner. In fact, Dennehy is considered so violent and depraved she may be one of the most high-risk inmates in the entire prison system. Professor David Wilson, a criminologist who began his career in the Prison Service, has now given MailOnline a fresh insight into the extreme security that will be needed to control the fiend behind bars. Part of the threat she poses, he says, is due to her ability to manipulate people using sex - a 'skill' she has already used to embark on an affair with a prison officer and a fellow murderer she was locked up with. She also remains a highly violent psychopath who has been accused of plotting to kill fellow prisoners, including Rose West, and planning to escape by murdering a guard and using their severed fingers to unlock biometric doors. The four women handed whole life orders Joanna Dennehy: Murdered three men during a 10-day spree and tried to kill two others. Rose West: Helped her husband, Fred West, torture and murder ten young women between 1973 and 1987. Myra Hindley: Murdered five children alongside her lover Ian Brady as part of the 'Moors Murders'. Lucy Letby: Convicted of murdering seven infants and attempting to murder seven others between June 2015 and June 2016. 'Dennehy was identified very early on as someone who had to be managed very carefully due to her unusual offending profile and ability to manipulate,' Professor Wilson told MailOnline. 'So clearly, you're dealing with someone who you need maximum security and control over. 'It would be a question of solitary confinement to keep her away from other people. She is alleged she threatened the life of Rose West and - as was heard in court - also planned to escape.' Dennehy was held on remand at HMP Bronzefield in Surrey, where she was quickly put into solitary confinement after her threats against Rose West, who was herself convicted of 10 murders in 1995. For Professor Wilson, who has met several people close to Dennehy, targeting the 71-year-old was evidence of her determination to attain a sense of power by being seen as the prison's 'top dog'. The murder threat reportedly saw Dennehy moved into solitary confinement at Bronzefield. At the start of the decade, she was moved to HMP Low Newton after allegedly embarking on an affair with a male prison officer. But she continued causing problems after the move to the high-security jail in County Durham by striking up a relationship with a much younger woman, the murderer Emma Aitken. Aitken was jailed for life alongside her father Vincent Aitken and boyfriend Nathan Doherty for the murder of Barry Smith, who they battered to death before dumping his burnt body outside Kilburn Welfare Social Club in Derbyshire in 2013. Professor Wilson is far from surprised about Dennehy's illicit relationships, seeing them as evidence of her ability to con people with offers of sex in the hope of gaining control over them. 'It is part of the conning and the cunning to use sex as part of that manipulation, so it doesn't surprise me in the least that she is having sexual relations,' he said. 'She will be using this to get what she wants. 'Even when she was being interviewed in a police station in Hereford for attempting to kill two men out walking her dogs, she started to flirt with the female custody sergeant.' A disturbing insight into Dennehy's life behind bars came in 2016, when she filed a High Court damages claim on the basis that spending two years in solitary confinement was damaging to her human rights. Evidence submitted by the Prison Service in the case revealed she had once forged a gruesome escape plot. The plan is said to have involved killing a female officer to steal her keys and use her fingerprints to trick the biometric systems that operate the prison locks. Dennehy was placed in segregation after guards discovered the plot in September 2013. The triple killer claimed it had just been a 'doodle'. A prison uniform was discovered hidden in the laundry room and guards discovered a drawing of the jail's layout in Dennehy's diary, the High Court heard before ruling against her. According to Professor Wilson, the killer's 'very unusual' criminal profile means she will almost certainly continue to pose a severe threat for as long as she maintains her physical and mental faculties. 'Dennehy is one of the very few female spree killers in criminological history,' Professor Wilson said. 'Spree murders tend to be a male phenomenon but here you have someone who killed three men and tried to kill two more alongside her accomplice Gary Stretch. 'There is some indication that Dennehy and Stretch were operating inside a folie à deux, which is a term for a shared psychosis or ''madness of two''. 'And often folie à deux has a dominant man and a subordinate woman - like Fred and Rose West - but in this one it is quite clear that she was the dominant partner, and Stretch was subordinate and afraid of her. 'I don't know what can be done with her in terms of changing her behaviour because she seems to have extreme violent tendencies, and that is based on having interviewed people who were very close to her - including her former husband.' The expert believes the American 'supermax' model - where the most serious offenders are kept in complete isolation from others - would be the best choice for inmates like Dennehy. She has never expressed regret for her crimes, after being arrested told a psychiatrist that she had started killing to 'see how it would feel, to see if I was as cold as I thought I it just got moreish.' The killer subjected one of her victims to 'post-death humiliation' by squeezing his mutilated corpse into a sequined black dress and dumping it into a ditch with his buttocks exposed. Another victim was stabbed through the heart with a pen knife and left in a wheelie bin. A third was stabbed 40 times until, a witness said, the knife's blade was 'as black as the handle' because of all the congealed blood, and 'smelled like copper'. Having brutally killed one man, Dennehy promptly phoned a friend and sang the Britney Spears song Oops, I Did It Again. Later, she told acquaintances: 'I've killed three people, and I want to have some more fun,' adding that she was 'meant to be a serial killer, a monster'. With Dennehy still only in middle age and as dangerous as ever, she promises to prove a major headache for prison bosses for many decades to come.


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Grieving father unlocks his son's phone a year after his death to find a video of 'the killer wearing a mocking grin moments after the stabbing'
A grieving father who unlocked his son's phone a year after his murder was left horrified after finding a video showing his alleged killer mocking the crime moments after it happened. Michael Boschetto, 32, was allegedly murdered by his childhood friend Giacomo Friso, 34, in a tragic attack in northeast Italy that saw him get stabbed four times. Cops were unable to unlock Michael's phone for a year after the murder, which took place in April last year in Villafranca Padovana, Italy. Eventually, the device was handed back to Michael's father Federico, who enlisted his son's girlfriend to help him unlock it. The grief-stricken father told local media: 'My son's smartphone, which had been seized from Friso, was only returned to me after many months, with the explanation that they couldn't extract any data from it. 'Later, his girlfriend helped me unlock it - but I saw her go pale. When she turned the phone towards me, I understood why. 'On Michael's phone, there was a video of Friso filming himself as he walked into his house, dancing and making a victory sign. 'The face of that man, who had just been arrested for my son's death, was on his phone, wearing a mocking smile. 'Those 30 seconds showed Giacomo Friso almost pleased with having killed my son, making a gesture that seemed to say, "I did it, I killed him."' Though Friso initially claimed he acted in self defence, this new evidence appears to contradict him. The bereaved father added: 'During the video, there were details that didn't match the story I'd been told. 'According to him, he'd just fought with my son and had been beaten too - but he didn't even have a scratch on his face.' Local media reported that Friso banged on Michael's front door at around 4:30am on the night of his death. He went downstairs to let him in, and the pair argued before Friso left. The alleged killer then came back at 6am with a knife. Michael had been waiting outside his home for his girlfriend when Friso returned. The woman arrived shortly after to find him dead, with several stab wounds across his face and chest. Detectives believe that Giacomo had no clear motive. The men are said to have lived on the same street and to have known each other since childhood. The alleged killer was known locally for his erratic behaviour and had been seen wandering the streets with a knife in the days leading up to the attack. He had also reportedly just come out of rehab. The trial is scheduled to take place on September 11.