logo
Eryri police find bodies of men missing years apart in same spot

Eryri police find bodies of men missing years apart in same spot

BBC News16 hours ago

It was a mystery that left detectives baffled after a 33-year-old doctor vanished without a trace while walking in Eryri National Park.Back in August 2012 Shayne Colaco, 33, from Stoke-on-Trent, had been hiking in the Carneddau range in north Wales when he did not return to his car. He was not seen again.At the time, the experienced hiker's disappearance sparked an extensive operation by air and on foot, with the search described by experts as a "needle in a haystack" in the Ogwen Valley.It was not until 12 years later that a vital clue led to the discovery of Mr Colaco's body in May 2024, only metres away from fellow hiker David Brookfield who had disappeared months before the discovery and died while walking in the same area.
Mr Brookfield, 65, from Skelmersdale, Lancashire, had been walking alone on 9 January 2024 when he went missing.North Wales Police said Mr Brookfield had sent a text to his wife from the top of Carnedd Llewelyn, but no further contact was ever received. The experienced walker had intended to complete an "amazing" 15km (nine mile) route in good weather, police said, but with forecasts that it would deteriorate throughout the day.It is believed he entered the broad mouth of a gully during his descent from his final summit at Pen yr Ole Wen when he fell and became seriously injured.Despite "extensive searches in challenging winter weather conditions", Mr Brookfield could not be found."The weather worsened, snow continued to fall... after the first couple of weeks we realised there wasn't any more we could do from the ground," said Sgt Paul Terry, of North Wales Police. Four months after his disappearance, coastguard helicopter crews discovered Mr Brookfield's body after seeing a glimpse of blue while carrying out a routine training exercise through the Ogwen Valley.It was during his recovery that volunteers also located a single item of clothing that led them to find the remains of Mr Colaco.
Sgt Terry, who assisted the rescue of the two bodies, said the circumstances were "exceptional" as many of the volunteers working on the rescue were involved in the initial search for Mr Colaco 12 years earlier.One of the winchmen who located Mr Brookfield from the helicopter was also part of RAF squadron looking for Mr Colaco."It shows the amazing willingness and determination of volunteers and the emergency services to find both these men."Sgt Terry said it was while investigating Mr Brookfield's death that a mountain rescue team member found a jacket about 5m (16ft) further down the gully. "The jacket didn't seem to fit with the picture of what we were investigating. It was an older jacket, one that seemed to have been there for some time and inside the pocket was a car key," he said. "Deep in the memory of this rescue team was Shayne Colaco, who had gone missing in the same area 12 years earlier."Sgt Terry said he was "amazed" to find the jacket was very similar to the one Mr Colaco was wearing on the day he went missing. Further investigations then confirmed the key in the pocket was the key to his car, a Fiat Seicento."Suddenly, we realised we may have a clue as to where he may have been all this time."
A mountain rescue drone operator then helped find Mr Colaco's body. It is now believed his descent from the summit of Pen yr Ole Wen took the same fatal turn as Mr Brookfield's. Sharing the tragic story, Sgt Terry voiced his condolences to the men's families and friends, as well as warning of the dangers of walking in Eryri, also known as Snowdonia. He said both men ended up in very dangerous ground, "which might have seemed inviting from the summit, but as it got steeper and more broken, it became harder"."It's important to understand the scale of these hills and the impact of weather – and how quickly it can change," he said. "We want you to come and enjoy these beautiful mountains in Eryri, it is amazing, but come and be safe and enjoy it."And so, I have a very simple safety message - be prepared."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

At least 1 hiker killed & 3 injured in horror rock slide at Banff National Park in Canada
At least 1 hiker killed & 3 injured in horror rock slide at Banff National Park in Canada

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

At least 1 hiker killed & 3 injured in horror rock slide at Banff National Park in Canada

FALLING rocks struck people on a hiking trail in Banff National Park in the Canadian Rockies, killing one and injuring three others. Rescuers had rushed to the park in the afternoon after receiving reports that a group of hikers had been struck by the rockslide. 2 2 The Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Parks Canada later confirmed one died and three were injured near Bow Glacier Falls. .

Moment burglar smashes into nan's home before beating her to death in attack heard by helpless daughter – as he's jailed
Moment burglar smashes into nan's home before beating her to death in attack heard by helpless daughter – as he's jailed

The Sun

timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Moment burglar smashes into nan's home before beating her to death in attack heard by helpless daughter – as he's jailed

A BURGLAR who beat a gran to death has been jailed for life after he was captured in terrifying doorbell footage smashing into her home. Catherine "Queenie" Flynn, 69, was dragged from her bed by Dean Mears, who broke every bone in her face in the random killing. 6 6 6 Her daughter Natasha Flynn-Farrell was forced to listen to her mum's final moments after the attack was caught on a doorbell cam. Mears has now been jailed for life with a minimum of 27 years after he was convicted of murder. Sentencing, Judge Rhys Rowlands said the killing was "truly horrific" and "senseless". The judge added: "Mrs Flynn had been an extremely vulnerable lady who was killed by you in what should have been the safety of her own home after you had broken in." Footage showed Mears ringing the bell at the home in Rhyl, North Wales, after he had taken cannabis and ketamine. The 34-year-old, who did not know Catherine, was then captured smashing a downstairs window to gain access to the house to burgle it. Once inside, Mears stomped on 4ft 10ins Catherine 15 times in a "senseless" attack. Tragically, the doorbell footage triggered a message on Natasha's phone - meaning she was forced to helplessly listen to her mum. Brave Natasha kept the app open in order to record the video, which provided key evidence in the harrowing case. As a result, she told how she just "had to watch it play out' as her mum desperately begged "please don't". Mears could also be heard yelling, "Where are the keys?" as Catherine pleaded with him not to hurt her. Natasha said: "It was horrendous, it was sickening.' Mears was then captured just two minutes later throwing himself through the broken window and fleeing. Frail Catherine, who used a Zimmer frame, suffered catastrophic injuries before dying the next day in hospital. Caernarfon Crown Court heard after the horror last October, Mears returned to his pal's home and stripped off his trousers and underwear. He was then seen on CCTV walking semi-naked around the town. Mears admitted he had carried out the attack but claimed he had no recollection. Prosecutor Andrew Jones said Mears had left Catherine "dying on the floor of her own bedroom". A post-mortem likened the injuries Catherine suffered to those seen in car crashes. A pathologist said the wounds were caused by "repeated, severe blunt force trauma that shattered all her facial bones". He added: "He inflicted such severe damage to the face of Mrs Flynn that she had no chance of surviving this vicious, unprovoked assault." Catherine's family described the gran as a "rock" and best friend to her three children and said "her house was so welcoming and warm". They said: "Catherine was a wonderful mum, nan, great nan, auntie, and sister, and also a second mother to many and a great friend. "She loved her family more than anything, she was a fantastic cook and was always wanting to feed anyone in her company. "Her pride and joy (after her family) was her love for her garden, she would sit for hours just watching the birds and the bees come in and out of her little wonderland, with every flower imaginable. "We often wondered how her garden was always so beautiful - now we know, it's because she was the ray of sunshine." 6 6 6

Dean Mears Rhyl ring doorbell killer jailed for Catherine Flynn murder
Dean Mears Rhyl ring doorbell killer jailed for Catherine Flynn murder

BBC News

time2 hours ago

  • BBC News

Dean Mears Rhyl ring doorbell killer jailed for Catherine Flynn murder

The daughter of a woman brutally killed by a drug dealer has said her life "shattered" the moment she saw the murderer enter her mother's Mears dragged grandmother Catherine Flynn, 69, from her bed and stamped on her, breaking every bone in her face during the attack in October Flynn's daughter Natasha Flynn-Farrell said she watched helplessly after she received a doorbell camera alert of the drug dealer breaking into her mother's home in the seaside town of Rhyl in Denbighshire. Jailing him for life with a 27 year and 128 day minimum term, Judge Rhys Rowlands said Mears, 35, was responsible for a "savage, and quite ferocious and merciless attack". He said the recording captured on the doorbell camera "can only be described as horrific"."It was by all accounts a truly shocking and cruel way to end her life."Mears, from Kinmel Bay in Conwy, was found guilty of murder after a nine-day trial in Caernarfon in jury heard he had taken ketamine and cannabis before breaking into the frail grandmother's home - a woman he had never then smashed a window and entered the home, going straight to Mrs Flynn's could be heard screaming at her before the sickening sound of stamping was captured on the doorbell Flynn was taken to hospital after suffering extensive facial trauma and multiple fractures, where she died the following Andrew Jones KC said she had suffered serious health and mobility issues, and used a stairlift and a walking frame inside her was just 4ft 10in (1.47m) and weighed less than eight stone (50kg). Mrs Flynn-Farrell addressed her mother's killer in the dock on Friday. "You Dean Mears - you can't even look at me," she said. "You didn't just kill my mum - you killed a part of me."You Dean Mears took the light out of my life."I want my words and my face to be etched into your brain."She said she lived with the footage and sounds captured by the doorbell camera during the attack."I hear those thuds to her head, face and neck every day."It replays in my in slow motion - thud, thud, thud."That moment was the vilest, sickening moment of my life."How could you do what you did to my mum - my queenie. You should hang your head in shame."You are nothing but a coward. I'll never forgive you Dean Mears." Pathologist Dr Brian Rodgers told the jury Mrs Flynn's injuries were "the types of injuries you see in high-speed road traffic collisions".The doorbell recording suggested there were up to 15 blows from her admitted he had carried out the attack, but said he had no recollection of what defence team argued Mears had been suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), after being stabbed twice following a prison sentence for drug dealing. Speaking to BBC Wales before the sentencing, Mrs Flynn-Farrell recounted the moment she received the doorbell notification to tell her someone was at her mother's front door."It is the worst night of my life I have ever experienced," she said."My life just shattered in that second," she said. "As soon as I clicked on that notification, that was the moment my world crumbled." Mrs Flynn-Farrell was home alone as events unfolded a short drive away at her mother's house, and could only watch and listen until Mears left before she could phone the police."For those two minutes I had to watch that out. It felt like two hours. I was hysterical." Arriving at the house, Mrs Flynn-Farrell was kept outside while police went in to see what had happened to her mother."I did know it was serious but I was trying to tell myself it was going to be OK, that hopefully it wasn't as bad as what I'd heard."But it was awful. It was the worst outcome that could have ever happened for her - and for all our family." Mrs Flynn-Farrell said Mears was "not worth the air we breathe"."To be able to do that to a defenceless, 69-year-old, frail, seven stone little woman. She was like a little doll."He's a monster and he's a coward. Mrs Flynn-Farrell said her mother's murder has had a profound affect on her and those around her."There are so many lives he has ripped apart," she said."The ripple effect this has had - not just on the family, on the community, on complete strangers. It's been a whirlwind of emotions for everyone."She said she was still living with the impact every day."I find it hard most days to get up and go out. I don't want to see anyone, I've lost contact with my friends. "It's given me bad anxiety, depression, PTSD. I don't even watch the telly anymore, in case things trigger it."I'm living a nightmare still." Mrs Flynn-Farrell said she hoped the sentencing could finally bring some closure to the tragedy and wants to be able to help others facing family trauma in the coined the social media tag #JusticeforQueenie as the murder case went through the court system, as a platform to remember her mother and to talk about what had happened."It's not just for my mum - it's for everyone's Queenie," she said."I want this to carry on and be a platform against violence for women and girls. It'll be used to help other organisations, femicide awareness and things like that."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store