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Family of hit-and-run cyclist say killers not being convicted of murder denied them justice
Family of hit-and-run cyclist say killers not being convicted of murder denied them justice

Daily Mail​

time10-08-2025

  • Daily Mail​

Family of hit-and-run cyclist say killers not being convicted of murder denied them justice

The widow of a cyclist who was killed by a hit-and-run drunk driver and secretly buried in a shallow grave believe her family was denied justice – after the men responsible avoided a murder conviction. Tony Parsons, 63, was on a charity cycle in the Highlands when he was knocked off his bike near Bridge of Orchy and lay dying by the roadside of horrific injuries. But instead of calling emergency services, driver Alexander McKellar and his twin brother Robert hid Mr Parsons' body in a peaty bog on the estate where they worked. The remains went undiscovered for three years until farm worker McKellar confided in his pathologist girlfriend Caroline Muirhead about the killing and took her to the burial site. She deliberately dropped a soft drink can on the ground and was later able to pinpoint the remote location to the police. In August 2023, Alexander McKellar was jailed for 12 years after he pleaded guilty to culpable homicide and attempting to pervert the course of justice by hiding the body. His twin also admitted attempting to pervert the course of justice and was jailed for five years at the High Court in Glasgow. The Crown had originally indicted both brothers for murder but this was reduced during the court case and the McKellars admitted to the lesser charges. In a BBC documentary that airs on Tuesday, Mr Parsons' wife, Margaret, said: 'They took Tony, they buried him and left me, my kids and grandkids for three and a half years not knowing where he was. 'When they get out of jail they will get back to life as if nothing has happened. They are going to enjoy themselves. I can't do that because Tony is not here. 'They are not the ones left with the life sentence, I am. There's no remorse, nothing from them at all. I hate them both, I'm still angry. It won't go away.' Mr Parsons went missing in September 2017 during a charity cycle, having battled prostate cancer. He had planned to ride through the night to complete his trip from Fort William to his home in Tillicoultry, Clackmannanshire. The court was told his body would likely never have been found if Ms Muirhead had not come forward, and that Mr Parsons would have been alive for around 30 minutes after he was hit. In Murder Case: The Vanishing Cyclist, Mr Parsons' son, Mike, a former police officer, said: 'He would have been in massive amounts of pain and for them not to seek any form of treatment is just 100 per cent inhumane. Dr Caroline Muirhead, former girlfriend of convicted killer Alexander McKellar, proved pivotal in leading police to the spot where the brothers had buried Mr Parsons' body 'If you know you have hit someone and know they are still alive, any basic human instinct says you need to try and get help. 'To willingly let someone die, that to me is murder and our opinion will always be the same. They murdered my dad and they have taken him away from us.' Mr Parsons' daughter Vicky said: 'When we found out the McKellars had made a plea, that didn't sit well with me. 'My initial thought was they are going down and they are taking the truth with them. 'By pleading, they have robbed me of knowing the truth.' She added: 'Being told he was found buried, that made me feel physically sick.' The documentary makers interviewed the investigating offices on what began as a missing persons case and ended in a murder probe and court case. DC Gavin McKellar said: 'You know you are looking for someone's loved one and they are looking for answers. It's a very heavy burden to carry.' He described how shocked the police were when the body was found on the remote Auch Estate in January 2021. He said: 'Where Tony was recovered was an area where there were kill pits, where a farmer or a gamekeeper will dispose of fallen livestock. 'Words can't describe what would go through someone's head to put another human being into that position. They are horrible.' Also interviewed was Professor Lorna Dawson, head of Soil Forensics Group at The James Hutton Institute. She helped police find the exact spot where the body was buried by identifying an icy, mossy patch of ground where the peat had been dug up. Forensic archaeologists soon found the remains, which had been well preserved in the peat. Professor Dawson said: 'He still looked like the images of him on the day he disappeared.' Murder Case: The Vanishing Cyclist, Episode 1, is available on iPlayer from August 12 and Episode 2 from August 19.

Charity cyclist's widow ‘will always hate' twins who left him to die
Charity cyclist's widow ‘will always hate' twins who left him to die

Times

time09-08-2025

  • Times

Charity cyclist's widow ‘will always hate' twins who left him to die

The widow of a charity cyclist who was killed by a drink driver has spoken for the first time to condemn the 'callous' twin brothers who hid his body in a shallow grave. Alexander McKellar was speeding when he hit Tony Parsons, 63, and left him to die on the A82 near Bridge of Orchy, Argyll, in September 2017. In an attempt to cover up the crime, he and his brother Robert retrieved the body and dumped it in a 'dead hole', which was used to dispose of animal carcasses on a remote estate where they worked. Parsons, a father of two from Tillicoultry in Clackmannanshire, who had served in the Royal Navy, had gone missing during a 104-mile charity bike ride from Fort William back to his home town. His body remained undiscovered for more than three years until January 2021, after Alexander McKellar led his former girlfriend, Caroline Muirhead, to the burial site and she tipped off police. Parsons's widow, Margaret, 68, has told of her devastation at his death and her hatred for the twins for leaving her with a 'life sentence'. In the BBC documentary Murder Case: The Vanishing Cyclist, she said: 'When they get out of jail they are going to go back to life as if nothing's happened. They are going to get on with it, they're going to enjoy themselves. 'I can't do that. I can't do that because Tony is not here. They are not the ones that are left with a life sentence — I am — because that is what they've done. 'They just wanted to protect themselves. They could have phoned for somebody. They could have phoned an ambulance, they could have phoned the police — they could have even done it anonymously — but they didn't. 'They took Tony, they buried him, they left me and my kids and grandkids for three and a half years not knowing where Tony was. There has been no remorse, absolutely nothing from them at all. To be honest I hate the both of them, I really do and I am still angry. It won't go away. 'I loved Tony because he was kind, he made me happy. He looked after me all these years and I'm lost without Tony.' Alexander McKellar, now 33, admitted a charge of culpable homicide at the High Court in Glasgow in 2023 and was jailed for 12 years. He and his brother, who was sentenced to five years and three months in jail, also admitted attempting to defeat the ends of justice. Their actions were described in court as 'callous and cowardly'. Parsons's son, Mike Parsons, a police officer, told the documentary that he considered what happened to his father to be murder despite the twins' pleas to the lesser charges. He said: 'The outcome of what would have happened — how long it would have taken an ambulance to get there — is irrelevant. If you know that you have hit somebody and you can see they are still alive, any basic human instinct says you need to try and get help. 'To willingly go down a course of action whereby you are letting somebody die, that to me is murder. Our opinion will always be the same — they have murdered my dad and they have taken him away from us.' The filmmakers were given unprecedented access to the police investigation and the court proceedings for the two-part documentary. Cameras were allowed into the High Court in Glasgow to film the hearings where the McKellars entered their guilty pleas and were sentenced. Murder Case: The Vanishing Cyclist will be available on BBC iPlayer from Tuesday and will also be shown on the BBC Scotland channel.

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