Murder of Zoe Nelson
The
murder of Zoe Nelson was committed in the
Cambusnethan suburb of
Wishaw,
North Lanarkshire, Scotland on 22 May 2010. 17-year-old Zoe Nelson's extensively burned remains were found in woodland near a
colliery spoil heap known locally as Monkey Hill after her killer constructed a
pyre in an attempt to destroy evidence.
Forensic pathologist Julia Bell told the
High Court of Justiciary in
Edinburgh that the possibilities for a full
post mortem were "limited" because the body was too badly burned, but that "some form of
throttling or
suffocating was the most probable cause of death, which was recorded as 'unascertained'". During their enquiries, police used new media for the first time in a murder investigation, in an effort to reach out to local teenagers who may otherwise have not wanted to communicate with the police. During the trial it also emerged that the victim's sister had withheld the identity of the killer for five days. On 25 March 2011, 21-year-old
Robert Bayne was found guilty of her murder and of a second charge of attempting to defeat the ends of justice. The judge deferred sentencing for
psychiatric and social background reports to be prepared. On 27 April 2011 Bayne was sentenced to
life imprisonment, with a minimum term of twenty years, for the murder and six years, to be served concurrently, for the second charge.
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