Murder of Harvey and Jeannette Crewe
Harvey and Jeannette Crewe | |
---|---|
![]() Harvey and Jeannette Crewe, pictured at their 1966 wedding | |
Born | David Harvey Crewe 20 October 1941 Jeannette Lenore Demler 6 February 1940 |
Died | Pukekawa, Lower Waikato, New Zealand |
Cause of death | .22 calibre gunshot wounds |
Body discovered | 16 August 1970 (Jeannette) 16 September 1970 (Harvey) |
Nationality | New Zealanders |
Occupation | Farmers |
Known for | Victims of unsolved murder |
David Harvey Crewe (20 October 1941 – c. 17 June 1970) and Jeannette Lenore Crewe (née Demler; 6 February 1940 – c. 17 June 1970) were a New Zealand farming couple who were shot to death in their home on or about 17 June 1970. The murders led to the wrongful conviction and subsequent
Background
Jeannette Crewe's father, Lenard M. Demler, was fined £10,000 for tax evasion in 1962, and had been forced to sell a half share in his farm to his wife in order to meet the liability.[1] Jeannette married her husband, David Harvey Crewe (known as Harvey), in Auckland, New Zealand, in 1966.
In 1970, the Crewes and their 18-month-old daughter lived on their farm at Pukekawa, Lower Waikato. Jeannette was afraid to be in the house without her husband after bizarre burglary and arson attacks, including one in which clothes were set on fire in a bedroom.[1] At the time of her death, Jeannette was about to receive her mother's half-share in the Demler farm, which adjoined that of the Crewes.[1][2] The bequest to Jeannette had come about after Jeannette's sister had been cut from their mother's will, and Demler had removed Jeannette as a beneficiary of his own will in retaliation although she had no role in the original matter.[2] Jeannette's mother had then re-written her will to bequeath to Jeannette the half-share in Demler's farm that he lived on.[2][1]
Crime
Harvey (aged 28) and Jeannette (30) were found to be missing from their bloodstained farmhouse on 22 June 1970 by Demler (died 4 November 1992), who had been asked to look in on them by an alarmed neighbour because they had not answered the telephone for days.[3]: 101 The Crewes' 18-month-old daughter Rochelle was distraught in her cot. Demler left her alone while he went on a farm errand.[3]: 103 The Crewes had last been seen on 17 June,[3]: 94 and milk, bread, and newspaper deliveries on the morning of 18 June had not been collected from the letterbox.[3]: 95
No medical opinion that an infant could survive without fluids for five days is supported by any verified case of such an occurrence.
Jeannette's body was found on 16 August, wrapped in a
Investigation and trials
Both victims had been shot to death with a .22 calibre firearm; Jeannette had broken facial bones from being struck with a blunt instrument.[1] Demler had been considered the main suspect, but the brutality of the assault on Jeannette, and the lead investigator's belief that she had been raped, led to doubts that he was involved.[1] On the basis that the murderer might have used a legitimately held gun, police collected and test-fired sixty-four registered .22 firearms, 3% of the total recorded as held in the Pukekawa area.[3]: 96 [2] A forensic report on 19 August stated that, of the sixty-four, neither Thomas' rifle nor one owned by the Eyre family could be eliminated as the possible murder weapon, but there was insufficient evidence pointing to one or the other.[5][3]: 14 [2] Although police suggested to Thomas during an interview that his rifle was used to kill the Crewes, the gun was returned to him on 8 September.[2] On 27 October, the garden at the Crewe house was searched for a third time and a spent cartridge case was found, apparently still lying where the murderer had left it.[3]: 15 The case carried marks which showed that it had been ejected from Thomas' rifle.[3]: 17 In November, Thomas was arrested and charged.
Despite his wife and cousin giving him a strong alibi for 17 June, Thomas was sent for trial on a charge of murdering the Crewes.[2] The prosecution suggested Thomas's wife, Vivien, had been the woman seen at the Crewes' house, although she was not charged. The witness was certain Vivien Thomas, whom he knew, was not the woman whom he saw.[3]: 92 The prosecution said that the motive for the murders was that Thomas had been obsessed with Jeannette, an accusation for which they provided very little evidence.[2] A witness who did give testimony supporting the prosecution's contention that Jeannette had been pestered by Thomas was Demler; he was cross-examined about why he had not mentioned such obviously relevant information before the court had begun sitting.[1] Thomas was found guilty of the murders in a 1971 trial, but the conviction was overturned on appeal. He was tried again in 1973 and convicted. Supporters of Thomas started a campaign to bring to public attention that the key evidence against him had serious anomalies.[2]
Campaign, pardon and Royal Commission
A campaign, led in part by Pat Booth of the Auckland Star, was largely responsible for getting Thomas released with a pardon. Campaigners said forensic work by Dr Jim Sprott had shown that the cartridge case had been planted at the scene and that its method of construction identified it as being from a batch that could not have contained the number 8 bullets recovered from the victims.[3]: 53 [6] Following David Yallop's book about the case, Beyond Reasonable Doubt, Thomas was pardoned by Governor-General Keith Holyoake on the recommendation of Prime Minister Robert Muldoon. Thomas was released after serving nine years in prison. He was paid NZ$950,000 compensation for his time in jail and loss of the use of his farm.[7]
A
Status
In 2014 an official police review of the investigation into the homicides, at a cost of $400,000 to New Zealand taxpayers,[11] said that evidence available in the murder of the Crewes was insufficient for any new prosecution.[12] The review acknowledged that a key prosecution exhibit in the trials had been fabricated by detectives, but did not appear to accept that they could have been on the wrong track; the review implied that the Crewes' daughter had not ingested any fluids between 17 and 22 June, and said a witness had been mistaken in thinking he had seen a woman on the farm during that period. The review did however rule out Demler having been the killer. Rochelle Crewe expressed satisfaction that a police review of evidence had cleared her deceased grandfather of involvement in the murders.[13] The case remains unsolved.
Books
- 1971: The Crewe Murders, by Evan Swain, Wilson and Horton.
- 1972: Bitter Hill: Arthur Thomas – the case for a retrial, by Terry Bell. Auckland Avante-Garde Publishing.
- 1975: Trial By Ambush, by Pat Booth. South Pacific Press.
- 1976: Quash the Verdicts – The Thomas Affair, by Earl Bailey.
- 1976: A.B.C. of Injustice, by Jim Sprott and Pat Booth, Wellington. Arthur Thomas Retrial Committee.
- 1978: Beyond Reasonable Doubt? By David Yallop. Hodder & Stoughton
- 2001: The Final Chapter: If Arthur Allan Thomas didn't Kill Jeanette and Harvey Crewe - Who Did? By Chris Birt. Penguin.
- 2010: Arthur Allan Thomas: The Inside Story: Crewe Murders: New Evidence, by Ian Wishart Howling at the Moon Publishing.
- 2012: The Case of the Missing Bloodstain, by Keith Hunter. Hunter Productions.
- 2012: All The Commissioner's Men, by Chris Birt. Stentorian Publishing
- 2023: The Crewe Murders: Inside New Zealand’s most infamous cold case, by Massey University Press.
See also
- Crime in New Zealand
- Death of Scott Guy
- List of solved missing person cases
- List of unsolved murders
- The Eyre Murder
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Beyond Reasonable doubt?, (2014) David Yallop
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Justice Denied: Extraordinary miscarriages of justice, James Morton 2015
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Report of the Royal Commission to Inquire into the Circumstances of the Convictions of Arthur Allan Thomas for the Murders of David Harvey Crewe and Jeanette Lenore Crewe 1980" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 June 2011. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
- ^ "Forensic History: Crimes, Frauds, and Scandals" by Professor Elizabeth A Murray
- ^ nzherald.co.nz New evidence claims in Crewe case 2 Aug, 2014
- ^ "Crewe murders: Police admit cartridge planted". stuff.co.nz. 30 July 2014. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
- ^ Report of the Royal Commission to Inquire into the Circumstances of the Convictions of Arthur Allan Thomas for the Murders of David Harvey Crewe and Jeanette Lenore Crewe, 1980 (PDF), p. 120, archived from the original (PDF) on 9 June 2011, retrieved 15 October 2010
- ^ "Report of the Royal Commission to Inquire into the Circumstances of the Convictions of Arthur Allan Thomas for the Murders of David Harvey Crewe and Jeanette Lenore Crewe, 1980" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 June 2011. Retrieved 27 June 2009.
- ^ "Report of the Royal Commission to Inquire into the Circumstances of the Convictions of Arthur Allan Thomas for the Murders of David Harvey Crewe and Jeanette Lenore Crewe, 1980" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 June 2011. Retrieved 27 June 2009.
- ^ "Report of the Royal Commission to Inquire into the Circumstances of the Convictions of Arthur Allan Thomas for the Murders of David Harvey Crewe and Jeanette Lenore Crewe, 1980" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 June 2011. Retrieved 27 June 2009.
- ^ "Evidence Planted". www.stuff.co.nz. 30 July 2014. Retrieved 15 August 2018.
- ^ "Crewe Review". New Zealand Police. 30 July 2014. Retrieved 10 July 2018.
- ISSN 1170-0777. Retrieved 12 September 2019.
Further reading
- Swain, Evan (1971). The Crewe Murders. Auckland.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Bell, Terry (1972). Bitter Hill: Arthur Thomas—the case for a retrial. Auckland: Avante-Garde Publishing.
- Booth, Pat (1975). Trial by Ambush: the fate of Arthur Thomas. Wellington: South Pacific Press.
- Bailey, Earl (1976). Quash the Verdicts—The Thomas Affair. Auckland.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Sprott, Jim; Pat Booth (1976). A.B.C. of Injustice. Wellington.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Yallop, David A. (1978). Beyond Reasonable Doubt. Hodder and Stoughton. ISBN 0-340-23667-1.
- Birt, Chris (2001). The Final Chapter. Penguin. ISBN 978-0141006291.
- Wishart, Ian (September 2010). Arthur Allan Thomas: The Inside Story. Auckland: Howling At The Moon Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9582401-7-8.
- Hunter, Keith (April 2012). The Case Of The Missing Bloodstain: Inside an incompetent and corrupt police inquiry: the truth of the Crewe murders. Auckland: Hunter Productions Ltd. ISBN 978-0-473-19646-2.
External links
- Article by Pat Booth in the New Zealand Listener
- Report urging Police to reopen the case in 2006 Based on Chris Birt's investigation into the identity of the unknown woman.
- Interview with Investigative journalist Pat Booth – 40 years since the Crewe Murders
- 'Who Killed the Crewes?', The Investigator Special, 2012, Bryan Bruce, TVNZ On Demand