Murder of Julie Pacey | |
Time: | Between 3:20 pm and 4:15 pm |
Place: | 30 Longcliffe Road, Grantham, England |
Coordinates: | 52.9282°N -0.6376°W |
Motive: | Not fully known, although victim was sexually assaulted |
The murder of Julie Pacey (1955/1956 – 26 September 1994) was a mysterious, and still unsolved, murder of a mother in her own home in Grantham, England on Monday 26 September 1994. 38-year-old 'vivacious mum' Pacey was found strangled to death with a cord in her first-floor bathroom by her 14-year-old daughter on her return home from school. A mysterious figure who became known as the 'Overalls Man', and who remains the prime suspect, was seen by numerous witnesses in the vicinity of Pacey's home in the days around the murder, and this red-faced man had suspiciously turned up at Pacey's home when she was alone three days previously, supposedly asking for directions. Although she had been sexually assaulted, investigators still do not know why she was apparently targeted in what appeared to be a pre-planned attack. The case has twice featured on Crimewatch, on which Pacey's murder was described as a "truly dreadful case".
As well as the mystery surrounding 'Overalls Man', the case is notable for a number of 'bizarre' matters associated with it. Even though Pacey's family car was an Audi, she was witnessed by multiple people in an unknown BMW in the days leading up to the murder, despite her family being adamant she would not have had access to one. A BMW was also reported to have been seen parked on her driveway on occasions, including on the day of the murder, and a BMW was also seen speeding away from the scene after the killing. These sightings of cars have never been explained. In another 'bizarre twist' that was reported on nationally, the (innocent) actor who played the role of the killer in the Crimewatch reconstruction was sensationally investigated as a suspect in September 2015 after the 1994 appeal was re-shown, with some viewers who had watched the appeal mistakenly calling in to state that they recognised him as the killer.
Publicity on the case had returned in 2015 after it was revealed that a full DNA profile of the killer had been identified in what was described as a "landmark forensic breakthrough", although with the killer's DNA not matching any on the UK National DNA Database, police continue to appeal to the public to come forward to provide a name that can be investigated to be eliminated. Pacey's murder has been described as one of the region's "most mysterious crimes".[1]
Pacey was a 38-year-old mother of two who lived with her family in a luxury bungalow in Grantham, Lincolnshire.[2] Her husband was Andrew Pacey, whom she had originally met at the age of eight, and they were childhood sweethearts. They had been married for eighteen years at the time of the murder and had two children, 14-year-old Helen and 11-year-old Matthew. Julie looked after children part-time as her job, at local preschool St Peter's Day Nursery in St Catherine's Road, which was opposite the town's police headquarters.[3] Andrew later described her as someone who "got on with everyone" and was "kind and caring and considerate" and "lived for the family".[4] Andrew worked for a long-established plumbing business in the town. The area they lived in was described as a peaceful neighbourhood.
Pacey was described as a "vivacious blonde" and a "vivacious 'perfect mum'" in the press,[5] with neighbours saying she was "extremely attractive and popular".[6]
There were a number of suspicious occurrences in the lead-up to Pacey's murder which it is believed may have been related to the killing.[7] At around 3:30 pm on Friday 23 September 1994, three days (almost exactly to the minute) before Pacey was killed, a local girl who came to the Pacey's home as usual after school to wait until her own mother returned from work saw a suspicious figure. As she walked towards the Pacey's house, she saw a "strange man" wearing blue overalls walking into the Pacey's driveway. When the girl walked into the driveway to enter the house, the unknown man walked back out and passed directly by her, with the girl saying he was also wearing brown workman's boots, was fairly chubby and looked around 35. The girl said he had a big round face that was "all pink", with him having a ruddy complexion. He also had rough hands.[8] As soon as the girl passed him and entered through the front door, Pacey asked her if she'd seen the strange man that had just entered, with Pacey explaining that she'd heard a knock at the door and assumed it was the girl as expected but that the stranger male had entered and asked for directions. Pacey revealed that the man had asked for directions to Eskdale Road. The girl involved would later help create an artist's impression of the ruddy-faced individual in overalls.
Though the Pacey's family car was an Audi 80, several people mysteriously later insisted to police that they'd seen Pacey in a 5-series BMW in the period before the murder. On the very day of the murder, an acquaintance of Pacey's was driving down her road when she again saw this BMW car. She had been driving behind it but it turned into Pacey's driveway, on which she also saw the family Audi car as usual. This was about 2:50 pm on the Monday Pacey was murdered, which was notable as Pacey had herself just returned home in the Audi only five minutes earlier at around 2:45 pm.
The murder occurred on Monday 26 September, 1994. That day, Pacey had left for work at around 10 am. Her husband was out that day working on a plumbing contract on Pechiney Packaging in Springfield Road with his brother. Having returned home in the family Audi car at 2:45 pm that day, Julie left again around half an hour later to go to the shops, being seen driving the Audi in Highcliffe Road near to her home. Suspiciously, a man in blue overalls – apparently the same that had randomly turned up at Pacey's home asking for directions three days earlier – was seen walking up the road at the same time, and he walked into the road as Pacey was passing in her car, causing her to nearly hit him. After Pacey's car had passed, the man was witnessed suddenly turning round and running back towards where Pacey's car had gone.
At around 4:15 pm Julie's daughter Helen arrived home from school to discover her mother dead in the first-floor bathroom. Pacey had been sexually assaulted and strangled. A ligature mark was found around her neck, and she had been strangled with a cord.[9] She was fully clothed but some of her clothes had been disarranged.
Only one item was found to be missing from the home after the murder: her unusual French Luc Desroches watch which she bought shortly before she died while on holiday in France, for the equivalent of only £10. This item has never been found and was apparently taken, for unknown reasons, from her home by her killer.
It was soon discovered by police that the suspicious man in blue overalls/dungarees had been additionally seen by a number of witnesses on the estate and in Grantham generally between Thursday 22 September, four days before the murder, and Tuesday 27 September, the day after. The witnesses generally agreed he had a particularly red face. It emerged that this man had been asking a number of people for directions to different places, including an industrial site far away on the other side of town, and unusually never asked the witnesses to repeat any directions. The morning after the murder, at 9 am, he was seen again kicking grass nearby as if he was looking for something, and he later entered a shop in Grantham town centre, acting "totally suspiciously" according to the shopkeeper. Again, he was wearing the blue overalls. The mysterious man became known as 'Overalls Man'.[10]
It was quickly established that there was a sexual motive for the crime, with Pacey having been sexually assaulted, although current investigators note that they have still found no specific motive for why she was apparently targeted to be attacked.[11] There were no signs of a break in, no indications of a struggle, and she was found face down in the bathroom which is where it is believed she was killed. It was believed she may have been strangled from behind.[12] Her nails, which had been "beautifully manicured", were found to be completely unbroken, further indicating the lack of struggle.[13] It was believed that the daughter had found Pacey's body only minutes after she had been attacked. Police theorised that the man could have got in because Pacey had left her keys in the lock as she entered the house.[14]
Pacey's case featured on Crimewatch in November 1994. It was said that it was "quite bizarre" that the family were adamant that Pacey never had access to a BMW, yet was apparently seen in it by numerous witnesses at times. The sightings had weight as some were made by people who knew Pacey well and knew she drove an Audi, and some of these witnesses stated that they had seen this BMW parked next to the Audi on the drive. To add to the mystery, a BMW with the same description was seen twice speeding away from the scene of the murder at around 3:20 pm, the time which Pacey was seen driving her Audi down Highcliffe Road as she encountered the man in the blue overalls.
On Monday 3 October 1994, exactly a week after the murder, police stopped more than 500 people walking or driving along Longcliffe Road to ask if they had any information on the murder.[15] Questionnaires were handed out to mothers and children. A full-colour poster with the artist's impression of the 'Overalls Man' was distributed to every house on Pacey's estate.
Detectives believed that the watch that had been stolen may have been given to a wife or girlfriend by the killer, and they then may have started wearing it without realising its significance.
Pacey's parents later said that they believed that the killer may not have known Julie but "known of her", saying: "It is too much of a coincidence that it happened the one day when she wasn't looking after the little girl she minded and before the children came home from school".[16] One of the lead detectives, Superintendent Roger Billingsley, declared in 1997 that the murder appeared to be a pre-meditated crime.[17]
The case eventually went cold, but continued to receive publicity. In 2001, it was reported that links between Pacey's case and the murder of 21-year-old Sharon Harper four months earlier in Grantham had been investigated.[18] The links were made as part of Operation Enigma, a wider national police investigation into the unsolved murders of dozens of women in the UK in the 1990s. Several 'clusters' of similar murders were identified which suggested that each could be the work of one man, and the Harper and Pacey cases were one of these 'clusters'. Barmaid Harper had been murdered after she left her Grantham pub workplace after midnight one night, and her body was found soon after in undergrowth near to her home having been strangled to death and beaten.
Publicity returned to the case in 2015 after significant developments.[19] [20] [21] [22] [23] A second appeal was made on Crimewatch, 21 years after the original reconstruction, where it was revealed that scientists had managed to isolate a full DNA profile of the killer. It was further noted that all investigations had failed to establish an actual motive for the crime, with Pacey simply being a family woman who lived for her children and there being no reason why someone should attack her. The crime was described as a "truly dreadful case". Significantly, it was revealed that the 'Overalls Man' who had been the key suspect in the original investigation had still not being eliminated or identified, suggesting that he is the killer. It was also revealed that the owner of the BMW car, which it was stated "may or may not have been involved" with events that day, had not been identified. The DNA development, which was made using the modern DNA-17 profiling technique, was described as a "landmark forensic breakthrough". The DNA did not match anyone in the UK National DNA Database, and so the appeals have been made to the public to identify the murderer by giving a name to investigators could compare to the DNA profile, with lead detective Helen Evans saying: "The one drawback is that the DNA does not match anyone presently in our databases. For that reason we are asking the public for help and urging them to give us a name". Appeals were also made to the 'Overalls Man' that he could come forward and potentially be eliminated with the DNA. However, he has not done so.
Shortly after the Crimewatch appeal, in early September 2015, the original actor himself in the 1994 reconstruction was investigated after calls to the programme in what was described as a "bizarre twist".[24] Some viewers who had watched the re-appeal, which included sections from the original 1994 reconstruction, became, as described by The Independent, 'confused', and called to name the actor playing the killer as being responsible. In events that made national news, this caused police to visit and take the DNA of the man, the now 53-year-old Steve Watson, but they didn't realise that he was the original appeal actor. Watson stated that locals had recognised him in the street after the reconstruction and so named him as the killer, and police investigated him as a result even after he told them he was the actor, saying: "[My face] was on the screen for too long and even then, people in the street said, 'Oh, is that that murderer? To hear those words you think, 'Please, it's just a reconstruction, surely you understand', but unfortunately they don't". He added that people had come up to him in the street and said "you're that murderer" or "you're that one that got that poor girl". Watson had previously received abuse from confused locals who thought he was the killer after he played the suspect in the 1994 appeal. He had played the role due to his likeness to the suspect, but this had caused problems including a farcical occasion when a police officer nearly arrested him after he turned up at the police station dressed as the suspect ready to film the reconstruction with the TV crew. After the 2015 events, Watson described the situation as "ridiculous" to the press, and The Independent said that the calls were misguided responses to the appeal. No further action was taken against Watson after the DNA sample was taken and in 2017 he was reported to have been found "entirely innocent".[25]
Other (still unsolved) UK cold cases where the offender's DNA is known: