
White House Farm: The Murders That Divided a Family
How a 1985 Essex killing spree exposed secrets, suspicion, and a case that still haunts British justice
Quick Facts
On the night of August 6-7, 1985, five members of the Bamber family were shot dead at White House Farm near Tolleshunt D'Arcy in Essex, England. The victims—Nevill Bamber, 61; his wife June, 61; their adopted daughter Sheila Caffell, 28; and her six-year-old twin sons Daniel and Nicholas—were killed with a semi-automatic rifle in what would become one of Britain's most controversial murder convictions.
The crime scene presented a puzzle from the start. When police entered the locked farmhouse at 7:54 am on August 7, using a sledgehammer to break down the back door (which had been locked from the inside with the key still in the lock), officers found Nevill dead in the kitchen and the others upstairs. A rifle lay near Sheila's body in the parents' bedroom, positioned against her throat. Initial suspicions fell on Sheila herself—a woman diagnosed with schizophrenia who, according to the narrative that emerged, had "gone berserk" with the weapon.
That narrative came from Jeremy Bamber, the adopted son who was 24 at the time. He claimed to have called police around 3:30 am after receiving a call from his father saying Sheila had lost control. For weeks, police pursued the theory that Sheila had murdered her parents and children before taking her own life. But investigators faced a growing problem: the forensic evidence didn't fit neatly into that story.
Three days after the murders, police discovered a silencer—or moderator—hidden in a cupboard at the farm. Prosecution evidence suggested the silencer had been attached to the rifle during the shootings. This discovery, combined with other details, eventually shifted suspicion toward Jeremy. In October 1986, he was convicted of all five murders by a 10-2 jury verdict and sentenced to life imprisonment without parole.


