AN investigation into the Jeremy Thorpe scandal will be reopened after police admitted they may have wrongly assumed one of the suspects was dead, according to a new documentary.
A probe launched in 2015 into the alleged attempted murder of the former Liberal leader’s gay ex-lover Norman Scott was closed last year.
Gwent Police had thought Andrew Newton – the man allegedly hired to kill Mr Scott – was dead.
But the force has told a BBC documentary, The Jeremy Thorpe Scandal, that new information has come to light, suggesting he may still be alive.
Reacting to the news, Mr Scott, 78, told the programme: “I just don’t think anyone’s tried hard enough to look for him.
“There must be people who knew him and there would surely be a record of him dying.”
“I thought Gwent Police were doing something at last but soon found out that absolutely they weren’t, they were continuing the cover up as far as I can see”.
The documentary, on BBC 4 at 10pm tonight, investigates the alleged plot to murder Mr Scott, who was involved in a relationship with Mr Thorpe in the early 1960s, when homosexuality was illegal.
Mr Thorpe, who died in 2014, was acquitted of conspiracy to murder after an Old Bailey trial in 1979.
A fresh probe was launched by Gwent Police in 2015 after new claims emerged.
Enjoy the convenience of having The Sunday Post delivered as a digital ePaper straight to your smartphone, tablet or computer.
Subscribe for only £5.49 a month and enjoy all the benefits of the printed paper as a digital replica.
Subscribe