![]() ![]() With no evidence to discount her story the police were forced to move on.Ī typical buff coloured Identity Card from the early years of WW2 in England Narrator: Mysteriously, the woman had no knowledge of how her ID card had ended up in Hagley Wood and claimed to have never been there in her life. Officer: Sure you can have it back, just as soon as we catch whoever put that lady in that tree. Woman: But that’s so strange, I’ve never been near Hagley Wood in my life. ![]() Officer: Well, yes, we actually thought this card might have been hers. Woman: Hagley Wood, you mean where they found that woman in the tree. Officer: That’s just it, this card was found in Hagley Wood. Woman: Yes, I’ve been missing it for months. Your address was listed on this identity card and we wondered if you knew the owner. Officer: Hello ma’am, sorry to bother you at home. The investigators were relieved and briefly hoped that the skeleton belonged to the woman named on the card, but when they visited the address on the card they found its owner was still alive. Narrator: The final and most promising item was a woman’s identification card. The excerpt below comes from around the 16:30 mark of the podcast. This extract is from the Unsolved Murders: True Crime Stories podcast, Episode 165 (part 1 of their Bella trilogy). While listening to some podcasts on the Bella in the Wych Elm mystery, I was struck by one claim which didn’t sound right. ![]()
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