Janice Weston’s body was found in a ditch near a lay-by on the A1 in Cambridgeshire.
Cambridgeshire is a relatively safe place to live. However, in the past, the county has seen some quite gruesome murders take place that have caught the attention of the whole country.
While those involved in many of these murders have been caught, there have been some instances where the deaths remain a complete mystery – and the perpetrators have not been brought to justice. That is the case for the murder of Janice Weston, who was found dead in a ditch on a busy Cambridgeshire A-road.
In 1983, the 36-year-old left work on September 10 at around 4:15pm. She went home to change and had half a meal before getting into her silver Alfa Romeo car. Weston took her book manuscript with her, and her husband believed she was going to spend the weekend in London.
At the time, Weston lived in West London. She worked as a solicitor at Lincolns Inn where she was a partner at Charles Russell and Co.
Weston’s husband, who had been away in France at the time, tried calling her over the weekend but had received no response. The next morning, on Saturday, September 11, her fully clothed body was found in a ditch next to a lay-by on the northbound carriageway of the A1, around one and a half miles away from the Brampton Hut roundabout.
Her body had several wounds caused by a blunt object and it took the police several days to identify her. It is believed Weston had pulled over into the lay-by to change a tyre. The new tyre was found attached to the car but the old tyre was never found.
The murderer, who could have been in the car with Weston, had driven off in the car after the incident. It was later found abandoned in Camden Town with some money and the keys to her two properties still in the vehicle.
A man had ordered a new number plate that exactly matched the number of Weston’s car at a garage in Royston. Weston’s husband was held by police for 55 hours and they applied to the Director of Public Prosecutions to charge him.
Weston had only been married to her husband for 15 months and he had inherited £200,000 untaxed as a result of her death. After deliberating, the DPP decided to not pursue a trial and released her husband.
Even though the police carried out a thorough investigation of the murder, no one was ever convicted for the death of Janice Weston. The police have relaunched appeals over the years but to this day, it is still a mystery as to who killed Weston and why they did so.
