He beat the shit out of the partner on more than one occasion
Only problem was the first person off the boat with him wouldāve been himself.

That malcontent wasnāt living happily ever after anywhere is my point.
Probably one for the things I learned today thread but one of Ian Baileyās sisterās, was a schizophrenic.
Looks like heās finally going to be cleared.
Will his kids or family be able to sue various outlets for the witch hunt?
I donāt know if he has any children or relations. Any windfall recovered through litigation would be swallowed up by hefty outstanding legal costs already accrued.
Heās a sister anyways
I was chatting with my dad he was up in arms
Over some
Article he read on the post office scandal. Think did he say 45 million of the 65 was paid to solicitors.
Should be a scandal in itself.
The solicitors made out as some kind of heroes then.
Unlike the legal profession to gobble up all the money. Sharks on the mainlandā¦.
Hard to imagine it happening here all the same - or is it?

Whatās this now?
He will only be cleared if they find someone elseās DNA on the block and the other person is a plausible suspect, and even then a lot of folk will think he did it.
An absence of his DNA wonāt be enough. In truth, DNA evidence is patchier than people think.
āThe method, called M-VAC, has helped solve decades-old cold cases in the United States.ā
Weād all like to see some final outcome.
Weāll see how it goesā¦
https://www.rte.ie/news/ireland/2025/0817/1528861-ian-bailey-dna/
The case has been so divisive I think whatever the results there will still be a massive stink of incompetence and corruption hanging over the Gardai⦠itās the case that just wonāt go away and Jim Sheridans new documentary is going to further that stink by the looks of it
I read that article in three different places and Iām not holding out much hope.
God knows how many GardaĆ or other people would have handled that evidence, whatever it is.
- Bailey did it
- Not Bailey
RIP
Opening paragraph would seem to suggest the perp is dead
A forensic breakthrough in the 29-year-old murder of Sophie Toscan du Plantier could bring the case to a conclusion as early as next month after the discovery of significant DNA evidence during a cold-case review
