How sick killer who murdered gran, 94, after game of truth or dare was nailed thanks to Tunnocks tea cake found at scene

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A GAME of truth or dare and a pile of discarded Tunnocks tea cake wrappers were the bizarre clues that helped nail a student who murdered his 94-year-old gran in a house blaze.

Tiernan Darnton, 21, almost got away with killing Mary Gregory after fire chiefs concluded a dropped cigarette had sparked the fatal inferno and an inquest ruled her death accidental.

CavendishTiernan Darnton was sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of his step-grandmother Mary Gregory, 94[/caption]

PAHe almost got away with killing Mary after fire chiefs concluded a dropped cigarette had sparked the fatal inferno and an inquest ruled her death accidental[/caption]

PADarnton let slip to pals during a game of confessions that he had killed his step-grandmother in 2018[/caption]

But the truth unravelled after Darnton let slip to pals during a game of confessions that he had killed his step-grandmother in 2018.

The following year, he told a counsellor about the admission, insisting there was someone “who could send me to prison ’cos of what he knows.”

The therapist alerted cops.

It was only when the case was reopened by police in 2019, and photos of evidence — including biscuit wrappers in the bin — were revisited, that the shocking truth emerged.

Heartless Darnton had started the 2018 fire at Mary’s bungalow in Heysham, Lancs.

And three years later, he was finally brought to justice — despite telling detectives during interviews that he’d made a false confession driven by misplaced guilt.

The friends Darnton had told about the slaying hadn’t reported him to cops as they thought he was joking.

Mary’s carer Karolina Madejska — who was the last person to see her alive — will now feature in a new Channel 5 documentary, The Murder Of Mary Gregory.

And the 27-year-old, from Morecambe, Lancs, today speaks publicly for the first time about how she helped police crack the case and put Darnton — who is thought to have autism and depression — behind bars for at least 15 years.

The mum of one, who gave evidence for the prosecution, says of the monster: “If the police hadn’t reopened the case, he could still be walking the streets doing God knows what. He could have done it again.”

During Darnton’s trial in 2021, Preston crown court heard how the serial killer-obsessed fiend had drawn up a “kill list” of other people.

Karolina, who began caring for Mary in 2017, says: “When I met him, I thought he was a sweet, polite guy.

“I thought he was just a normal teenage boy. Never in a million years would I think he could be a killer.

“Thinking about it now gives me goosebumps.”

The documentary, which airs on Wednesday, tells how Darnton was a loner at school who owned a pristine SS uniform and ornate dagger.

A former student at Kendal college and Lancaster & Morecambe college, he lived with his step-father Chris Gregory, who later home-schooled him. But he was regularly at Mary’s home.

Karolina says: “He would often be there two or three times a week. He was always there on a Friday night.”

She admits she never questioned why he wasn’t out with friends, like most lads his age, adding: “I just thought he wanted to see his grandma.”

But Darnton’s motive for being in the property was clearly more sinister, as police later found a floor plan of Mary’s pad — part of his meticulous murder plot.

He had also written “good hiding place” and “quick exit”, as well as making references to needing a “good alibi”.

Karolina, who visited the elderly woman three times a day, reveals Mary became increasingly upset by Dartnon’s presence.

She says: “She always used to say, ‘The boy, he’s helped himself to my food and made a mess. He’s always helping himself’. She was upset because she liked to have a nice, clean kitchen.

Channel 5Mary’s carer Karolina Madejska said: ‘If the police hadn’t reopened the case, he could still be walking the streets doing God knows what’[/caption]

“We would try to help her clean it up. When carers arrived and saw a mess, we knew Darnton was in the house.”

When Karolina visited on the evening of the fire, Mary and her grandson were embroiled in a row.

She recalls: “Mary was in the conservatory and Darnton was in the living room. Mary was really angry.

“He came in and they were having an argument in front of me. I can’t remember what about.

“I was trying to calm her down and made her a cup of tea.”

It was the last time Karolina would see Mary.

Darnton went to the elderly woman’s home in the early hours and started a blaze in one of the bedrooms by setting fire to a curtain with a lighter.

A neighbour recalls in the documentary how she woke to hear Mary hammering on the walls.

Firefighters found the OAP in the conservatory, where the exit had been blocked.

She had suffered such severe smoke inhalation that the inside of her mouth was black, and she died in hospital four days later.

Karolina, originally from Poland, initially blamed herself for the blaze.

She says: “I had been making Mary food and I was thinking, ‘What if I had left the cooker on?’.

“But the police told me it had nothing to do with me. I was relieved, but at the same time sad.”

Officers from other forces were drafted in to help with the two-year probe into Mary’s death, known as Operation Ellsworth.

If the police hadn’t reopened the case, Darnton could still be walking the streets doing God knows what. He could have done it again.

Karolina Madejska

Speaking in the documentary, senior investigating officer Detective Chief Inspector Zoe Russo said: “The investigation was complex.

Traditionally, we would rely on CCTV, phone evidence, witness evidence. Some of that was no longer available.”

There was also no crime scene, as Mary’s bungalow had been renovated and sold after the fire.

What the police did have, though, was Darnton’s phone and laptop, seized during his arrest.

They found that, a month before the fire, Darnton — who was 17 at the time — had searched for “under 18 killing”, “I’m a murderer”, “feeling guilty after a murder” and “urge to kill again”, plus “I want to cause evil.”

But DCI Russo tells film-makers the evidence was “circumstantial” and “didn’t prove he was responsible for Mary’s death”.

Undeterred, police painstakingly analysed photographs taken by crime scene investigator after the fire.

Detective Inspector Jo Dent tells the programme: “We had to go through the photographs with a fine-tooth comb, looking for anything that could be a clue as to what actually had gone on that night.”

Pictures showed an open lock box with no key inside, the wire to Mary’s landline unplugged and smoke alarms missing from the ceiling.

Karolina says she also told police that Mary never smoked in the bedroom, where the fire started.

But it was a photo of a plastic bag containing a can of Coke and Tunnocks tea cakes wrappers, at the top of the kitchen bin, that would eventually provide a 2020 breakthrough.

Karolina says: “I told the police that Mary wouldn’t eat Tunnocks tea cakes and she never liked Coca-Cola. She would rather have a cup of tea.”

The carrier bag was from a local garage, where a computerised search of sales put Darnton to the scene around the time of the fire.

It was the final piece of the jigsaw which allowed cops to charge him.

Karolina says: “I can’t understand what was actually going through his head. He said he tried to put her out of her misery but he put her through more pain with the fire.

“For him to admit it, I don’t know if he was trying to show off or maybe he was proud.”

She also talks of her heartbreak at losing Mary and how her murder has caused a rift in the family.

And she adds of Darnton cutting Mary’s life short: “Nothing was wrong with her. She had dementia but she was happy and healthy. It didn’t give him any right to do what he did.”

Truth or Dare: The Murder of Mary Gregory is on Channel 5 on Wednesday at 10pm, and will be available to stream on My5.

SWNSTunnocks tea cakes and a can of Coca-Cola placed Darnton at Mary’s house around the time of the fire[/caption]

Tunnocks’ Milk Chocolate Tea CakesAlamy Published: [#item_custom_pubDate]

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