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For more than a decade, Jersey (one of the Channel Islands off the coast of Normandy) was haunted by a figure locals came to call the Beast of Jersey. A masked man who moved through hedgerows and farm lanes at night slicing phone lines and entering homes while families slept. He abducted women and children from their beds assaulted them in their rooms or out in the fields and then returned them hours later, all while their families were fast asleep.
Today we meet Edward Paisnel: his background, his double life as a respected builder and beloved “Uncle Ted,” his access to children’s homes, and the crimes that terrorized an island from the late 1950s through the early 1970s. We examine how fear and suspicion led to the wrongful vilification and exile of Alphonse Le Gastelois. Paisnel was finally caught by chance after a reckless night drive (how many of these men were caught by traffic violations) and how the evidence: his mask, nail‑studded coat, and taped torch confirmed survivors’ accounts with chilling precision.
We also explore how the case lingered, no just through the firsthand testimonies that convicted him, but the unanswered questions surrounding institutional failure, and the folklore and ghost stories that grew in the wake of collective trauma. Small islands can create big legends.
This episode is a examination of one of the most disturbing cases in British criminal history.
Sources
Joan Paisnel, The Beast of Jersey (New English Library, 1972; later reprints).
Ward Rutherford, The Beast of Jersey: The Final Chapter (Redberry Press).
Ward Rutherford, The Untimely Silence (Hamish Hamilton, 1973).
Hillsdon, Jersey Witches, Ghosts & Traditions (1987).
Robert Sinsoilliez, Histoire des Minquiers et des Écréhou (1995).
States of Jersey, Proposition P.111/1999: Alphonse Le Gastelois – Ex Gratia Payment.
States of Jersey, Minutes of the States Assembly, 14 September 1999.
Independent Jersey Care Inquiry, Final Report (2017).
Independent Jersey Care Inquiry, Appendix 1: Chronology of Significant Events.
Jersey Heritage Archive catalog entries relating to police and inquiry records (e.g., ZC/D/AW1/A1).
States of Jersey, Public Records (Jersey) Law 2002 – Report R.62/2016.
The Guardian (Jersey care homes and Paisnel coverage, Feb–Mar 2008).
The Times — Simon de Bruxelles & David Brown (26 Feb 2008).
Irish Examiner — Tom Palmer (27 Feb 2008).
Jersey Evening Post (various articles, 2012–2015).
BBC Jersey (coverage relating to Alphonse Le Gastelois and later reflections).
Bailiwick Express (historical investigations and retrospective features).
The True Crime Database – “Beast of Jersey.”
The True Crime Enthusiast – “The Beast of Jersey.”
All That’s Interesting – “Edward Paisnel, The Beast of Jersey.”
Back on the Rock (Jersey blog, July 2020).
“Edward Paisnel.”
“Alphonse Le Gastelois.”
By Monte Mader5
5454 ratings
For more than a decade, Jersey (one of the Channel Islands off the coast of Normandy) was haunted by a figure locals came to call the Beast of Jersey. A masked man who moved through hedgerows and farm lanes at night slicing phone lines and entering homes while families slept. He abducted women and children from their beds assaulted them in their rooms or out in the fields and then returned them hours later, all while their families were fast asleep.
Today we meet Edward Paisnel: his background, his double life as a respected builder and beloved “Uncle Ted,” his access to children’s homes, and the crimes that terrorized an island from the late 1950s through the early 1970s. We examine how fear and suspicion led to the wrongful vilification and exile of Alphonse Le Gastelois. Paisnel was finally caught by chance after a reckless night drive (how many of these men were caught by traffic violations) and how the evidence: his mask, nail‑studded coat, and taped torch confirmed survivors’ accounts with chilling precision.
We also explore how the case lingered, no just through the firsthand testimonies that convicted him, but the unanswered questions surrounding institutional failure, and the folklore and ghost stories that grew in the wake of collective trauma. Small islands can create big legends.
This episode is a examination of one of the most disturbing cases in British criminal history.
Sources
Joan Paisnel, The Beast of Jersey (New English Library, 1972; later reprints).
Ward Rutherford, The Beast of Jersey: The Final Chapter (Redberry Press).
Ward Rutherford, The Untimely Silence (Hamish Hamilton, 1973).
Hillsdon, Jersey Witches, Ghosts & Traditions (1987).
Robert Sinsoilliez, Histoire des Minquiers et des Écréhou (1995).
States of Jersey, Proposition P.111/1999: Alphonse Le Gastelois – Ex Gratia Payment.
States of Jersey, Minutes of the States Assembly, 14 September 1999.
Independent Jersey Care Inquiry, Final Report (2017).
Independent Jersey Care Inquiry, Appendix 1: Chronology of Significant Events.
Jersey Heritage Archive catalog entries relating to police and inquiry records (e.g., ZC/D/AW1/A1).
States of Jersey, Public Records (Jersey) Law 2002 – Report R.62/2016.
The Guardian (Jersey care homes and Paisnel coverage, Feb–Mar 2008).
The Times — Simon de Bruxelles & David Brown (26 Feb 2008).
Irish Examiner — Tom Palmer (27 Feb 2008).
Jersey Evening Post (various articles, 2012–2015).
BBC Jersey (coverage relating to Alphonse Le Gastelois and later reflections).
Bailiwick Express (historical investigations and retrospective features).
The True Crime Database – “Beast of Jersey.”
The True Crime Enthusiast – “The Beast of Jersey.”
All That’s Interesting – “Edward Paisnel, The Beast of Jersey.”
Back on the Rock (Jersey blog, July 2020).
“Edward Paisnel.”
“Alphonse Le Gastelois.”

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