A woman from Thornton Heath has been sentenced to 12 years in prison after being convicted of manslaughter in the 1978 death of her five-year-old stepdaughter. Janice Nix’s conviction followed a review by the Metropolitan Police Cold Case Homicide team, which reopened the decades-old investigation into the child’s fatal injuries.
Cold Case Reopened
The case was revived after Andrea Bernard’s older brother contacted police in 2022, alleging his stepmother was responsible for Andrea’s death and recounting repeated abuse during childhood. The Metropolitan Police launched a fresh inquiry, examining thousands of archived documents and hospital records to piece together what happened.
New Evidence Emerges
A crucial 16-page coroner’s report detailed Andrea’s severe burns and hospital treatment, contradicting Nix’s claim during the recent investigation that a boiler malfunction caused the injuries. Expert testimony during the trial supported the prosecution’s argument that Andrea was deliberately held in scalding water, noting the typical reflex of a child to try to escape such pain.
Sentence And Impact
Janice Nix was sentenced at Isleworth Crown Court for manslaughter and received a concurrent 15-month term for the assault and ill-treatment of Andrea’s older brother between 1975 and 1978. In a victim impact statement, Andrea’s brother described the lasting trauma, recalling being forced to lie about the incident and his sister’s screams as his final memory.
Detective Praises New Witness
Detective Inspector Louise Caveen highlighted the importance of revisiting cold cases when new evidence comes to light, crediting the brother’s courage in coming forward as pivotal in securing justice decades after the tragedy.