Killer Jeremy Bamber says he is using lockdown to sift through case material looking for new evidence in his bid for freedom.
Bamber, 59, is serving a whole-life sentence for slaughtering his family in the 1985 White House Farm murders, the subject of an ITV drama this year.
He was found guilty of shooting his adoptive parents June and Nevill, both 61, his sister Sheila Caffell, 28, and her six-year-old twins Daniel and Nicholas.
Bamber is locked in his cell in Wakefield prison in West Yorkshire. He has not tested positive for coronavirus and has not displayed any symptoms.
Read more on mirror.co.uk