The words come out quietly, but the distress is clear. âI never taught them how to swim,â says Genevieve Barnaby-Adetoro, of her three stepdaughters, âinseparableâ sisters Jane, Christina and Rebecca.
The sistersâ aunt, Ajike Johnson â Auntie Jik to âthe girlsâ â can barely think straight after the stress of the past ten days, but is adamant she is wrong.
âNo, Genevieve, you didnât teach them, but they would have learned when they were young, before they lived with you. Iâm sure they could swim.
âI remember Jane coming with us to that water park in Bolton when she came to stay. Iâm sure she was swimming then.â
We never quite establish the facts about how confident these sisters were in the water, but it hardly matters now.
On Wednesday, May 13, both of these women listened separately to news reports of how the bodies of three young women had been pulled from the sea in Brighton.
It was an awful tragedy, unfolding far away. Genevieve was watching the news at home with her husband Joseph in Uxbridge, west London; Ajike, who lives in Manchester, recalls updates from Sky News pinging into her phone.
âI just remember thinking, âWhat has happened here? God bless them, and their poor families.ââ

The inseparable Walters sisters Jane, Christina and Rebecca in a digitally enhanced image provided by their family

The sisters with their father, Joseph. He has been âcatatonicâ since hearing what happened to his daughters
Neither woman knew, for the entire day, that this was their family tragedy, that at around midnight, once the police had gone through the handbags left on the beach, and searched the rental apartment where the women had been staying, there would be police officers on Genevieveâs doorstep, breaking the worst news possible.
Sisters Jane, 36, Christina, 32, and Rebecca, 31 â Jikâs beloved nieces, Josephâs adored daughters, had entered the sea at some time before 5.30am, in circumstances that are still unclear, and been swept to their deaths.
They were fully clothed, âright down to the shoesâ says Genevieve. âNot in going out clothes, as was reported, just in ordinary daytime clothes.â
âThe police phoned first,â she adds. âThey asked Joseph if he had children, and when he said yes, they asked him their names. Then they came round to tell us in person. Weâd been watching the news and had no idea it was our girls. We didnât even know they were in Brighton. Then we had to go and identify the girls, one by one.â
Genevieve tells me that there is a fourth sister in this now broken family. Her daughter Lilly, 25, technically a half-sister, has been inconsolable since learning that all three are dead.
âJosephâs biggest worry was âHow do we tell Lilly?â. In the end I did it. Weâre all in this nightmare you think you will wake up from.â She tells me they are trying to get Lilly, who lives in the US, working as a manager for a Dallas engineering company, back for the funeral. There is no date yet, because a police investigation is underway and the bodies have not yet been released to the family.
âWe think itâs right that Lilly is involved,â says Genevieve. âWeâve said she can be in charge of their homecoming and she wants it to be as beautiful as possible, with white caskets and white roses.
âShe even wants a carriage to take them home, to honour them. We will ask her to pick their clothes.â
There is a strong sense that the women of the family will sort this funeral, because the sistersâ father Joseph, a 68-year-old chief security guard, simply doesnât have that sort of strength right now.
âThey are his babies. He is a softie anyway. My brother is a teddy bear, but when it comes to his girlsâŠâ
âHe has been catatonic,â says Jik. Genevieve agrees. âHe wonât shut his eyes, he forgets to eat.â
In an almost unbearable twist, this is not the first time this close-knit unit has endured tragedy.
In 2010, the girls lost their mother, Janice Adetoro, aged just 43, in particularly horrifying circumstances that have now taken on an added poignancy.
Janice, who had split from their father and suffered mental health issues, walked into a park lake near her Midlands home on a January day 16 years ago. Her body was not recovered for several months, because of snowy weather conditions at the time.
Jane, Christina and Rebecca â then aged 20, 16 and 15 â did not know for all that time if their mother was alive or dead.
As part of a police appeal for information, Janiceâs brother made a direct plea to his sister: âThe girls are so upset and canât stop thinking about you,â the local newspaper report from the time reads. âFor their sake we need you to make contact.â
âIt traumatised the girls,â says Jik. âThey never recovered.
âTheyâd been living in the Midlands with their mum, but then moved in with their dad and Genevieve in Uxbridge afterwards. They picked up the pieces.â
Whether this painful chapter in the family history is linked to what happened in Brighton, we may never know. The family have no idea why the sisters were even there, or how they got there. The only connection they can recall with the seaside town is one family holiday.

Flowers and messages left at the scene in Brighton

In 2010, their mother Janice Adetoro, who had split from their father and had mental health issues, walked into a park lake
Police have been investigating CCTV footage to see if they took the train, and try to pinpoint their movements once they arrived.
Was it in character for them just to take off? âNo. They might go walking but not like this,â says Jik.
One theory the police will clearly be looking at is whether these sisters walked into the water deliberately, as their mother had done. Genevieve is adamant they could not have.
âNo, no, no. It is 16 years since they lost their mother. Time diminishes pain. It is still there, but there is no way you kill yourself after 16 years because your mother died. It doesnât happen like that.â
Jik clings to the thought that it was a terrible accident, and an unthinkable coincidence.
âI pray that theyâve been being mischievous, and that one of them lost their footing and the others dived in to save them.â
The vacuum of information has â as is so sadly often the case â been filled by armchair sleuths and social media conspiracy theorists.
The family has agreed to this interview because theyâve been horrified at how the deaths have captured public attention, some of which has been critical.
âWeâve had to tell Lilly to stay off the internet because every time she goes on there, she sees her sisters everywhere, and the comments sections are even worse,â says Genevieve.
âPeople have come up with their own explanations of what has happened. I read things like, âOh, they are blacks, maybe they fell off a boatâ, or âthree less hijabsâ. Iâve read things that have made me cry.
âPeople are heartless. Some are saying, âWe MUST know. We must have answers.â Hold on a minute. We are their family, and we donât have answers.â
And my goodness they want them. Jik, 51, a former social worker who now works as a life coach, is almost in tears, partly furious ones; partly just exhausted ones. âDonât think we arenât asking the questions ourselves. âGirls, why were you in Brighton? Did you just decide to go?â Iâve gone over and over it.
âThat night there was a David Attenborough tribute thing, for his 100th birthday. The girls loved David Attenborough. They used to watch his documentaries. Did they decide to go to Brighton for that? Did they go for a paddle in the sea?
âIt would have been just like them to put their bags down carefully â they all had a touch of OCD and wouldnât have wanted to get them dirty â and Iâve read that the water drops away suddenly.
âDid one fall in and the others go to help, because they would have done. Where one of them went, you always found the other two.â
She pauses. âMy initial thought when I heard was, âWho has done this to them?â because they are so naive, so closed off, in a way, that I thought someone must have done this.â
In the wake of Janiceâs death, the family had to recalibrate, each member changed, their dynamic forever altered, and a contained new unit Jik calls âthe bubbleâ emerged. She tells me: âJane became the mother for the girls. She was the disciplinarian; they followed her.â Genevieve adds: âBecky was more of the clown; she cracked jokes a lot. Christina was the stubborn one. If you wanted Christina to do something, youâd have to ask her 20 times.â
The girls were bright, high-achievers who would grow into young women with poise. Jane worked as an accountant. Christina was in education, studying at Brunel University, while Becky had done various courses after school and, Jik says, was forever being teased by her family to buckle down and commit to something.
They had, says Jik, full lives ahead of them. None had a boyfriend or partner, says Jik. She and Genevieve wrack their brains to think if there was ever mention of one, and they recall that Jane was once seeing a handsome man, âand we thought it might go placesâ, but it fizzled out.
None of the sisters socialised much. They attended church, but they didnât drink.
âThey were teetotal,â says Jik. âIf one of the rest of us had a drink or a cigarette, theyâd say âAuntie, Auntie!â.â
âThey were unlike other girls of their age. None of them were on social media. They didnât go out partying. They werenât into make-up and they didnât dress in a revealing way.â
The women allow themselves a smile at social media speculation that they would have been clubbing in Brighton. Absolutely, categorically not.
âIf you knew our JaneâŠâ says Jik. âShe was always covered, I mean even her arms were completely covered up. But they were proud of being a bit different. They didnât need to be like other girls.â
âThey didnât have other friends really â didnât need them. It wasnât a negative thing, they just had everything they needed in each other. And they were always together. If you saw one of them, the others would be there, too.â
They werenât, she insists, âreclusesâ, and when it did come to them leaving home two years ago and moving to a flat in Uxbridge as a trio they were elated.
âThey were excited to be independent, but they were still co-dependent, to a point, with their dad and Genevieve. He still helped them financially, emotionally. He was there for them.
âTheyâd speak or message several times a day. Now we have to go into their flat and sort things out. No one can bear that.â
This is a family struggling in the sudden glare of publicity.
Another layer of confusion came when the family provided police with a photograph of the three girls, but it transpired that the image had been digitally altered because they didnât have one of all three sisters together.
Jik says they are devastated that this diverted attention from their tragedy â and gave the conspiracy theorists more ammunition.
âItâs been a witch-hunt,â she says. âAnd our girls deserve better.â
The answers will come, in time. Now they must plan a triple funeral and begin the grieving process.
Is there any comfort in the fact that the three sisters died as they had lived â together?
âNo,â weeps Genevieve. âThey didnât come into this world together. Why would they leave it together? They had their whole lives ahead of them. They should have got married, had children, grandchildren. We have lost so many years. There is no comfort here.â
- Â To support the family go to:Â gofundme.com/f/in-loving-memory-of-jane-christina-rebecca


