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Category Archives: Serial child killers

Amelia Sach/Annie Walters – Baby farming killers

26 Tuesday Jun 2012

Posted by Author in Child Killer, Female Abuser, London, Serial child killers

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See also Britain’s worst ever serial killer: The Victorian ‘Angel Maker’ who murdered 400 babies 

Amelia Sach  (pic below) (1873 – 3 February 1903) and Annie Walters (1869 – 3 February 1903) were two British serial killers better known as the Finchley baby farmers.

Crimes

Amelia Sach operated a “lying-in” home in Stanley Road, and later at Claymore House in Hertford Road (both in East Finchley), London. Around 1900, she began to advertise that babies “could be left”, and took money for adoptions. The clients, judging from the witness accounts, were mostly servants from local houses who had become pregnant, and who had employers who were keen for the matter to be resolved discreetly. There was a charge for lying-in, and another for adoption, a “present” to future parents of between £25 and £30.

Annie Walters would collect the baby after it was born, and then dispose of it with poison — chlorodyne(a medicine containing morphine). They were caught after Walters raised the suspicions of her landlord in Islington who was a police officer. An unknown number of babies were murdered this way, possibly dozens.During their trial at the Old Bailey, the quantity of baby clothes found at Claymore House was used as evidence of the scale of their crimes. A local campaign to have their sentences commuted to life failed, and they became the first women to be hanged at Holloway on 3 February 1903, by Henry Pierrepoint, the future father of Albert Pierrepoint, the only double hanging of women to be carried out in modern times.

Background

Little is known about Annie Walters, but Sach’s background is well-documented: Amelia Sach was baptised Frances Amelia Thorne in Hampreston, Dorset, on May 5, 1867. She was the fourth child of ten and had three sisters. She married a builder called Jeffrey Sach in 1896. Sach was active long before she engaged Walters. By 1902 she was working from ‘Claymore House’, a semi-detached, red-brick villa in East Finchley, North London.

Sach was herself a mother; the England and Wales census of 1901 shows that a child was born to her in Clapham. She lied about her age — she was 32, not 29. Walters’ background is unknown, but she had been married. She seems to have had a drinking problem and she would periodically advertise herself as a sick nurse. On her arrest she was determined to be “feeble”, that is to say, feeble-minded.

There is a small possibility that the pair may have been involved in an earlier homicide that resulted in another woman being executed. In 1899, Louise Masset was tried for the murder of her young son Manfred, whose body was found in the ladies’ lavatory at Dalston Junction railway station. Circumstantial evidence suggested that Louise was the murderer, and the killing was to be rid of a supposed encumbrance due to her wanting to marry a man named Lucas. However, in her claims of innocence, Louise said she had taken Manfred out of the care of one woman to give him to two ladies she met who had an establishment for the care of growing children. The police claimed they made some effort in looking for the two women, but the extent of their investigation is unknown. In any event, Louise Masset was tried and convicted of the murder and, despite a petition for mercy, was executed in early January 1900.

Aftermath

The bodies of Sach and Walters were buried in unmarked graves within the walls of Holloway Prison, as was customary. In 1971 the prison underwent an extensive programme of rebuilding, during which the bodies of all the executed women were exhumed. With the exception of Ruth Ellis, the remains of the four other women executed at Holloway (i.e. Styllou Christofi, Edith Thompson, Sach and Walters) were subsequently reburied in a single grave (plot 117) at Brookwood Cemetery. The grave is marked with a horizontally laid grey granite tombstone, and the names of all the occupants are engraved on it. The precise location of Sach and Walters’ grave within Brookwood Cemetery 

“Claymore House”, the semi-detached, red-brick villa where Sach had lived and worked in 1902 acquired a bad reputation due to the criminal activities which took place there. Some time after the trial of Sach and Walters, the building had its name chiselled off the stone plaque above the window and is now anonymous

Baby farming

Baby farming was a term used in late-Victorian Era Britain (and, less commonly, in Australia and the United States) to mean the taking in of an infant or child for payment; if the infant was young, this usually included wet-nursing(breast-feeding by a woman not the mother). Some baby farmers “adopted” children for lump-sum payments, while others cared for infants for periodic payments. Though baby farmers were paid in the understanding that care would be provided, the term “baby farmer” was used as an insult, and improper treatment was usually implied. Illegitimacy and its attendant stigma were usually the impetus for a mother’s decision to put her children “out to nurse” with a baby farmer, but baby farming also encompassed foster care and adoption in the period before they were regulated by British law.

Richer women would also put their babies out to be cared for in the homes of villagers. Claire Tomalin gives a detailed account of this in her biography of Jane Austen, who was fostered in this manner, as were all her siblings, from a few months old until they were toddlers. Tomalin emphasises the emotional distance this created.

Particularly in the case of lump-sum adoptions, it was more profitable for the baby farmer if the infant or child she adopted died, since the small payment could not cover the care of the child for long. Some baby farmers adopted numerous children and then neglected them or murdered them outright (see infanticide). Several were tried for murder, manslaughter, or criminal neglect and were hanged. Margaret Waters (executed 1870) and Amelia Dyer (executed 1896) were two infamous British baby farmers, as were Amelia Sach and Annie Walters (executed 1903). The last baby farmer to be executed in Britain was Rhoda Willis, who was hanged in Wales in 1907. The only woman to be executed in New Zealand, Minnie Dean, was a baby farmer.

Spurred by a series of articles that appeared in the British Medical Journal in 1867, Parliament began to regulate baby farming in 1872 with the passage of the Infant Life Protection Act. A series of acts passed over the next seventy years, including the Children Act 1908 and the 1939 Adoption of Children (Regulation) Act, gradually placed adoption and foster care under the protection and regulation of the state.

The term has been used to describe the sale of eggs for use in assisted conception, particularly in vitro fertilization.

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Robert Black – All areas

25 Monday Jun 2012

Posted by Author in All Areas, Child Killer, Serial child killers

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June 2012

Northumberland girl’s killer to confess horror crimes on TV

THE parents of murdered schoolgirl Susan Maxwell have spoken of their “mixed feelings” about a television programme in which interviews with killer Robert Black (who abducted and murdered at least 4 kids) will be broadcast for the first time.

The sexual predator, who abducted the youngster near her Northumberland home before murdering her and dumping her body, is the subject of a Channel 5 documentary, which will be shown tomorrow night at 8-9 pm (26/06/2012)

See also full profile on black – Child killer

In the series Killers Behind Bars, criminologist Professor David Wilson attempts to uncover the true scale of the crimes committed by some of the country’s most notorious serial killers.

In tomorrow’s episode he will examine the theory that Black may be guilty of more murders than the four he has been convicted of, and attempt to link him to two of the UK’s longest-running unsolved cases.

But Susan’s parents, Liz and Fordyce, who live in Berwick, have been warned that the programme will feature a series of interviews with Black, recorded in prison, during which he confesses to some of his crimes in horrifying detail.

Yesterday Mrs Maxwell said: “We have not decided whether we are going to watch it yet. We have very mixed feelings. It is very upsetting.”

Susan was abducted on July 30, 1982, after she left her home in Cornhill-on-Tweed, north Northumberland, to play a game of tennis in Coldstream.

Black, now 65, raped and strangled her, before dumping her body by the side of a road near Uttoxeter in Staffordshire, some 250 miles away.

In 1994 the paedophile, from Stamford Hill in London, was given 10 life sentences at Newcastle Crown Court for the murder of Susan, Sarah Harper, 10, and Caroline Hogg, five.

His killing spree only ended in 1990, when he was caught red-handed by police with a barely-alive six-year-old girl hooded, bound, gagged and stuffed in a sleeping bag in the back of his van in the Scottish village of Stow.

But the family of one of his victims, Jennifer Cardy from Northern Ireland, faced a 30-year wait for justice as it was not until October last year that Black was finally jailed for life over her murder.

The nine-year-old was snatched as she cycled to a friend’s house in the quiet County Antrim village of Ballinderry on August 12, 1981. Her body was found six days later in a dam behind a roadside lay-by 15 miles away at Hillsborough, County Down.

Killers Behind Bars, which airs at 8pm tomorrow, will feature interviews with Scotland-born Black, recorded at Aberdeen’s Peterhead Prison.

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Steven Grieveson – Sunderland

21 Thursday Jun 2012

Posted by Author in Child Killer, Serial child killers, Tyne and Wear

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On 20th February 2014, Grieveson was also arrested on Suspicion of the murder of 7 year old Nikki Allen in 1992.

Click this for full profile on Nikki Allan

Admin note: Steven John Grieveson (born 1970) is an English serial killer who was convicted on 28 February 1996 of the murders of three teenage boys in the city of Sunderland, Tyne and Wear from 1993 to 1994. 

grievsonsteven

It was ascertained at his trial that Grieveson murdered the boys in order to conceal his homosexuality. He was subsequently ordered to serve at least 35 years for the three murders.

In October 2013, Grieveson was found guilty of a 4th murder; a 14 year old boy

October 2013

Serial Killer guilty of Sunderland schoolboys murder

steven_grieveson

Steven Grieveson pictured in early 90’s

A NOTORIOUS child killer, known as the Sunderland Strangler, has been convicted of murder and faces his fourth life sentence.

The serial killer murdered David Hanson, 15, Thomas Kelly, 18, and David Grieff, 15, during a four month killing spree in Sunderland between 1993 and 1994.

He denied he was the killer, who strangled his victims before setting their bodies alight, but was convicted by a jury and given three life sentences after a trial in 1996.

He has since admitted he killed all three.

The 42-year-old has now been convicted after a trial at Newcastle Crown Court of the murder of 14-year-old Simon Martin in 1990, whose body was found in a derelict house in the city a week after he went missing in May that year.

Former fairground worker and kitchen assistant Grieveson confessed to detectives last year the schoolboy was the first of his victims, but denied murder on the grounds of diminished responsibility.

After an hour’s deliberation a jury of five women and seven men found him guilty of murder.

The court heard during the trial Grieveson had claimed all four deaths were “accidents”, which happened while he was threatening his victims to keep quiet about him being bisexual.

But during the case it was revealed the killer had allegedly confessed to a woman visitor “the need to kill took him over”.

Grieveson, who was flanked by five guards throughout the trial, showed no emotion as the horrors of what he had done were revealed before the jury.

He did not give evidence from the witness box during the trial but called expert evidence to claim he had a severe abnormality of mind which impaired his responsibility for killing Simon.

Professor Derek Perkins told the court during the trial Grieveson has “psychopathic traits” to his personality which, mixed with vulnerabilities which makes for a “dangerous combination”.

The professor said: “His lack of emotion, callousness, lack of remorse are elements that would have contributed to his ability to kill, more than once.”

Grieving members of Grieveson’s victims’ families staged a daily vigil in the public gallery to hear what had happened during their sons’ final moments.

Grieveson told police after performing a sex act with Simon he killed him on a mattress in a room at Gilside House in Roker.

The killer , who first got in trouble with the police at aged 11 and had clocked up over 60 convictions before he was jailed for life, said during his confession last year: “After it was finished I got scared and I started shouting at him not to tell anyone.

“I just flipped, I flipped, just flipped for a minute I did then I started strangling him then, I don’t know, I didn’t let go.

Steven Grieveson – Sunderland

Steven Grieveson pictured in an old police custody photo

“The next thing he was on the bed and I got scared and I think there was a rock or something and I smashed his head.”

Grieveson had kept quiet when questioned by investigators in the past.

He even kept his silence when a former schoolmate, Alvin White, was charged with Simon’s murder, although the case was eventually dropped against the innocent teen.

But during the confession he made at a Leeds police station last year Grieveson said the words many had been desperate the hear.

He said: “I needed to tell the police. It was haunting me for 20 years.

“It drove me crazy and I needed to give the family peace of mind and peace of mind for myself as well.

“I can’t move forward unless this has been said.”

Grieveson, formerly of Roker Avenue in the city, refused to discuss the details surrounding the deaths of the other three teenagers he strangled.

But the boys’ families broke down in floods of tears when letters were read to the courtroom where Grieveson begged for their forgiveness and offered to answer any questions they had.

Grieveson had burnt the three boys bodies in a bid to cover his tracks during the murder spree between November 1993 and February 1994.

He had strangled each of the victims using ligatures.

killer

Steven Grieveson, pictured playing football over 2 decades ago

February 2013

Simon Martin death: Steven Grieveson admits killing

A man has admitted killing a Sunderland schoolboy more than two decades ago.

Steven Grieveson is accused of the murder of 14-year-old Simon Martin between 17 May and 27 May, 1990.

Appearing via videolink at Newcastle Crown Court, the 42-year-old denied his murder but admitted via his legal team that he was responsible for the death.

He was remanded in custody and a trial to determine whether he is guilty of murder or manslaughter will take place in June.

The teenager’s semi-naked body was found in a derelict house in Roker in 1990.

December 2012 – A man has appeared in court charged with the murder of a Sunderland schoolboy who was found dead more than 20 years ago.

Steven Grieveson, who was 20 at the time, is accused of killing teenager Simon Martin in May 1990.

The 14-year-old’s body was found in a derelict building close to the seafront. Magistrates remanded Mr Grieveson, 42, in custody. He will appear at Newcastle Crown Court on Thursday.

Steven John Grieveson (born 1970) is an English serial killer who was convicted on 28 February 1996 of the murders of three teenage boys in the city of Sunderland, Tyne and Wear from 1993 to 1994. 

It was ascertained at his trial that Grieveson murdered the boys in order to conceal his homosexuality. He was subsequently ordered to serve at least 35 years for the three murders.

Murders and trial

On 26 November 1993 Grieveson murdered 18-year-old Thomas Kelly in an abandoned allotment shed in Fulwell, Sunderland. On 4 February 1994 he murdered 15-year-old David Hanson in Roker Terrace, the bodies were found suffocated and partially-burned, before finally murdering 15-year-old David Grieff on 25 February 1994 near Fulwell in Sunderland, Davids body was discovered in a disused guest house less than two miles away. Cans of lighter fuel and glue were found beside the bodies.

The ­allotment where the body of one of Steven Grieveson’s three teenage ­victims was found.

Thomas Kelly had been strangled with his own scarf in an allotment hut; David Hanson with a scrap of material from an unoccupied basement; and David Grieff with his own belt in an allotment shed close to the scene of the Kelly murder.

At the scene of the David Hanson murder, Mr Grieveson’s fingerprint was found on a basement window, and on boarding torn down to force entry, police also found a footprint which matched the sole of Mr Grieveson’s training shoe. A DNA profile taken from semen found in David Grieff’s mouth and stomach matched Mr Grieveson’s DNA.

Following an extensive investigation, Grieveson was arrested for the murders on 11 March 1994 and faced a six-week trial in 1996 where he was handed three life sentences for murder. He was ordered to serve a minimum of 35 years in prison.

Other possible murders

In November 2000, Steven Grieveson, serving his three life sentences at Full Sutton Prison, was arrested and questioned over the murder of 14-year-old Simon Martin, who was murdered in Gilside House Roker, in 1990.

In June 2004, Grieveson wrote a letter to the Victim Liaison Services admitting murdering his three victims, but did not admit to the murder of Simon Martin and was not charged with the murder.

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Fred & Rosemary West

24 Thursday May 2012

Posted by Author in Child Killer, Devon, Female Abuser, Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, Serial child killers

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Frederick Walter Stephen West (29 September 1941 – 1 January 1995), was a British serial killer.

Between 1967 and 1987, he alone, and later, he and his wife Rosemary, tortured, raped and murdered at least 11 young women and girls, many at the couple’s homes. Rosemary West also murdered Fred’s stepdaughter (his first wife’s biological daughter) Charmaine, while he was serving a prison sentence for theft. The majority of the murders occurred between May 1973 and September 1979 at their home in 25 Cromwell Street, Gloucester. The house was demolished in 1996 and the space converted into a landscaped footpath connecting Cromwell Street to St. Michaels Square.

Rosemary Pauline “Rose” West (née Letts) (born on the 29th of November, 1953, in Barnstaple, Devon) is a British serial killer, now an inmate at HMP Low Newton, Brasside, Durham, after being convicted of 10 murders in 1995.

Her husband Fred, who committed suicide in prison while awaiting trial, is believed to have collaborated with her in the torture and murder of at least 10 young women, many at the couple’s home in Gloucester, Gloucestershire, England. Fred West is known to have carried out 12 murders. Rosemary West had no involvement in the first two.

See also Fred West’s Son Jailed For Under-Age Sex

Early life of Fred West

Fred West was born into a poor family of farm workers in Bickerton Cottage, Much Marcle, Herefordshire, to Walter Stephen West (5 July 1914 – 28 March 1992) and Daisy Hannah Hill (1922-6 February 1968). He was the second of their six children. West would later claim that his father had incestuous relationships with his daughters. It has been suggested that incest was an accepted part of the household, and that his father taught him bestiality from an early age. West recalled, in police interviews, that his father had said on many occasions “Do what you want, just don’t get caught doing it”. It has also been alleged that his mother Daisy began sexually abusing him from the age of 12, although this was never proven nor admitted by West.

At school, West showed an aptitude for woodwork and artwork, but did not excel academically. He left school at the age of 15 in December 1956; two years later, in November 1958, he suffered a fractured skull and a broken arm and leg in a motorbike accident. The accident put him into an eight-day coma. His family reported that after the accident he became prone to sudden fits of rage. Two years later, he was unconscious for 24 hours after hitting his head in a fall from a fire escape.

At the age of 19, he was arrested for molesting a 13-year-old girl. He was convicted, but escaped a sentence of imprisonment. His mother sent him to live with her sister Violet in Much Marcle and the rest of the family effectively disowned him thereafter

Marriage to Rena Costello

In September 1962, the 21-year-old West became re-acquainted with a former girlfriend, Catherine Costello, who was now better known as Rena from her time working as a prostitute. Costello was already pregnant by another man, and she and West married on 17 November before moving to Coatbridge, Lanarkshire. Her daughter, Charmaine Carol, was born on 22 February 1963. Costello and West claimed they had adopted Charmaine, whose father was from Pakistan. In July 1964 Costello bore West a daughter named Anne Marie. During this period in Coatbridge, West worked as an ice cream van driver. On 4 November 1965, he ran over and killed a four-year-old boy with his van.

The family, along with Isa McNeill who looked after the couple’s children and Costello’s friend Anne McFall, moved into the Lakeside caravan park in Bishop’s Cleeve, Gloucestershire at the end of 1965 when West feared for his safety following the ice cream van incident. To escape from West’s sadistic sexual demands, Costello and McNeill moved to Scotland in 1966 while McFall, who had become infatuated with West and the two children, remained. Costello continued to visit the children every few months. In August 1967 McFall, who was eight months pregnant with West’s child, vanished. McFall was never reported missing and her remains were found in June 1994.

In September 1967, Costello returned to live with West, but left again the following year, putting the children in West’s care

Early life and marriage to Fred West

Rosemary Letts was born in Barnstaple, Devon, to William Andrew and Daisy Gwendoline Letts after a difficult pregnancy. Her mother suffered from depression and was given ECT while pregnant; some have argued that this may have caused prenatal injury to her daughter. Rosemary grew up into a moody teenager and performed poorly at school.

Rosemary’s parents split up when she was a teenager. She lived with her mother before moving in with her father at the age of 16 in Bishop’s Cleeve, near Cheltenham; her father was prone to violence and repeatedly sexually abused her. At around this time, she began dating West who was living at Lake House Hotel Caravan Park, Stoke Road, Bishops Cleeve. Her father disapproved of the relationship, threatening to call social services and threatening West directly. Rosemary was caring for West’s daughter Anne-Marie (by his previous marriage to Rena Costello) and his stepdaughter, Charmaine (daughter of Rena Costello and another man).. West and Rosemary moved in together at the Lake House Hotel Caravan Park; Charmaine briefly attended Bishops Cleeve County Primary School on Tobyfield Road. However, by 1970, Rosemary found herself pregnant by West and they moved to Midland Road, Gloucester.

Rosemary West and her husband were convicted of sexual assault in January 1973. They were fined for indecent assault of Caroline Roberts (née Owen), who escaped the couple’s home after being attacked and reported them to the police. The Wests’ typical pattern was to pick up girls from bus stops in and around Gloucester and imprison them in their home for several days before killing them.

She also periodically worked as a prostitute, often while her husband watched.

One of the most frequent visitors to 25 Cromwell Street, now demolished, was her father, who had abused her from a young age. She was often pregnant and was the mother of eight children. Five of these were fathered by Fred West, while three were fathered by clients she met through prostitution.

It is reported that, even after the birth of her fourth child, Rosemary’s father would still visit her for sex, and would then rape Fred’s daughter Anne-Marie

Fred West with daughters Anne-Marie (standing) and Tara West pictured at Anne-Marie’s wedding

Marriage to Rosemary “Rose” Letts

While still married to Costello, 27-year-old West met his next wife, Rosemary Letts, on 29 November 1968, on her 15th birthday. On her 16th birthday she moved in with him and a few months later they moved from the caravan to a two-storey house in Midland Road, Gloucester. On 17 October 1970, Rosemary gave birth to their daughter, Heather Ann. Fred West was imprisoned for theft from 4 December 1970 until 24 June 1971.

Rosemary killed Charmaine (Fred’s stepdaughter from his first marriage) shortly before West’s release in June 1971. According to Anne Marie, both sisters were subject to frequent beatings, but Charmaine infuriated Rosemary by her refusal to cry no matter how severely she was beaten. Charmaine disappeared in mid June. Rosemary explained this by claiming that Costello had called and taken her back to Scotland. Costello turned up to collect Charmaine in late August, however, and she too then disappeared.

On 29 January 1972, Fred and Rosemary West married in Gloucester, and on 1 June of that year, Rosemary gave birth to their second daughter, Mae. Around this time West encouraged his wife into prostitution. Rosemary eventually had seven children, of whom three were mixed race. Needing a bigger house, the family moved to 25 Cromwell Street , now demolished, where West converted the upper floor to bedsits. “Rose’s Room”, the room Rosemary used for prostitution had peepholes so he could watch and a red light outside the door for warning the children not to enter when she was “busy”. Like West, Rosemary came from a family where incest was common; Rosemary’s father, Bill Letts, with Fred’s approval, would often visit their home to have sex with Rosemary.

In October 1972 the Wests hired 17-year-old Caroline Roberts as the children’s nanny. They had picked up the girl during the night time along a secluded country road and after she informed them that she wished to escape her stepfather; a week later she moved into 25 Cromwell Street to look after their three children at the time. Rosemary, who had begun prostitution in her bedroom at this time, explained to Roberts that she was a “masseuse” when Roberts had inquired about the men frequently visiting her. While there, according to Caroline, Fred had informed her that if ever she needed an abortion he was well equipped to do so. She became suspicious when Fred boasted that many of the women he had treated with an abortion were so overjoyed that they offer him sexual services as a reward. 

She rejected Fred and Rosemary’s advances into their “sex-circle” and left a few weeks later. On 6 December 1972 the Wests picked her up again along the secluded road and apologized profusely for what had happened and invited her to their home to make amends with a “cup of tea”. Roberts had believed they had been genuinely courteous in what they said in their apology to her and obliged, believing that they had simply mistaken what the job had entailed. Back at 25 Cromwell Street, after initially making her welcome with the promised cup of tea, soon afterwards Rose started kissing her, bound her heavily with bondage tape, and both raped her. According to Roberts, Fred had remarked that “her vagina was unusual” and that he “would have to change that”. When she screamed, Rosemary smothered her with a pillow and she was bound even further around the neck. Fred threatened her that they would keep her locked up in the cellar and let Rosemary’s black male visitors “use” her and that when they had finished they would bury her under the paving stones of Gloucester. Fred boasted that they had killed hundreds of young girls and the police would never find them. Quickly realizing that they would kill her, Caroline gave into them and let them sexually do whatever they wanted to her without a fight. Fred allowed Roberts to leave the next day only after she promised she would return as their nanny. Roberts reported the rape to police but withdrew the accusation when the case came to court. The Wests pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of indecent assault and were fined £50.

In early 1973, the Wests took eight-year-old Anne Marie to the cellar, where they bound and gagged her before West raped her while Rosemary watched.

In 1979 Anne Marie became pregnant by West, but the pregnancy was terminated as it was ectopic. Unable to cope with her father any longer, she left home; West now began abusing Heather, who disappeared a few years later

Investigation, arrest and conviction

See also Rose west police interviews

In May 1992, West filmed himself raping one of his other daughters, and twice again afterwards. She told friends at school what had happened. On 4 August one of the friends told her mother and she went to the police. On 6 August 1992, the police began an investigation, eventually leading to West being charged, with Rosemary as an accomplice, with rape. She was also charged with child cruelty and the remaining children were placed in foster care. The rape case against the Wests collapsed when the two main witnesses declined to testify at the court case on 7 June 1993.

Chilling … killers Fred and Rose West on day out

The police continued investigating the disappearance of their daughter Heather. After taking statements from social workers, and the children themselves, about a joke about “Heather being buried under the patio”, they obtained a further search warrant in February 1994, allowing them to excavate the garden in search of Heather. They started searching the house and excavating the garden on 24 February 1994.

After West’s arrest the following day, the police uncovered human bones. He confessed, retracted and then re-confessed to the murder of his daughter, denying that Rosemary was involved. Rosemary was not arrested until April 1994, initially on sex offences but later charged with murder. Further bodies were found and, on 4 March 1994, West admitted that he had carried out nine more murders, including that of his first wife. However he frequently denied killing Anne McFall. The remains of McFall and Costello were subsequently unearthed in fields near the village of Kempley.

Fred and Rosemary West were brought before a magistrates’ court in Gloucester on 30 June 1994; he was charged with 11 murders and she with 10. Immediately afterwards, Fred West was re-arrested on suspicion of murdering Anne McFall, whose body had been found on 7 June 1994. On the evening of 3 July 1994, he was charged with her murder.

Death

On 1 January 1995, Fred West hanged himself while on remand in his cell at Winson Green Prison, Birmingham. His funeral was held in Coventry on 29 March 1995. West was cremated with only three people present.

Aftermath

The evidence against Rosemary was circumstantial; unlike her husband, she did not confess. She was tried in October 1995 at Winchester Crown Court, found guilty of all 10 murders and sentenced to life imprisonment. The trial judge recommended that she should never be released and 18 months later the then serving Home Secretary Jack Straw agreed with this recommendation.

Rose West … House Of Horrors killer scoffed her way to obesity in Bronzefield jail in Ashford

In October 1996, the Wests’ house in Cromwell Street, which was next to the Seventh Day Adventist Church, along with the adjoining property No. 23, was demolished and the site made into a pathway. Every brick was crushed and every timber was burned to discourage souvenir hunters.

Novelist Martin Amis was a cousin of the Wests’ victim Lucy Partington, who disappeared in 1973; he dedicated his novel The Information (published in 1995) to her

The victims

  • Charmaine West (born 22 February 1963): Killed in June 1971 by Rose West while Fred was in prison, the motive said to be Rose’s wish to break links with Charmaine’s mother, “Rena”.

  • Catherine Bernadette “Rena” West (born 14 April 1944): Killed August 1971. Rena had called to take Charmaine away with her and it is believed Fred West killed her to avoid an investigation into Charmaine’s whereabouts.

  • Lynda Gough (born 1 May 1953): Killed April 1973. A lodger at 25 Cromwell St, Gough and Rosemary would share lovers. Following her disappearance Gough’s mother called to visit and Rosemary, wearing Gough’s clothes, told her she had moved to find work in Weston-super-Mare.

  • Carol “Caz” Ann Cooper (born 10 April 1958): Killed November 1973. Cooper was living in a children’s home in Worcester when she disappeared while walking home from the cinema.

  • Lucy Katherine Partington (born 4 March 1952): Killed December 1973. Spent Christmas with her family in Cheltenham and visited a friend, and disappeared after leaving to catch a bus home. There is strong evidence that she had been kept alive for at least several days. A week after she disappeared, Fred went to a hospital in the early hours of 3 January 1974 to get a serious laceration stitched. A knife matching the cut was found with Partington’s body and police surmise he sustained the injury while dismembering the body. Partington, a university student, was the cousin of novelist Martin Amis and the sister of author Marian Partington, who wrote about her sister’s disappearance and the discovery of her remains in her memoir If You Sit Very Still (2012) 

  • Therese Siegenthaler (born 27 November 1952): Killed in April 1974. A student in South London who left to hitch-hike to Ireland and disappeared.

  • Shirley Hubbard (born 26 June 1959): Killed November 1974. Left a work experience course in Droitwich to return home but did not arrive. When her remains were found her head was completely covered in tape with only a three-inch rubber tube inserted to allow her to breathe.

  • Juanita “Nita” Marion Mott (born 1 March 1957): Killed April 1975. A former lodger at 25 Cromwell St, Mott was living with a friend of her mother’s in Newent when she disappeared.

  • Shirley Anne Robinson (born 8 October 1959): Killed May 1978. A lodger at 25 Cromwell St, Robinson was a prostitute for the Wests. Disappeared after becoming pregnant with Fred’s child.

  • Alison Chambers (born 8 September 1962): Killed August 1979. Last known sexually-motivated killing.

  • Heather Ann West (born 17 October 1970) Killed June 1987. Heather became the focus of Fred’s attentions after Anne Marie left home. She complained to friends about the abuse, and when this got back to Fred & Rose, they decided to eliminate her as Heather now risked exposing them. Also, Heather was probably sired not by Fred, but by Rose’s abusive father, Bill Letts.Fred West claimed he had not meant to kill her but she had been sneering at him and he “had to take the smirk off her face”. Rosemary told an enquiring neighbour the following day that she and Heather had had a “hell of a row” so it is believed Rosemary may have initiated her death. The Wests told their children Heather had left for a job in Devon, but later changed the story to her having run off with a lesbian lover when she failed to contact or visit them. Later still Fred would threaten the children that they would “end up under the patio like Heather” if they misbehaved. Heather’s body was found under the patio that Fred had built over the fishpond dug by his son Stephen. Heather’s murder indirectly led to the Wests’ arrests almost seven years later.

  • Rena Costello West, Fred’s first wife, was killed in 1971. Her body was found in Letterbox Field near Much Marcle.

Their only known victim between 1980 and their arrest 14 years later was their daughter Heather (who died in 1987), compared to nine murders in the previous eight years committed by the pair as a couple. However, police believe the couple murdered more. There were no known murders in the years 1976–1977, 1980–1986 and 1988–1992. During questioning after being arrested, Fred West had confessed to murdering up to 30 people, but the police believed the pair may have killed only 13. As well as the 12 confirmed they believe West also killed 15-year-old Mary Bastholm in January 1968, but to date no body has been found. West’s son, Stephen, has said he firmly believed the missing Gloucester teenager was an early victim of his father, as Fred West had reportedly boasted of committing Miss Bastholme’s murder while on remand in prison during 1994.

Although no forensic evidence linked Fred West to the murder of Anne McFall, and he always denied killing her, in contrast to the other murders, the state of the body (missing finger and toe bones as was the case with the other bodies) and the dimensions of the grave site match aspects of West’s modus operandi.

Janet Leach, West’s Appropriate adult who also visited him in prison, says West told her he had been involved in at least 20 further murders, including children killed in a barn.

Berkley Mill, where Fred West claimed to have buried more victims – No bodies or remains have been found

The Handwriting

Ruth Myers, a London graphologist, has analysed a sample of Rose West’s handwriting and made the analysis available on her web site. According to Ruth,”Rose West’s letters prove she is a twisted, sadistic killer with no conscience…Rose West lives in a world of deception and has a tough ruthless nature. She is also deeply disturbed.She appears friendly, but this is only on the surface. In reality she is cold and introspective, shown by her writing leaning to the left. She is highly secretive — one of the main characteristics in a murderer’s personality — shown by the closely dotted i’s. The o’s are also closed in a perfect ring, one of the biggest signs of someone who likes to hide things.

“Her true feelings are frozen and repressed, probably the result of childhood traumas. She is emotionally warped and has no conscience or sense of right or wrong. She is moody and prone to flashes of quick temper and irritability shown by the t bars not crossing through the stem of the letter. Her sweeping t bars with upward strokes indicate an enthusiastic, optimistic attitude at times. She is able to fire others with zeal and dominate the scene.

“However, the pointed ending of the t bars shows hostility with a desire to punish. The mixture of rounded and spiky formation of her letters, especially the hooked initial strokes on the b, a t,i and s show cruel tendencies. And some of the lower descenders of the y’s denote sexual deviation and violence. Her writing is quite large which shows a need to be noticed. It also means she has a low attention span.

“She is fairly unpredictable, immature and impressionable, shown by the fully looped h’s, k’s and l’s.”


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Beverly Allitt – Lincolnshire

05 Saturday May 2012

Posted by Author in Child Killer, Doctors/Nurses, Female Abuser, Lincolnshire, Serial child killers

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Angel of Death serial killer Beverley Allitt has put on FOUR STONE since 1993 while serving 13 life sentences.

December 2007

Serial killer nurse Allitt must serve 30 years

Beverly Allitt, pictured in 1991

The serial killer nurse Beverly Allitt must serve a minimum of 30 years in jail for the murder and abuse of children in her care, the high court ruled today.

A high court judge ruled that Allitt, dubbed the “Angel of Death”, should serve a minimum sentence of 28 years and 175 days, taking into account the one year and 190 days she spent in custody before being sentenced.

Allitt was given 13 life sentences in 1993 for murdering four children, attempting to murder another three, and causing grievous bodily harm with intent to a further six at Grantham and Kesteven hospital in Lincolnshire.

Mr Justice Stanley Burnton, sitting in London, confirmed the minimum sentence of 30 years, which is the same term previously recommended by the trial judge and the then Lord Chief Justice. Allitt will be 54 before she will be considered for parole.

The former nurse was diagnosed as suffering from Munchausen syndrome by proxy (MSbP) when she carried out the attacks between 1991 and 1993.

The 39-year-old is now being held at the Rampton high-security hospital in Nottingham.

Allitt murdered the four children by injecting them with high doses of insulin.

MSbP is a condition identified by the paediatrician Sir Roy Meadow in 1977, and described as a form of child abuse in which carers deliberately induce or falsely report illnesses in children to focus attention on themselves.

The judge said: “I have to say that I regard the determination of the minimum period in a case such as the present – and fortunately cases as extreme as this are rare – as a very difficult task.

“Once it is accepted that the offender was suffering from mental disorder, difficult ethical and indeed philosophical questions arise as to the degree to which responsibility for the offences in question should be regarded as diminished.

“I have found that there is an element of sadism in Ms Allitt’s conduct and her offending. But that sadism is itself, if not the result, certainly a manifestation of her mental disorder, and it would be unduly simplistic to treat it in the same way as one would if the offender were mentally well.

“By her actions, what should have been a place of safety for its patients became not just a place of danger, but if not a killing field somethingclose to it.”

The four children murdered by Allitt were seven-week-old Liam Taylor, 11-year-old Timothy Hardwick, two-month-old Becky Phillips and 15-month-old Claire Peck.

They all died between February and April 1991 while Allitt was a nurse at the Lincolnshire hospital.

Nine other children survived her murder attempts.

Allitt was subsequently found to have been the only nurse on duty at the time of all the poisonings.

The judge said: “These were multiple murders and attempted murders of young children whose lives were snuffed out almost before they had begun.”

Having considered all the medical evidence, he was satisfied that she was suffering from “an abnormality of mind” when she committed the offences.

Joanne Taylor, the mother of Allitt’s first victim, Liam Taylor, said she was pleased with the judge’s verdict and his reference to Allitt’s sadism.

Taylor, who was in court with her husband, said: “That’s what we all felt at the time. There’s a fine line between evil and illness, and I’ll never forget him saying that word today.”

David Peck, of Newark, Nottinghamshire, the father of 15-month-old Claire who died in March 1991, said: “I’m absolutely delighted with the outcome – and pleased for the other families as well.

“We can now put this behind us after 15 years. I couldn’t ask for anything better.”

Claire, who suffered from asthma, was admitted to hospital and collapsed when Allitt was alone with her.

Allitt was convicted of her murder after the jury heard evidence that the toddler had been injected with potassium and lignocaine.

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