On the afternoon of 23 March 1988, Deborah Linsley was murdered on a train between Petts Wood and London Victoria stations in Greater London. Although there were about 70 people on the train, and Linsley apparently fought and injured her attacker, only one passenger reported hearing anything suspicious. The killer has not been identified. Stored blood evidence from the scene allowed the case to be re-examined a decade later using DNA technology, and in 2002 it was re-opened with a major publicity campaign. A police reward is on offer.
Deborah "Debbie" Ann Linsley was born in Bromley, Kent, on 20 October 1961 to Arthur and Marguerite Linsley. Her father was a retired insurance broker, and Marguerite investigated fraud for the Department of Social Security. [1] By 1988, Deborah had moved out and was living and working in Edinburgh as a hotel manager. [2] [3] She had returned to London to attend a hotel management course, [4] and stayed at her parents' house in Bromley. [5] She also visited her brother Gordon, at whose wedding in two weeks she would have been a bridesmaid. [2]
On the afternoon of Wednesday 23 March, [6] Gordon gave Deborah a lift to Petts Wood station, [1] where she boarded the Orpington-to-London train at 14:16. [2] The intermediate stops en route to London were Bickley, Bromley South, Shortlands, Beckenham Junction, Kent House, Penge East, Sydenham Hill, West Dulwich, Herne Hill and Brixton, [5] with arrival at Victoria scheduled for 14:50. [2]
The train was a 4EPB electric multiple unit number 5115 with compartment stock [1] [7] made up of a mixture of carriage types. Some carriages were of the fully open type with a central gangway running the full length of each carriage; others had unconnected full-width compartments seating twelve, each with a door on each side opening directly to the outside and no means of moving from compartment to compartment within the train. [3] [8] [9] The trailer second carriage Linsley was in (number 15084) was of the latter type, and she may have chosen it because it was one of the few in which smoking was permitted. [10] Following the murder, British Rail emphasised that trains always had at least some corridor-type carriages to give passengers a choice of corridor or non-corridor compartments. [5]
At some point before the journey ended, Linsley was stabbed to death. She sustained eleven stab wounds [1] to the face, neck and abdomen, [4] of which at least five were to the area around the heart. [2] One of these wounds was the cause of death. [4] When the train arrived on to Victoria's platform two at 14:50, [9] a British Rail porter [4] (as was customary) walked through the train. The carriage floor and seat were covered in blood. [2] Some of this was discovered to be that of Linsley's killer, who had been injured in the struggle. [2] Linsley had defence wounds on her hands, [2] and a spokesman for Scotland Yard said that she may have been trying to defend herself from a sex attack, [11] though police did not find any evidence of sexual interference. [12]
Linsley's funeral took place at Holy Trinity Church, Bromley on 22 April, and she was buried in a nearby cemetery. The cortege was accompanied by a police escort between the church and cemetery, [13] where Deborah Linsley was buried in the bridesmaid's dress she would have worn at her brother's wedding. [4]
British Rail had been slowly phasing out carriages of the type in which Linsley died, and within a week of the murder it announced that the number used on off-peak journeys—such as Linsley had been travelling on—would be reduced to minimise the chance of passengers being isolated. [14] A broad red band was painted along the cantrail of coaches without corridors to allow passengers to identify them before boarding. [7]
The Metropolitan Police's senior investigating officer, Superintendent Guy Mills [5] described the crime as "savage and brutal". [2] He highlighted that because the compartment Linsley was travelling in had no corridor, she had had no means of escape, "apart from through the side doors onto the track". [5] On account of the ferocity of the attack, Mills suggested that it was unlikely to have been the killer's first. [2] The short duration of the Brixton–Victoria journey –six minutes –suggested Linsley might have known her attacker. [1]
Although approximately 70 people had boarded and departed the train by the time it arrived at Victoria, [1] the only potential witness [2] appears to have been a French au pair [1] who reported hearing loud screams soon after the train had departed Brixton. [2]
Of interest to police were the following individuals:
The weapon was not found, but it is believed to have been five to seven-and-one-half inches long with a heavy blade. [2] The 1988 police investigation produced 1200 witness statements; 650 individuals were questioned and ruled out. [3] [9] The case was featured on the crime reconstruction programme Crimewatch UK on 14 April 1988. [17]
An inquest was held on 16 November 1988. The au pair who heard the attack was criticised by the Coroner for not pulling the communication cord, despite believing that someone was being raped. She said she had been "glued to her seat" and contacted police only after she learned that a murder had occurred. The coroner highlighted that, although passengers reported hearing "a commotion", nobody investigated. The inquest returned a verdict of unlawful killing. [12]
In response to Linsley's murder, British Rail's Eastern Region ordered its guards to proactively patrol their trains and be particularly observant for women travelling alone. Likewise, the police advised that passengers should be vigilant on the railway generally, but particularly to "avoid [carriages] where the only means of escape was directly onto the line or platform". [8]
Linsley's killer had sustained injuries and left blood at the scene, which was collected and stored. DNA science was in its infancy in 1988, [18] but with advances in DNA profiling technology, the case was re-opened in 2002 [2] and a complete DNA profile built from the sample. [2] Linsley's case was raised on the Tonight with Trevor MacDonald programme which aired on 13 September 2002. [19]
The new investigation case was passed to the Met's cold case investigative section, formed in 2000. [1] An extensive publicity campaign was launched in Victoria station, and there was a peak-time television crime-scene reenactment. [20]
In 2013 the leading officer on the case called it "puzzling" that the DNA of Linsley's killer, who was "a probable repeat violent offender" had not been matched to anyone in the DNA database. [2] That same year, police offered a reward of £20,000 for information [2] leading to the arrest and conviction of the killer. [4] The new investigation also re-examined steps taken in the previous investigation, including tracing Linsley's seventy fellow passengers that day; police say they know the identities of at least fifty of them. [1]
Deborah Linsley's parents publicly appealed several times for the assistance of the public in solving her death. [3] Her mother had died by 2013. [4]
A detective has suggested more recently that not only was the attacker injured and probably bloodied but likely "behaved in a different way after the murder", which friends or relatives may have noticed at the time. [4]
UK cold cases where the offender's DNA is known:
Victoria station, also known as London Victoria, is a central London railway terminus and connected London Underground station in Victoria, in the City of Westminster, managed by Network Rail. Named after the nearby Victoria Street, the mainline station is a terminus of the Brighton Main Line to Gatwick Airport and Brighton and the Chatham Main Line to Ramsgate and Dover via Chatham. From the main lines, trains can connect to the Catford Loop Line, the Dartford Loop Line, and the Oxted line to East Grinstead and Uckfield. Southern operates most commuter and regional services to south London, Sussex and parts of east Surrey and south-east Hampshire while Southeastern operates trains to south-east London and Kent, alongside limited services operated by Thameslink. Gatwick Express trains run direct to Gatwick. The London Underground station is served by three lines: Circle, District and Victoria. On the Circle and District lines, the station is between Sloane Square and St James's Park stations. On the Victoria line, it is between Pimlico and Green Park stations. The area around the station is an important interchange for other forms of transport: a local bus station is in the forecourt and Victoria Coach Station is nearby, which serves national and international coaches.
Colin Pitchfork is an English child-murderer and child-rapist. He was the first person convicted of rape and murder using DNA profiling after he murdered two girls in neighbouring Leicestershire villages: Lynda Mann in Narborough in November 1983 and Dawn Ashworth in Enderby in July 1986. He was arrested on 19 September 1987 and sentenced to life imprisonment on 22 January 1988 after pleading guilty to both murders. The sentencing judge gave him a 30-year minimum term.
Penge East railway station is on the Chatham Main Line in England, serving part of the Penge and Sydenham areas in the London Borough of Bromley, south London. It is 7 miles 15 chains (11.6 km) down the line from London Victoria and is situated between Sydenham Hill and Kent House.
John Francis Duffy and David Mulcahy are two British serial rapists and serial killers who together attacked numerous women and children at railway stations in southern England during the 1980s.
The Ipswich serial murders, commonly known as the work of the Suffolk Strangler, took place between 30 October and 10 December 2006, during which time the bodies of five murdered sex workers were discovered at different locations near Ipswich, Suffolk, England. Their bodies were discovered naked but there were no signs of sexual assault. Two of the victims, Anneli Alderton and Paula Clennell, were confirmed to have been killed by asphyxiation. A cause of death for the other victims, Gemma Adams, Tania Nicol and Annette Nicholls, was not established.
John Alexander Dickman was an Englishman hanged for murder.
The murders of Eve Stratford and Lynne Weedon, two young women from London, England, occurred in separate, sexually motivated attacks by the same unidentified individual during 1975. Stratford was a bunny girl and Weedon was a schoolgirl who was killed almost six months later, on the other side of London. After Weedon's cold case was re-opened in 2004, new DNA techniques revealed that she and Stratford had been murdered by the same person. Stratford's case was re-opened in 2007, but neither case has been solved. A £40,000 reward for information leading to the killer remains on offer.
Steven Gerald James Wright is an English serial killer, also known as the Suffolk Strangler. He is currently serving life imprisonment for the murder of five women who worked in Ipswich, Suffolk. The killings took place during the final months of 2006 and Wright was found guilty in February 2008 and given a whole life order.
Colette Aram was a 16-year-old British trainee hairdresser who was abducted, raped and strangled as she walked from her home to her boyfriend's house in Keyworth, Nottinghamshire, on 30 October 1983. The murder was the first case to be featured on the BBC television series Crimewatch when it began in June 1984. However, despite receiving over 400 calls as a result of the programme, Nottinghamshire Police were unable to catch the killer, and it was not until 2008 and following advances in forensic technology that police were able to develop a DNA profile of the suspect. Paul Stewart Hutchinson was finally charged with the murder in April 2009. He initially pleaded not guilty, but changed his plea to guilty on 21 December 2009 and was sentenced to life imprisonment on 25 January 2010. Following his sentencing, Crimewatch ran a recap of the murder and investigation on BBC TV on 27 January 2010 exposing several inaccuracies reported in the press about his background, notably a lie about being a psychology graduate.
Ruth Penelope "Penny" Bell was an English businesswoman who was murdered on 6 June 1991 in the car park of Gurnell Leisure Centre, Greenford, London. She was stabbed over fifty times as she sat behind the wheel of her car. Her murder remains unsolved.
Melanie Hall was a British hospital clerical officer from Bradford-on-Avon, Wiltshire, who disappeared following a night out at Cadillacs nightclub in Bath. She was declared dead in absentia in 2004.
Peter Britton Tobin was a Scottish convicted serial killer and sex offender who served a whole life order at HM Prison Edinburgh for three murders committed between 1991 and 2006. Police also investigated Tobin over the deaths and disappearances of other young women and girls.
Lynette Deborah White was murdered in Cardiff, Wales. South Wales Police issued a photofit image of a bloodstained, white male seen in the vicinity at the time of the murder but were unable to trace the man.
Janet Brown was an English nurse who was murdered by an intruder in her house in Radnage, Buckinghamshire in 1995. The case remains unsolved, and the investigation remains open. A link has been suggested between her murder and that of 50-year-old Carolanne Jackson 10 miles away in Wooburn Green, which occurred in similar circumstances and on almost the exact same day two years later. In 2015 it was announced by police that a DNA profile of Brown's killer had been extracted.
In June 1981, fourteen-year old Marion Crofts was raped and murdered in Aldershot, England. The case is notable for the 21 year delay in justice before former soldier Tony Jasinskyj was found guilty as a result of advances in DNA testing and sentenced to life in prison. He is up for parole in 2022, despite him never having admitted his guilt and the DNA evidence proving that the chances of the perpetrator being anyone other than Jasinskyj were 1 in a billion.
Jacqueline Susan Ansell-Lamb and Barbara Janet Mayo were two young women who were murdered in separate incidents in 1970. Both women were last seen hitch-hiking along motorways in England, and both were sexually assaulted before being strangled to death.
Alun Kyte, known as the Midlands Ripper, is an English double murderer, serial rapist, child rapist, paedophile and suspected serial killer. He was convicted in 2000 of the murders of two sex workers, 20-year-old Samo Paull and 30-year-old Tracey Turner, whom he killed in December 1993 and March 1994 respectively. After his conviction, investigators announced their suspicions that Kyte could have been behind a number of other unsolved murders of sex workers across Britain in the 1980s and 1990s. He was apprehended due to the ground-breaking investigations of a wider police inquiry named Operation Enigma, which was launched in 1996 in response to the murders of Paull, Turner and of a large number of other sex workers. Kyte was sentenced to a minimum of 25 years imprisonment for the murders of Paull and Turner.
Chris Clark is a British amateur crime writer who writes chiefly about serial killers and their supposed links to unsolved crimes. He is a retired police intelligence officer who worked in the King's Lynn area for Norfolk Police, although his career was somewhat unsuccessful and he had three applications to join the new National Criminal Intelligence Service rejected in 1993, with the commanding officers unimpressed by his record and applications. In 2022, his book Yorkshire Ripper: The Secret Murders, which was jointly written with journalist Tim Tate and alleged links between Peter Sutcliffe and unsolved murders, was made into an ITV prime-time documentary series of the same name.
Rikki Neave was a six-year-old boy who was murdered on 28 November 1994 by a 13-year-old boy, James Watson, in Peterborough, England. In 1996, his abusive mother, Ruth Neave, was tried and acquitted of his murder. Watson was convicted of the murder in 2022 after new DNA evidence was found.
The murders ofKate BushellandLinda "Lyn" Bryant, a 14-year-old schoolgirl and a 41-year-old woman, respectively, occurred in separate incidents in the West Country, England. The events occurred on 15 November 1997 and 20 October 1998 respectively. The similar circumstances of the murders led investigators to conclude that there is a high possibility the murders are linked, with both killed with knives while walking dogs along isolated lanes.