Jayne MacDonald | |
---|---|
![]() MacDonald, c. 1977 | |
Born | Jayne Michelle MacDonald 16 August 1960 Leeds, West Yorkshire, England |
Died | 26 June 1977 16) Chapeltown, Leeds, England | (aged
Cause of death | Hammer blows (x3) to skull. Multiple stab wounds to upper chest and back |
Body discovered | 9:25 a.m. 26 June 1977, Chapeltown Road, Leeds 53°49′04″N1°31′59″W / 53.81773°N 1.53314°W (approximate) |
Resting place | Harehills Cemetery, Leeds, England 53°48′26″N1°30′05″W / 53.80714°N 1.50147°W (approximate) |
Occupation | Shop assistant |
Known for | Victim of serial murder |
Height | 5 ft 3 in (1.60 m) |
The murder of Jayne MacDonald is a British child murder case dating from June 1977 in which a 16-year-old girl was murdered by a combination of bludgeoning and stabbing in Chapeltown, Leeds, while walking home from an evening socialising with friends. Her murder was rapidly attributed to a series of murders committed by a serial killer known as the Yorkshire Ripper . [1]
Although investigators believed MacDonald's murderer had attacked and/or murdered a minimum of seven women in the two years prior to her death, contemporary misogynistic and sexist attitudes among police officers and society in general had led police and the media to categorise the Ripper's victims as prostitutes and "good-time girls". [2] As such, investigators believed the perpetrator solely preyed on women of specific sexual ethics and the crimes—although the subject of heightened, ongoing investigation—had only received moderate nationwide coverage.
MacDonald's murder caused considerable public alarm and forced the Chief Constable of West Yorkshire Police, Ronald Gregory, to appoint his most senior investigator in command of the investigation to apprehend the perpetrator. [3]
Jayne Michelle MacDonald was born in Leeds on 16 August 1960. She was the first of three children born to Wilfred and Irene (née Sutcliffe) MacDonald, with a sister, Debra, born in 1961 and a brother, Ian, born in 1964. MacDonald had two older half-sisters—twins Carole and Janet—from her mother's first marriage. [4] [n 1] Her father worked for British Rail and her mother was a housekeeper. The family was close-knit, and resided in a modest terraced house in Scott Hall Avenue in the Chapeltown district of Leeds. [5]
MacDonald grew into a pleasant and popular girl who enjoyed dancing and who occasionally earned money in her mid-teens by babysitting or performing chores. [6] [n 2] Her primary hobbies included dancing, roller skating and music; she had been an avid Bay City Rollers fan and, although "Rollermania" had largely subsided in the U.K. by 1977, she still remained a fan and had numerous posters of the band adorning her bedroom walls. In addition, although slender, petite, [8] and attractive, by her sixteenth birthday, she had only had one boyfriend and had terminated the relationship before it had become physical. [4]
In April 1977, MacDonald finished her schooling at Allerton High School. [9] Shortly thereafter, she obtained full-time employment as a sales assistant at Grandways supermarket in nearby Roundhay Road, where she quickly became a popular member of staff among her colleagues. [10] She began paying her parents a weekly percentage of her earnings, although much of the remainder of her wages were spent on clothes. [11] Much of MacDonald's social activity occurred on Saturday evenings, when she typically either went roller skating or to a disco at the Merrion Centre with friends. [3]
On Father's Day 1977, MacDonald and her younger siblings purchased several gifts for their father, including a silver cup inscribed 'World's Best Dad', which he placed on the mantlepiece above the living room fireplace. [12] The following week, MacDonald learned her colleagues planned to meet and socialize in Leeds city centre that Saturday evening. As she had not previously socialized with her colleagues outside of working hours, she opted to join them. [3]
As prearranged, on the evening of 25 June 1977, MacDonald met both friends and work colleagues at the Hofbrauhaus, a German-style bierkeller in Leeds. She was wearing a blue flared gingham skirt, a blue-and-white halter-neck sun top, a waist-length summer jacket, and platform-soled shoes. [13] Her father would later recollect Jayne had kissed him "cheerio" as she left the family household and that his daughter had been "almost bursting with optimism and the sheer joy of life." [5]
According to colleagues, MacDonald spent much of her time at the Hofbrauhaus talking with acquaintances, listening to music, and dancing. [14] At approximately 10:30 p.m., MacDonald and a friend, 18-year-old Mark Jones, walked from the premises in the direction of Briggate, where she suggested the two purchase some chips. [15] By the time the two had found a fish and chip shop and had eaten their purchases, MacDonald had missed her last bus home. [16] Jones then walked with MacDonald towards his home, located close to St James's University Hospital, upon the promise that if his sister was at home, she would "give [MacDonald] a lift" home. [17]
Jones's sister's car was not parked outside his household; therefore, the two continued walking along Beckett Road in the direction of Chapeltown, where the two parted company in a school field close to the gates of the hospital, having arranged to meet the following week. Jones would later estimate the time the two had parted was sometime after 1:30 a.m. [18]
MacDonald first walked along Chapeltown Road, where she passed the Hayfield pub before turning left into Reginald Street. [19] She was attacked by the Yorkshire Ripper at approximately 2 a.m. as she walked past an adventure playground; her murderer struck her once upon the rear of her skull, then dragged her body twenty yards into the darkness of the playground, [n 3] where he bludgeoned her further about the head before stabbing her once in the back and repeatedly throughout the chest. [21] [22] Her murderer then purposely pulled her skirt upwards to expose her upper thighs before fleeing the scene. [23]
I left her lying in the corner. I cannot remember whether she was lying face up or face down. I walked back down the same street to where I had parked my car ... I don't think I had any blood on me following this one. I cannot remember what I did with the knife, I must have taken it home with me and washed it. I feel I may have left it in the Corsair when I scrapped it ... When I saw in the papers that MacDonald was so young and not a prostitute, I felt like someone inhuman and I realised that it was a devil driving me against my will and that I was a beast.
At 9:25 the following morning, two children entered the playground between Reginald Street and Reginald Terrace. [25] Minutes later, they discovered MacDonald's body lying face down close to a rubbish-strewn wall on the far side of the playground. [26] [8] Her body was tentatively identified by the contents of her handbag, and formally identified by a relative later that day. [12]
MacDonald's post mortem examination was conducted by Home Office pathologist Professor David Gee. Her autopsy revealed she had received three incapacitating bludgeoning wounds to the back of her head with a hammer before her upper torso had been purposely exposed by her murderer prior to his inflicting several stab wounds to her upper torso and back, with her frontal chest wounds being repeatedly stabbed through the same incision, causing the external diameter of one of the wounds to become enlarged. [27] MacDonald did not die until several of the stab wounds to her torso had been inflicted. [23] A broken glass bottle with screw-top attached was also deeply embedded in her stomach. [11] [n 4] Death had occurred between midnight and 3 a.m. [28]
The physical evidence at the crime scene and upon MacDonald's body enabled investigators to determine the events surrounding MacDonald's murder. Spots of blood on the pavement outside the entrance to the playground indicated she had been struck upon the head as she walked along Reginald Street, causing her to slump to the ground before her murderer dragged her body some twenty yards into the darkness of the playground, where he had struck her further about the head at the location where her body lay, then pulled up her halter-neck sun top before inflicting the stab wounds to her torso, then turning her body face down and stabbing her in the back and beneath her right shoulder blade. [12]
The injuries to MacDonald's head and body, plus the location of the attack, rapidly linked her murder to a series committed by an individual known to police and the press as the Yorkshire Ripper, [29] who had attacked a minimum of seven women in West Yorkshire over the previous two years—four fatally. [30] However, due to contemporary societal attitudes, [31] many of the Ripper's previous victims were believed by investigators to have been targeted by the perpetrator due to their perceived lifestyles. [32] Several contemporary public statements by senior investigators involved in the manhunt to apprehend the Ripper following MacDonald's murder indicated their belief that, as Chapeltown was the red-light district of Leeds, the Ripper had mistakenly believe MacDonald had been a prostitute. [33] [n 5]
As MacDonald was only sixteen, had only recently left school, and was evidently neither promiscuous or engaged in prostitution, her death caused a public outcry, [10] with petitions instigated calling for the restoration of capital punishment in the United Kingdom and a renewed intensity by West Yorkshire Police to apprehend the perpetrator. [35] [36] Shortly thereafter, the Chief Constable of West Yorkshire Police, Ronald Gregory, appointed his most senior detective to lead the investigation to apprehend the perpetrator. [37] [38]
Gregory appointed George Oldfield, an individual with 31 years' experience with West Yorkshire Police, to lead the investigation. [39] Oldfield—then an assistant chief constable—publicly staked his reputation on apprehending the Yorkshire Ripper. [40] [n 6]
Initial police inquiries of individuals who had been in the vicinity of Reginald Street—a reasonably busy thoroughfare at weekends—identified three hundred and eighty individuals who had driven through or walked along the street in the early hours of 26 June. All but twenty were either traced or came forward to eliminate themselves from the police inquiry. Only one of these twenty individuals had been standing alone near the entrance to the adventure playground; he had been a "strongly built" white male. In addition, one of the residents of Reginald Street was also adamant she had heard banging, scuffling and a man with a distinctive Scottish accent shouting obscenities from the vicinity of the playground at the estimated time of MacDonald's death. This individual was also never traced. [36] An anonymous telephone hotline number was also established and extensively publicised to encourage anonymous public tips from individuals suspecting the identity of the perpetrator. This automated service generated hundreds of leads, although none named the actual perpetrator. [42]
By September, inquiries into MacDonald's murder had seen the residents of six hundred and seventy-nine homes in the immediate vicinity of Reginald Street interviewed, with approximately 3,700 witness statements taken. However, investigators were no closer to apprehending the perpetrator than they had been at the beginning of the Ripper inquiry some eighty-eight weeks previously. [43]
The Yorkshire Ripper was not arrested until 2 January 1981. [44] His arrest occurred in Broomhill, Sheffield, South Yorkshire, following a routine police check by a probationary constable after he had been observed kerb crawling and which revealed his car had false number plates. [45]
Transferred to Dewsbury the following day, the individual, Peter Sutcliffe, admitted having stolen the number plates from a scrapyard. He was then questioned in relation to the Ripper case, of which he denied any culpability. That evening, one of the two officers who had arrested Sutcliffe returned to the scene of the arrest, where he discovered a ball-pein hammer and a knife that Sutcliffe had discarded beneath some bushes behind an oil storage tank while ostensibly urinating immediately prior to being taken into custody. [46]
Following several hours of intensive questioning on the afternoon of 4 January, Detective Inspector John Boyle informed Sutcliffe that an officer had recovered a knife and ball-pein hammer at the site of his arrest the previous evening. Upon hearing these revelations, Sutcliffe fell silent as Boyle added: "I think you're in trouble, serious trouble." In response, Sutcliffe replied, "I think you're leading up to it" before elaborating: "The Yorkshire Ripper ... Well, it's me. I'm glad it's all over. I would have killed that girl in the car if I hadn't been arrested." [47]
Over the following seventeen hours, Sutcliffe confessed to thirteen murders and seven attempted murders. He was formally charged with these offences on 5 January. [n 7]
Sutcliffe was brought to trial before Judge Sir Leslie Boreham at the Old Bailey in May 1981, charged with thirteen murders and seven attempted murders. He was convicted of all counts by a majority verdict of 10 to 2 on 22 May. [49] He was sentenced to a term of life imprisonment with a recommendation he serve a minimum of thirty years' imprisonment. [50]
Following Sutcliffe's sentencing, MacDonald's mother, Irene, is known to have remarked she wished capital punishment had not been abolished in the United Kingdom, adding: "I wish he was going to the gallows. I hope other prisoners have the decency to make every minute he is inside a living hell for him." [51]
Within six months of MacDonald's murder and in part inspired by the Women's Liberation Movement, the first of many nationwide Reclaim the Night marches and protests was held in Leeds. This particular march—organised by the Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group—occurred in November 1977. [52] The inspiration for the march was largely due to a police response to the Ripper attacks and murders that, to remain safe, women should stay out of public spaces after dark; however, the march was also a protest against the ongoing threats of rape, violence, and sexual harassment women face. [53] In addition, many women were equally outraged at contemporary societal misogynistic attitudes towards women which had seen some of the Ripper's victims as less deserving of police and media focus than others. [54]
Solidarity marches in cities as far afield from Leeds as Lancaster and London were held on the same date, with participants waving placards bearing messages such as "We mourn ALL the victims of male violence against women" and "It could have been me". [55] Although few initial marches attracted large numbers of participants, by 1979 and 1980, the number of participants in these marches had increased substantially, [56] with participants and organisers creating sophisticated support and communication networks later described by University of Bradford professor Hilary Rose as being reminiscent of "that sense of community that was shown in the Blitz." [57]
MacDonald's father, Wilfred, who had to identify his daughter's body, died at age 60 on 10 October 1979. His wife would later state her husband had never recovered from their daughter's murder and the sight of her body in the morgue, adding he had developed nervous asthma and chronic bronchitis within weeks of their bereavement, had been unable to work, and that his own will to live had ebbed. Wilfred was buried with his daughter in Harehills Cemetery. [58]
At Wilfred's eulogy, family friends repeated a reflective sentence he had frequently recited following his daughter's murder and prior to his own death: "She smelled so sweet, so clean, when she bent down to kiss me goodbye. She was untouched and perfect, just like a flower." [59] [12]
When you hate women as much as he must, any woman will do. Prostitutes are simply more vulnerable targets.
The December 1981 Byford Report into the police investigation of the Yorkshire Ripper case was markedly critical of the numerous investigative failings made during the hunt for the Ripper. The report was also critical of police and societal attitudes pertaining to perceived lifestyles of several of the victims of the Ripper and the fact MacDonald's death elicited a more sympathetic response from both the public and the press in addition to galvanizing police into appointing a more senior investigator to oversee the investigation, which by June 1977 had been ongoing for twenty months. [61]
Within the report, Sir Lawrence Byford also references the fact that at the time of MacDonald's murder, police—who had described MacDonald as a "respectable young girl" who was mistaken by the Ripper as a prostitute—had failed to consider "the possibility that any unaccompanied woman was a potential Ripper victim" at the time of her murder. [62]
On 5 March 1982, a High Court registrar ruled Sutcliffe must pay Irene MacDonald the sum of £6,722 (the equivalent of approximately £23,450 as of 2025 [update] ) for the loss of her daughter. [63] This ruling proved to be the first instance in the United Kingdom in which a convicted criminal was held personally accountable for damages inflicted upon his victim. [64] However, due to ongoing receivership and subsequent insolvency issues pertaining to Sutcliffe's assets at the time of this ruling and his subsequently being declared bankrupt in 1984, these damages were never paid. [65]
In 2020, the Chief Constable of West Yorkshire Police, John Robins, issued a formal public apology for both the mistakes made by his predecessors in their efforts to apprehend the Yorkshire Ripper and for the callous and misogynistic comments and attitudes of—particularly—senior investigators involved in the manhunt. This public apology was addressed primarily to the families of the Ripper's murder victims and those who survived his attempted murders and saw Robins express regret for the "additional distress and anxiety caused to all relatives by the language, tone and terminology used by senior officers at the time in relation to Peter Sutcliffe's victims ... Such language and attitudes may have reflected wider societal attitudes of the day, but it was as wrong then as it is now." [66]
{{cite book}}
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