Towpath murders | |
---|---|
Location | Teddington Lock, Richmond upon Thames, London, England |
Coordinates | 51°25′56″N0°19′31″W / 51.43222°N 0.32528°W |
Date | 31 May 1953 c. 11:25 p.m. [1] |
Weapons |
|
Deaths | Christine Rose Reed (18) Barbara Songhurst (16) |
Perpetrator | Alfred Charles Whiteway (21) |
Motive |
|
Sentence | Death (2 November 1953) Executed (22 December 1953) |
The towpath murders (also known as the Thames Towpath Murders and the Teddington Towpath Murders [2] ) are a double murder which occurred upon a section of towpath between Teddington Lock and Eel Pie Island in Richmond upon Thames, London, England, on 31 May 1953. The victims were two teenage girls named Christine Reed and Barbara Songhurst who were ambushed by a lone individual as they cycled to their respective homes in Hampton Hill and Teddington. [3] Both girls were overpowered, then violently raped and murdered before their bodies were discarded in the River Thames. The perpetrator, 21-year-old Alfred Charles Whiteway, was convicted of both murders in a trial held at the Old Bailey before Mr Justice Hilbery that October; he was hanged at Wandsworth Prison on 22 December 1953. [4]
The murders of Christine Reed and Barbara Songhurst became known as the "towpath murders" due to a towpath being both the location the victims were last seen alive and the site of their murder. The forensic methods used to link the perpetrator to both the victims and the weapons used in the commission of the crime were described as "one of Scotland Yard's most notable triumphs in a century". [5]
On the afternoon of Saturday 30 May 1953, 16-year-old Barbara Songhurst informed her parents of her intention to cycle from her Teddington home to spend the evening with her friend, 18-year-old Christine Reed, who lived in nearby Hampton Hill. [6] Although Reed was two years older than Songhurst and the girls hailed from differing social backgrounds, [a] the two were best friends, having become acquainted through their shared love of jazz music and dancing approximately one year prior. Both also enjoyed cycling, and had scrupulously saved their money to purchase their own bicycles: Reed had purchased a bicycle with money saved from her earnings as a machinist earlier in 1953; Songhurst had also recently purchased a new bicycle for £17 (the equivalent of approximately £400 as of 2024 [update] ) with money earned via her employment as a chemist's shop assistant. [6]
Later that afternoon, Reed, Songhurst and a friend named Joy Woolveridge cycled to a bebop concert to be held at York House, Twickenham, where several of their friends were also socialising. [8] Several hours later, Reed and Woolveridge left the premises to visit a nearby café as Songhurst danced with an American soldier based at Bushy Park; she later joined her friends at the café. [7] [9]
Reed, Songhurst and Woolveridge left the café shortly before midnight; Woolveridge returned to her own home as Reed and Songhurst cycled approximately three miles to Reed's home in Roy Grove, Hampton Hill where, by prearrangement, Songhurst spent the night. [10]
At 10 a.m. on 31 May, Reed and Songhurst ate breakfast after Reed had redressed into a yellow cardigan and dark blue serge trousers; they then returned to Songhurst's home, where Barbara changed from her dancing clothing into a tartan shirt, blue jeans and a distinctive waist-high, wide black belt with a large clasp buckle before informing her mother she and Reed intended to cycle to Brighton. That afternoon, the girls returned to Reed's home before—at approximately 7:15 p.m.—cycling to a section of the River Thames towpath between Teddington Lock and Petersham, where several teenagers both knew were camping on the opposite side of the river. [11] The two spent several hours at this location, with the final ninety minutes including a game of Catch and Kiss. [12]
Reed and Songhurst left their friends at approximately 11:10 p.m. [13] As Songhurst's new bicycle was not fitted with lighting, one of the male campers lent her his cycle lamp. Several campers watched the friends cycle in the direction of Teddington Lock, where they were to cross an iron bridge en route to their homes. [14] The last individuals to see the girls alive were a young courting couple sitting alongside the towpath. [15]
At 8:15 a.m. on 1 June, a man named George Coster discovered the body of a teenage girl floating face-down in the Thames as he cycled to work; [16] he immediately notified authorities, who instructed the Marine Policing Unit to retrieve the body, which was then taken to Richmond mortuary.
Extensive injuries upon the body indicated the decedent had been violently murdered. A search of the vicinity revealed the girl had evidently been attacked approximately half a mile from the location of her discovery at a location known locally as Lovers' Glade. [17] This site was approximately 400 yards from a lock within a secluded section of a secondary towpath which runs parallel to the main towpath by the Thames and is surrounded by shrubbery, trees and bushes. [18] At this location, two large pools of blood were discovered in addition to numerous blood spatterings upon sections of shrubbery and ample sections of churned soil indicative of a ferocious physical struggle between the decedent and her murderer. A forensic analysis of the two pools of blood revealed one pool—located closer toward the centre of the towpath—to be type A [19] and the other type O. The decedent in the river had type A blood. Furthermore, two pairs of women's shoes—one pair two sizes larger than the other—were recovered near a poplar tree 5 feet (1.5 m) from the crime scene, [20] indicating more than one victim. [21]
The decedent's autopsy was conducted by pathologist Keith Mant, [22] who described the victim as a brunette, Caucasian female in her mid-teens and 5 ft (150 cm) in height who had died approximately eight hours prior to her discovery. She had received a deep laceration to her left cheek, which had fractured her cheekbone in addition to three stab wounds to the back—each of which had punctured her lungs and had had penetrated her body up to nine inches in depth. [1] She had also received a laceration to her scalp, a skull fracture, and numerous scratches and bruises on her legs likely sustained as she fought her assailant. This theory was further supported by several fibers sourcing from a man's sports jacket recovered from beneath her fingernails. The girl had also been violently raped. [23] Mant was also able to determine the weapons used to inflict the injuries to the decedent were a distinctive Gurkha knife with a double-edged, one-inch-wide blade and a small hatchet and that the perpetrator had likely been "a man of unusual strength". [24]
Songhurst's parents formally identified their daughter on the afternoon of her discovery; her mother also informed police she had last seen her daughter in the company of Christine Reed on Sunday morning and that she had assumed her daughter had simply chosen to spend the previous evening at Reed's home, but had expected her home that day as her daughter had been looking forward to the upcoming Coronation of Elizabeth II and had entered a local bathing beauty contest in celebration of the occasion to be held the following evening. [25] She had only learned her daughter was missing when she failed to show up for work that morning, and had also discovered from Reed's parents their daughter was also missing. [20]
Formally establishing Songhurst's identity and learning her close friend was also missing led investigators to conclude Reed had most likely also been murdered. This conclusion was supported by the discovery of articles of Reed's clothing alongside garments belonging to Songhurst at the site were two individuals had evidently been violently assaulted and murdered. As such, a decision was made to dredge a three-mile section of the River Thames between Teddington Lock and Richmond. [26] [27] Shortly after the Port of London Authority opened the sluices at Teddington Lock on 2 June, an electromagnet located Reed's distinctive blue-and-cream BSA bicycle beneath the river approximately one hundred yards from the site where the girls had evidently been attacked. [b] A distinctive knife was also recovered from the riverbed, although this weapon was later determined to be unrelated to the case. [29]
On the afternoon of 6 June, Reed's partially-clothed body was found submerged close to Glover's Island, less than one mile from Richmond Bridge. [30] [31] Her autopsy revealed she had received six stab wounds to her back, six stab wounds to her chest and one stab wound above her left wrist. One of the stab wounds to Reed's back had pierced her lung, while four of the wounds to her chest had entered her heart. Four deep laceration wounds were discovered upon Reed's skull, which had been fractured in two places and, like Songhurst, Reed had been violently raped. Reed's forearms and hands also bore numerous lacerations and bruises evidently inflicted as she attempted to defend herself. [32] All the injuries had been inflicted with a hatchet and either a stiletto or Gurkha knife. [24]
The pathologist who conducted Reed's autopsy placed the time of death as occurring between five and six days previous; he was also able to determine she had still been alive when thrown into the river. [28]
The murders of Reed and Songhurst received considerable media attention, and numerous television and radio appeals encouraged potential eyewitnesses or individuals with information to assist in the intense police manhunt to apprehend the murderer or murderers. These appeals were also broadcast in all cinemas within a ten-mile radius of Teddington Lock. [33] The individual assigned command of the investigation was Detective Chief Inspector (DCI) Herbert Hannam, who initially believed the double murder had been committed by two men but soon revised his opinion to conclude the murders had been committed by a single individual. [34]
Hannam established both girls had been responsible, family-oriented and virtuous, with no known enemies. Although both had enjoyed the company and attention of males, neither had been promiscuous, and both had been virgins prior to their rape. [5] [17] All individuals known to the girls—including the three camping teenage boys they had specifically cycled to meet on the date of their murder—were eliminated from police enquiries. As Songhurst was known to have frequently danced with United States Air Force servicemen stationed at Bushy Park, all personnel at the base were questioned and likewise eliminated. Over 1,600 individuals would be questioned and eliminated throughout the enquiry, and several known sex offenders interrogated and eliminated as suspects. [25]
Both the time at which the murders had occurred and the somewhat secluded location of the crime scene led investigators to conclude the perpetrator was most likely either local to the area or someone familiar with local transport networks. [5] Furthermore, as both victims had been riding bicycles at the time of their initial assault, and the wounds to both were similar in nature in addition to having been applied with considerable force, Hannam believed the murderer had likely incapacitated one victim by either stunning her with, or throwing the axe at her head or torso as she cycled along the towpath before rapidly overpowering the other victim—possibly by throwing a knife at her back. [28]
Initial public appeals resulted in the courting couple whom the girls had cycled past coming forward to inform police they had sat on the bank of the River Thames from 10 p.m. until midnight on the date of the murders; both revealed they had heard the male campers briefly chat with, then say "Goodbye", to the girls before both had cycled past them in the direction of Teddington Lock shortly before midnight. One of these individuals had heard a brief, high-pitched scream shortly thereafter, but had paid no attention to the noise. [28]
On 12 June, a 46-year-old woman was approached by a young man on a bicycle ostensibly asking for directions to The Holly Tree pub as she walked her dog in Windsor Great Park. [32] As she attempted to describe the directions for this man she was dragged into nearby undergrowth at knifepoint and sexually assaulted, though not raped. [c] The modus operandi of this attack had been similar to the rape of a 14-year-old girl in the Oxshott Heath and Woods on 24 May. In this instance, the schoolgirl had first been rendered semi-conscious by a blow to the head from the flat edge of an axe-like instrument, with her assailant having crept upon her from behind. She had also been walking a dog when attacked, and her assailant had been riding a bicycle. As such, investigators were unable to discount a link between the two cases, or rule out the possibility the perpetrator had also murdered Reed and Songhurst. [36]
Enquiries into the rape of the schoolgirl produced an eyewitness who had seen a young, dark-haired man wearing brown leather gloves and blue overalls following a schoolgirl from a distance as she walked across a heath at the approximate time of the assault. Another witness had seen a man matching this description waiting for a bus close to Oxshott Heath and Woods shortly after the rape had occurred; this individual also added the man had a cleft chin. A facial composite of this individual was created and extensively distributed throughout the media. [37]
Several days after the facial composite was released to the media, on 17 June, two builders spotted a man matching this description sitting on a tree stump alongside a parked bicycle close to Oxshott railway station. Both recognised him as a man they had previously worked with: Alfred Charles Whiteway. He was briefly questioned by two policeman before undergoing formal questioning at Kingston police station, but was soon released as he was not considered to closely resemble the identikit of the suspect. [38]
On 28 June, Whiteway was arrested by the Surrey Constabulary; this arrest was in relation to the sexual assault he had committed in Windsor Great Park sixteen days previous. Both the victim of this sexual assault and the man who had seen a suspicious individual waiting for a bus close to Oxshott Heath and Woods shortly after the 24 May rape of the schoolgirl positively identified Whiteway when asked to view an identity parade. [5] A search of Whiteway's home revealed a pair of recently-washed crêpe-soled shoes which he admitted habitually wearing; forensic testing revealed traces of human blood in the seam and eyelets of the right shoe. [39] [40]
Whiteway was remanded in custody in relation to both sex attacks on 1 July, having admitted to robbing one victim but denying any involvement in either of the sexual assaults, with his wife also corroborating his alibi for the date of the murders. Upon learning of these developments and the fact the 21-year-old labourer and father-of-one had recently separated from his pregnant wife, was a body-building enthusiast, was also known to practice knife throwing as a hobby, [41] had been questioned by police the previous year in relation to a physical assault upon a young woman whom he had struck across the head with a section of lead pipe, [42] and lived at an address less than one mile from the scene of the murders, [43] [44] DCI Hannam chose to question Whiteway with regards to his whereabouts on 31 May. [45]
Several days after Whiteway was remanded in custody at HM Prison Brixton, he was questioned by DCI Hannam in relation to both the sexual assaults and the towpath murders. On this occasion, Whiteway gradually admitted responsibility for the sexual assaults but denied any responsibility for the murders, although he admitted to having known Barbara Songhurst and her family. [46] In reference to his movements on the afternoon of 31 May, Whiteway stated that, as he had typically done "most nights" since their amicable recent separation due to their difficulty in finding a household, he had spent the afternoon in the company of his wife, Nellie May, and baby daughter, Christina, from approximately 7:30 p.m. to between 11 and 11:30 p.m. On the date in question he, his wife and child had visited Canbury Gardens before returning to her parents' Kingston upon Thames home, where he drank a cup of tea on the doorstep before cycling alone to his parents' Teddington home via Kingston Bridge, arriving home shortly before midnight. [47]
In this initial interview with DCI Hannam, Whiteway insisted he could pinpoint the actual time of his retiring to bed in the early hours of 1 June as he had had to adjust the time of a "slow clock" in his bedroom to display 12:15 a.m. before doing so. [48]
When questioned with regards to an earlier admission he had owned a small axe, Whiteway first claimed the tool was in the cupboard of his wife's parents' home before admitting he had discreetly hidden the tool in his overalls before, in a moment of opportunism, placing the item beneath the driver's seat of a police car following his 17 June arrest and questioning at Kingston police station. [49] [35]
Prior to this admission, a Kingston police officer named Arthur Cosh had discovered a small axe concealed beneath the driver's seat of a police car while cleaning the vehicle on the morning of 18 June. [50] [d] As no member of the public had enquired about the tool for several days, the constable had taken the tool home and had been using the instrument to chop wood in his basement; he later retrieved the axe from his home and presented the tool to Hannam upon learning of the item's significance in relation to the murder investigation. A forensic examination of the tool yielded no physical evidence linking the item to Whiteway, although the axe's dimensions perfectly matched wounds inflicted to both murder victims. [52]
On 30 July, DCI Hannam again interviewed Whiteway. On this occasion, he presented the tool to Whiteway. According to Hannam, upon viewing the axe, Whiteway almost immediately stated: "Blimey, that's it. It was ... sharp when I did it. I sharpened it with a file." He then further elaborated: "It's all over. You know well I done it, eh? [My shoe] buggered me .... I'm mental. I must have a fucking woman. I can't stop myself." [53] [54]
In his account of the night of 31 May, Whiteway claimed to have initially seen only one cyclist, whom he "bashed about the head and she went down like a log"; he then heard another female—whom he had not initially seen—"scream out down by the lock" before approaching her and "[shutting] her up" with his weapons. Emphasising the second of the girls he had attacked had been Barbara Songhurst—whom he had known and would undoubtedly have been able to identify him as she had witnessed him striking Reed before approaching her—Whiteway stressed his attack would not have been fatal but for this fact. [55]
On 20 August, initial pretrial hearings pertaining to Whiteway's alleged culpability in relation to the murders of Reed and Songhurst resulted in his being remanded in custody until 27 August. [56] He was formally charged with both murders on 18 September. When asked if he wished to speak at this committal hearing, Whiteway stated, "I have denied the charges" before his solicitor informed the court his client intended to reserve his right to defend himself at a later date. [57]
As Whiteway's blood type was determined to be the same as Christine Reed, greater physical evidence existed to connect him with the murder of Barbara Songhurst; as such, the Crown subsequently opted for him to be tried solely for her murder. [19]
Whiteway was brought to trial at the Old Bailey for the murder of Barbara Songhurst on 26 October 1953. He was tried before Mr Justice Hilbery. [58] The prosecution consisted of Christmas Humphreys and J. F. Claxton; the defence consisted of solicitor Arthur Prothero, who instructed Peter Rawlinson (then a relatively junior barrister) [59] and Michael Havers. [60] Whiteway pleaded not guilty to the charge. [61]
In his opening statement to the jury, Humphreys stated the prosecution intended to prove Whiteway had committed Songhurst's murder, but they did not need to prove his motive as to why. [62] The defence outlined their opening statement by claiming Whiteway had an alibi accounting for his whereabouts at the time the murders were committed and alleging much of the evidence to be produced by the prosecution had been fabricated by police. [63]
The primary evidence against Whiteway was his alleged signed confession, which was introduced into evidence in the opening days of the trial and which DCI Hannam testified "unlocked the whole crime". [e] Hannam testified as to both the circumstances surrounding the obtaining of the confession and the actual contents, also alleging that Whiteway had said to him he would later claim his confession was "all lies". [65]
Upon cross-examination, Hannam's testimony pertaining to Whiteway's expletive-laden confession and police investigative procedures was subjected to intense scrutiny and criticism by Peter Rawlinson. Over the course of two days, Rawlinson successfully outlined several discrepancies and inaccuracies in Hannam's accounts, including official records of interviews in which Whiteway had told police he did not know what he was actually being asked to sign when instructed to add his signature to the alleged confession before suggesting to the jury police had wilfully "fictionalised and manipulated" [5] his client's signed confession. [66] [65] In a direct reference to Hannam's claims to the contrary and which Hannam stated he was "pleased to deny", [26] Rawlinson alleged Hannam was ultimately "swearing away [Whiteway's] life." [67] [f]
The physical evidence introduced into evidence included the axe used in the commission of the murders, with Keith Mant testifying the laceration wound to Songhurst's cheek was consistent with having been inflicted by an axe of the size of the one presented into evidence. [23] Mant also testified the dimensions of the flat edge of the weapon also perfectly matched the fractures inflicted to her skull [68] before stating one of the stab wounds inflicted to Songhurst's back would have been almost immediately fatal. [12]
Dr Lewis Nickolls, Director of the Metropolitan Police Laboratory, also testified to having discovered traces of human blood upon a shoe belonging to Whiteway. Nickolls testified the positive reaction was strongest around the stitching of the sole and the stitching of the eyelets, indicating the shoe had either been washed or rubbed upon extremely wet grass. [69]
Officer Arthur Cosh also testified to the circumstances surrounding his discovering the axe alleged by the prosecution to have been used in the murders beneath the driver's seat of a police vehicle on 18 June and having later taken the tool home to chop wood, only to discover the weapon's significance in a widely publicised murder case the following month and return the item to Kingston police station. When asked to explain his actions, Cosh replied: "The practice among drivers is that anything found in the car is claimed by the driver finding it." When asked if he had discovered a jemmy hidden in the car would he have taken the item home, Cosh replied, "No." [70]
Cosh was then subjected to an intense cross-examination by Rawlinson, who poured scorn on his claims regarding his discovery of the axe and subsequent actions culminating in his bringing the item to investigators after Whiteway's arrest and at a time when police were unable to locate the murder weapon. [70] Midway through Rawlinson's questioning, Cosh fainted. [71]
Whiteway's wife also testified her husband had been drinking tea with her on the porch of her home at approximately 11:30 p.m. on 31 May, when the victims were last seen alive, adding her parents—who made no secret of their dislike of Whiteway—had refused to allow him into their home. [5] Her testimony was followed by Whiteway's uncle, Charles Langston, who stated that Whiteway had returned home at 11:30 p.m. by "[my] clock", which had been ten or fifteen minutes slow. Also to testify was Whiteway's sister, who agreed a similar weapon had been stored beneath a cupboard in her parents' home and typically used to chop firewood, although she insisted the item had been missing for "five or six weeks" at the time police first questioned her. [62] [g]
Whiteway himself gave evidence in his defence. To both prosecution and defence counsel, he denied having ever confessed to the murders and insisted he had only applied his signature to one caution. He further denied Hannam's allegation that he had been "shocked and trembling" when informed of investigators having discovered traces of blood upon one of his shoes and emphasised he "did not know" the actual text content of the sole document he had signed—only that Hannam had told him to sign "a page with writing on it". [72]
When questioned as to the bloodstains upon his crêpe-soled shoes, Whiteway insisted he had cut himself while shaving three weeks before the murders, and had also cut himself in his employment as a labourer at approximately the same time. Humphreys pressed Whiteway on these claims, although Whiteway admitted he could not account for how the blood had actually been discovered upon this item of clothing. [73]
In his closing argument to the jury, Christmas Humphreys referenced the confessions given by Whiteway upon learning of the police's mounting evidence against him; he also described the defence's contention police had obtained these confessions via deceit or forgery as "the most tremendous attack [of this nature] ever made within a British court." In reference to the actual motive for Songhurst's murder, Humphreys alleged Whiteway had chosen to murder his victim to prevent her from identifying him as her assailant, stating: "He is raping these girls; his face is inches from theirs. [Songhurst] might know his face. He has to kill her; otherwise she is going to say, 'It was Alfie Whiteway who raped me last night.'" [74]
Peter Rawlinson delivered the defence's closing argument. Rawlinson alleged the actual perpetrator had been a lone male on foot who had been seen by several witnesses loitering in the vicinity of the murders before their commission; he also emphasised that Songhurst's bicycle had never been found, and that, as corroborated by family members, Whiteway had been riding his own bicycle on the afternoon and evening of the murders, and as such, the actual perpetrator must have fled the scene on Songhurst's bicycle.
In reference to the time the murders had occurred, Rawlinson stressed that, unlike Whiteway's wife, uncle, and his wife's parents, most eyewitnesses relied on memory as to the time the girls had last been seen alive and the brief, high-pitched scream had been heard. He speculated the murders may possibly have occurred as late as 1 a.m. when—as corroborated by several individuals—Whiteway had long since returned home. Referencing Songhurst's autopsy report, Rawlinson further stated pathologist Keith Mant could only estimate she had died "approximately eight hours" prior to her discovery at 8:15 a.m. on 1 June. [74]
Discussing the savagery of the murders, Rawlinson also referenced the fact no bloodstains had been discovered on any of Whiteway's clothes save for one shoe, which his client had stated sourced from either his shaving or his menial labour. He then discussed the circumstances surrounding the axe presented in evidence against his client, which had been conveniently and dubiously discovered at a time police desperately sought one or both of the murder weapons, and his client's alleged confession, which Rawlinson again alleged had been fabricated by police and signed by his client through trickery or force. Rawlinson concluded his closing argument by urging the jury to find his client not guilty. [74]
How little did those two light-hearted young girls, in the very springtime of their lives ... think that was the last hour they [actually] had to live, and what awful death awaited them a little further along that path.
The jury retired to consider their verdict on the afternoon of 2 November; [76] they deliberated for forty-eight minutes before announcing they had reached their verdict: Whiteway was found guilty of Songhurst's murder. He closed his eyes and swayed slightly as the sentence was passed, then left the courtroom in silence. [77]
After Whiteway had left the dock, Judge Hilbery ordered that charges against Whiteway for the murder of Christine Reed and the two separate charges of rape and assault with attempt to rape and robbery for which he had initially been arrested lie on file. [75]
Whiteway did appeal his sentence; his appeal contended the trial judge had wrongly permitted the fact he had previously been arrested upon a charge of attempting to rape a 15-year-old girl to be introduced into evidence at his trial. The appeal was heard by the Lord Chief Justice (Lord Goddard), Mr. Justice Sellers and Mr. Justice Barry on 7 December, but was rejected the same day, [78] with Lord Goddard describing the case as one of the "most brutal and horrifying crimes" he had encountered in many years of service and directly quoting sections of Whiteway's confession upon announcing the upholding of the sentence. Upon hearing the rejection of her husband's appeal, Whiteway's 18-year-old wife burst into tears and had to be assisted from the courtroom. [79]
Alfred Whiteway was hanged at Wandsworth Prison on 22 December 1953. His executioner was Albert Pierrepoint. [80] One of Whiteway's last actions in life prior to walking to the gallows was to send a Christmas card to his wife and infant daughters. [35]
Frederick Walter Stephen West was an English serial killer, who committed at least twelve murders between 1967 and 1987 in Gloucestershire, the majority with his second wife, Rose West.
The Hammersmith nude murders is the name of a series of six murders in West London, England, in 1964 and 1965. The victims, all prostitutes, were found undressed in or near the River Thames, leading the press to nickname the killer Jack the Stripper. Two earlier murders, committed in West London in 1959 and 1963, have also been linked by some investigators to the same perpetrator.
Peter Kürten was a German serial killer, known as The Vampire of Düsseldorf and the Düsseldorf Monster, who committed a series of murders and sexual assaults between February and November 1929 in the city of Düsseldorf. In the years before these assaults and murders, Kürten had amassed a lengthy criminal record for offences including arson and attempted murder. He also confessed to the 1913 murder of a nine-year-old girl in Mülheim am Rhein and the attempted murder of a 17-year-old girl in Düsseldorf.
John Bodkin Adams was a British general practitioner, convicted fraudster, and suspected serial killer. Between 1946 and 1956, 163 of his patients died while in comas, which was deemed to be worthy of investigation. In addition, 132 out of 310 patients had left Adams money or items in their wills.
Teddington Lock is a complex of three locks and a weir on the River Thames between Ham and Teddington in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames, England. Historically in Middlesex, it was first built in 1810.
Earle Leonard Nelson, also known in the media as the Gorilla Man, the Gorilla Killer, and the Dark Strangler, was an American serial killer, rapist, and necrophile, who is considered the first known serial sex murderer of the twentieth century. Born and raised in San Francisco, California by his devoutly Pentecostal grandmother, Nelson exhibited bizarre behavior as a child, which was compounded by head injuries he sustained in a bicycling accident at age 10. After committing various minor offenses in early adulthood, he was institutionalized in Napa for a time.
John Reginald Halliday Christie was an English serial killer and serial rapist active during the 1940s and early 1950s. He took sex tapes of his victims before the murders. He murdered at least eight people—including his wife Ethel—by strangling them inside his flat at 10 Rillington Place, Notting Hill, London. The bodies of three of his victims were found in a wallpaper-covered kitchen alcove soon after he had moved out of Rillington Place during March 1953. The remains of two more victims were discovered in the garden, and his wife's body was found beneath the floorboards in the front room. Christie was arrested and convicted of his wife's murder, for which he was hanged.
Peter Anthony Grayson Rawlinson, Baron Rawlinson of Ewell, was an English barrister, Conservative politician and author. He served as Member of Parliament for Epsom for 23 years, from 1955 to 1978, and held the offices of Solicitor General (1962–1964) and Attorney General for England and Wales (1970–1974) and for Northern Ireland (1972–1974). Had he been appointed Lord Chancellor, as seemed likely during the mid-1970s, he would have been the first Roman Catholic to hold that position since Thomas More in 1532.
The Thames Path is a National Trail following the River Thames from one of its sources near Kemble in Gloucestershire to the Woolwich foot tunnel, south east London. It is about 185 miles (298 km) long. A path was first proposed in 1948 but it only opened in 1996.
Wrongful execution is a miscarriage of justice occurring when an innocent person is put to death by capital punishment. Opponents of capital punishment often cite cases of wrongful execution as arguments, while proponents argue that innocence concerns the credibility of the justice system as a whole and does not solely undermine the use of the death penalty.
Levi Bellfield is an English serial killer, sex offender, rapist, kidnapper, and burglar. He was found guilty on 25 February 2008 of the murders of Marsha McDonnell and Amélie Delagrange and the attempted murder of Kate Sheedy, and sentenced to life imprisonment. On 23 June 2011, Bellfield was further found guilty of the murder of Milly Dowler. On both occasions, the judge imposed a whole life order, meaning that Bellfield will serve the sentence without the possibility of parole. Bellfield was the first prisoner in history to have received two whole life orders.
The murder of the Grimes sisters is an unsolved double murder that occurred in Chicago, Illinois, on December 28, 1956, in which two sisters named Barbara and Patricia Grimes—aged 15 and 12 respectively—disappeared while traveling from a Brighton Park movie theater to their home in McKinley Park. Their disappearance initiated one of the largest missing persons investigations in the history of Chicago. The girls' nude bodies were discovered alongside a deserted road in Willow Springs on January 22, 1957.
Herbert Wheeler Walter Hannam was a British policeman within the Metropolitan Police Service. He was based at Scotland Yard where he held the rank of Detective Superintendent.
George Junius Stinney Jr. was an African American boy who, at the age of 14 was convicted and then executed in a proceeding later vacated as an unfair trial for the murders of two young white girls in March 1944 – Betty June Binnicker, age 11, and Mary Emma Thames, age 8 – in his hometown of Alcolu, South Carolina. He was convicted, sentenced to death, and executed by electric chair in June 1944, thus becoming the youngest American with an exact birth date confirmed to be both sentenced to death and executed in the 20th century.
The Green Bicycle Case was a British murder investigation and subsequent trial pertaining to the fatal shooting of Bella Wright near the village of Little Stretton, Leicestershire, England, on 5 July 1919. Wright was killed by a single bullet wound to the face. The case takes its name from the fact that on the evening of her death, Wright had been seen cycling in the company of a man riding a green bicycle.
The Geeta and Sanjay Chopra kidnapping case was a kidnapping and murder crime in New Delhi in 1978. It involved the kidnapping and subsequent murder of siblings Geeta and Sanjay by Kuljeet Singh and Jasbir Singh. Although the children were kidnapped for ransom, they were killed after the kidnappers learned that their father was a naval officer, in the assumption that he was not wealthy. Both men initially admitted to raping Geeta before her murder. They later retracted their statements and forensic evidence could not confirm the rape. The two kidnappers were convicted and sentenced to death. The execution was carried out in 1982. Crime Patrol Dial 100 aired two episodes on Sony TV based on the story, 723 and 724 on 28 February 2018 and 1 March 2018. The case was also shown on the TV series Bhanwar, which was based on real-life court cases.
The "Career Girls Murders" was the name given by the American media to the murders of Emily Hoffert and Janice Wylie, which occurred inside their apartment on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, New York City, on August 28, 1963. George Whitmore Jr. was charged with this and other crimes, but he was later cleared.
Teddington is an affluent suburb of London in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames. Historically an ancient parish in the county of Middlesex and situated close to the border with Surrey, the district became part of Greater London in 1965. In 2021, The Sunday Times named Teddington as the best place to live in London, and in 2023, the wider borough was ranked first in Rightmove's Happy at Home index, making it the "happiest place to live in Great Britain"; the first time a London borough has taken the top spot.
The Soham murders were a double child murder committed in Soham, Cambridgeshire, England, on 4 August 2002. The victims were two 10-year-old girls, Holly Marie Wells and Jessica Amiee Chapman, who were lured into the home of a local resident and school caretaker, Ian Kevin Huntley, who subsequently murdered them – likely via asphyxiation – and disposed of their bodies in an irrigation ditch close to RAF Lakenheath in Suffolk. The bodies were discovered on 17 August 2002.
Thelma Anne Taylor was an American teenager who was abducted and murdered in Portland, Oregon in 1949, after having disappeared on August 5. Her body was discovered the following week, on August 11. Taylor's murder received national attention and became a cause célèbre. The perpetrator, Morris Leland, was executed in 1953. The murder occurred in the St. Johns neighborhood of North Portland near the St. Johns Bridge and land that is now known as Cathedral Park.