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Brady and Hindley photographed at the time of their arrest

The Moors murders were committed around the Manchester area, England, between 1963 and 1965 by Ian Brady and Myra Hindley. The Moors murders are named as such because four of the victims were buried on Saddleworth Moor near Oldham, Lancashire.

Brady and Hindley's Relationship

Brady and Hindley began their relationship in 1961 while working at Millwards, a chemical factory in Manchester. By virtually all accounts, Hindley was an eager participant in Brady's nefarious activities. She changed her look to match that of his ideal woman: high boots and mini skirts – even dirndls, a word Hindley could never pronounce. She bleached her hair and the whole ensemble was created so that she would appear more German. Brady also urged Hindley to join a shooting club and get a gun licence so they could rob banks.

Victims

Pauline Reade

Pauline Reade

Their first victim was 16-year-old Pauline Reade, a neighbour of Hindley's, who disappeared on her way to a social club in the Crumpsall district on 12 July, 1963. She got into a car with Hindley while Brady secretly followed behind on his motorbike.

When the van reached Saddleworth Moor, Hindley stopped the van and got out before asking Pauline to help her find a missing glove. They were busy "searching" the moors when Brady pounced upon Pauline and smashed her skull with a shovel. He then subjected her to a savage rape before slitting her throat with a knife, her spinal cord was severed and she was almost decapitated. Brady then buried her body, and it would not be discovered for more than 20 years.

John Kilbride

John Kilbride

On November 23, 1963, Brady and Hindley struck again. This time the victim was 12-year-old John Kilbride. Like many children, he had been warned not to go away with strange men but not about strange women. When he was approached by Hindley at a market in Ashton under Lyne, the youngster agreed to go with her to help carry some boxes.

Brady was sitting in the back of the car. When they reached the moors, he took the child with him while Hindley waited in the car. On the moor, Brady subjected John Kilbride to a sexual assault and attempted to slit his neck with a knife with a six inch serrated blade, but it didn't work, so Brady strangled him to death with a shoelace and buried his body in a shallow grave.

Keith Bennett

The third victim was 12-year-old Keith Bennett who vanished on his way to his grandmother's house in Gorton on June 16, 1964 - 4 days after his 12th birthday. He accepted a lift from Hindley, and she drove to the Moors and asked him to help search for a lost glove. Brady then lured Keith into a ravine where he sexually assaulted the boy. He also took photographs which Hindley destroyed in the days after Brady's arrest, before she herself was taken into custody. Brady then strangled the child to death with a piece of string, before burying his body. Hindley stood above the ravine and watched the murder. Keith's body has never been found.

Lesley Ann Downey

The fourth victim was 10-year-old Lesley Ann Downey who vanished from an Ancoats fairground on Boxing Day, 1964. She had been lured back to Brady and Hindley's house on the Hattersley estate to help them carry boxes. Brady and Hindley enticed Lesley into a bedroom and subjected her to sexual abuse and torture. They tape-recorded Lesley's screams as she was abused and took 9 pornographic photographs of her. She was eventually strangled to death with a piece of string by one of the two; Lesley's mother always insisted that Hindley was the killer, and Brady also said this. Brady and Hindley then dumped Lesley's naked body in a shallow grave on Saddleworth Moor.

Edward Evans

The fifth and final victim was 17-year-old Edward Evans on October 6, 1965, who was lured to Brady and Hindley's house and hacked to death with an axe by Brady. The crime was witnessed by Hindley's 18-year-old brother-in-law David Smith, who had been invited to get involved in the mugging of Evans. Dave Smith walked in on the grim scene of Brady driving an axe into Edward Evans's head. He was then forced to help clean up the murder scene; in fear for his life and whilst still in shock he complied to Myra and Ian's request. After he left the house, Smith returned home, and told his wife Maureen Hindley (Myra's sister) what he had witnessed. They then, armed with a weapon scared that Brady could be waiting for them, called the police from a phone box, bringing an end to the duo's murderous spree.

Arrest and imprisonment

The house was raided soon afterwards. Brady was immediately arrested and charged with the murder of Edward Evans. During questioning he admitted to the murder but lied that David Smith had joined in. Hindley was only arrested several days later, when police found the pair's suitcase full of evidence in a locker at Manchester's Central railway station. Apart from the photographs and tape recording of Lesley's torture, there was also a notebook in which John Kilbride's name was found. Both bodies were soon discovered, and Brady and Hindley were faced with three charges of murder.

Verdict

On May 6, 1966, at Chester Crown Court, Brady was found guilty of murdering John Kilbride, Lesley Ann Downey, and Edward Evans. Brady received three concurrent terms of life imprisonment (the death penalty had been abolished a year earlier). Hindley was found guilty of murdering Lesley and Edward and given two life sentences, plus seven years for being an accessory to Brady in the murder of John. The trial judge reccommended that both Hindley and Brady should spend a very long time in prison before being considered for parole. He condemned Brady was 'wicked beyond belief' and felt that there was no reasonable possibility of him ever reforming, although he did not think that the same was true of Hindley once she was removed from Brady's influence.

Brady's imprisonment

Ian Brady spent nineteen years in a mainstream prison before he was declared insane in 1985 and sent to a mental hospital. He subsequently confessed to two more murders in 1987 and has since made it clear that he never wants to be released from prison.

The trial judge had recommended that his life sentence should mean life, and successive Home Secretaries have agreed with that decision. The only person to make a different judgment was Lord Chief Justice Lane who set a 40-year minimum term in 1982. A House of Lords ruling which stripped the Home Secretary of his power to set tariffs on life sentences could lead to Brady being released in 2006, but Brady insists he never wants to be freed.

While incarcerated since 1985 in the high-security Ashworth Psychiatric Hospital, Brady began a hunger strike in 1999 and was subsequently force fed. Brady took ill and was transported to another hospital for tests. He eventually recovered and was considering suing the hospitals for force-feeding him. In early 2006, prison authorities intercepted a package, addressed to Brady from a female friend, containing 50 paracetamol pills hidden within a hollowed out crime novel.

Brady has also written a controversial book on serial killing titled The Gates of Janus.

Hindley's imprisonment

At her trial, Hindley was told that she should spend at least 25 years behind bars. The Lord Chief Justice agreed with that recommendation in 1982, meaning that Hindley could be considered for parole beginning in October 1990. However, after she and Brady admitted in 1986 to additional murders (Pauline Reade and Keith Bennett), Home Secretary Leon Brittan increased her tariff to 30 years, ruling out parole until at least October 1995.

By that time, Hindley claimed to be a reformed Roman Catholic woman. She explained that she had acted under the influence of Brady and that she had only carried out murder because Brady had abused her and threatened to kill her family if she did not.

Although a minority supported the idea that Hindley should be released, the majority of the British public was strongly opposed, and relatives of the victims vowed to kill her if she were ever let out. In 1990, then Home Secretary David Waddington agreed with public opinion, imposing a whole life tariff on Hindley, which meant she would never be released.

Hindley was not informed of the decision until 1994, when a Law Lords ruling obliged the Prison Service to inform all life sentence prisoners of the minimum period they must serve in prison before being considered for parole.

In 1997, the Parole Board had ruled that Hindley was low risk and should be moved to an open prison. She had rejected the idea and had moved to a medium security prison instead, but the House of Lords ruling seemed to give her a good chance of freedom.

In December 1997, November 1998, and March 2000, Hindley made appeals against the whole life tariff, claiming she was a reformed woman and no longer a danger, but the High Court rejected each one. Hindley's best chance of parole came in May 2002, The House of Lords stripped the Home Secretary of his powers to overrule the Parole Board's recommendations that a life sentence prisoner should be released.

Jock Carr, one of the police officers who brought Hindley to justice, said that if Hindley were ever released, the chances were that she would be murdered herself, meaning that somebody else would have suffer - go to prison - because of her crimes. Carr also feared that Hindley could go on and become a T.V celebrity who would earn more than he did throughout his entire working life, something that he felt was 'very wrong'.

Then, another life sentence prisoner challenged the Home Secretary's power to set minimum terms. Hindley, and 70 other life sentence prisoners whose tariffs had been increased by politicians, looked certain to be released from prison if the ruling was made. Hindley's release seemed imminent. Plans were already underway for her to be given a new identity.

On November 15, 2002, Myra Hindley died in a West Suffolk Hospital from a myocardial infarction. She was 60 years old. Less than two weeks later, on November 26, 2002, the Law Lords and the European Court of Human Rights agreed that judges, not politicians, should decide how long a criminal spends behind bars, and thus stripped of the power to set minimum sentences.

It is an indication of Hindley's notoriety that dozens of crematoria refused to take her body and the company that finally did so insisted on anonymity as a condition of performing the service.

Frank Pakenham, 7th Earl of Longford, more commonly referred to as Lord Longford, campaigned heavily to secure the release of 'celebrated' criminals, in particular Myra Hindley, a cause of constant derision in the public and the press. He described Hindley as a "delightful" person and said "you could loathe what people did but should not loathe what they were because human personality was sacred even though human behaviour was very often appalling."

Other media

  • The Moors murders served partly as the inspiration for Edward Gorey's chilling short story The Loathsome Couple.
  • The Smiths wrote a touching tribute to the victims on their first album in a song called Suffer Little Children, and in fact make references either directly or indirectly to the Moors murders in a number of other songs.
  • The Edward Evans murder is recounted in detail in the Throbbing Gristle song, Very Friendly.
  • The satirical program Brass Eye depicts a love song to Hindley by the fictional band Blouse (a clear parody of Pulp).
  • The poet Carol Ann Duffy wrote a poem entitled 'The Devil's Wife' about Hindley in her collection 'The World's Wife'.
  • A dramatisation of the crimes and conviction of the Moors murderers was aired on ITV (May 14th & 15th) 2006 called "See No Evil: The Moors Murders" which recounts the events from the perspective of Maureen Hindley.
  • The Sex Pistols have a line in the song 'No-one Is Innocent' which goes "God save Myra Hindley, god save Ian Brady. Even though he's 'orrible and she aint what ya'd call a lady"

See also




Part of this article consists of modified text from Wikipedia, and the article is therefore licensed under GFDL.