On
this day, 22 January 1988, English Child Killer, Colin Pitchfork was sentenced
to life imprisonment for the rape and murder of two girls. I will post information
about him from Wikipedia and The Daily Mail, before giving my thoughts.
Colin Pitchfork
(born March 1960, Newbold Verdon, England) is a British criminal, the first
convicted of murder based on DNA fingerprinting evidence, and the first to be
caught as a result of mass DNA screening. Pitchfork raped and murdered two
girls, the first in Narborough, Leicestershire, in November 1983, and the
second in Enderby, also in Leicestershire, in July 1986. He was arrested on 19
September 1987, and sentenced to life imprisonment on 22 January 1988, after
admitting both murders.
Pitchfork
lived in Newbold Verdon, attending school in Market Bosworth and Desford, until
his marriage in 1981, after which he lived in Littlethorpe.
Crimes
On
21 November 1983, 15-year-old Lynda Mann left her home to visit a friend's
house. She did not return. The next morning, she was found raped and strangled
on a deserted footpath known locally as the Black Pad. Using forensic science
techniques available at the time, police linked a semen sample taken from her
body to a person with type A blood and an enzyme profile that matched only 10
percent of males. With no other leads or evidence, the case was left open.
On
31 July 1986, another 15-year-old girl, Dawn Ashworth, took a shortcut instead
of taking her normal route home. Two days later, her body was found in a wooded
area near a footpath called Ten Pound Lane. She had been beaten, savagely
raped, and strangled to death. The modus operandi matched that of the
first attack, and semen samples revealed the same blood type.
The
prime suspect was a local 17-year-old youth, Richard Buckland, who revealed
knowledge of Ashworth's body, and admitted the crime under questioning, but
denied the first murder. Alec Jeffreys, of the University of Leicester, had
recently developed DNA profiling along with Peter Gill and Dave Werrett of the
Forensic Science Service (FSS) and detailed the technique in a 1985 paper.
Gill
commented:
I was responsible for developing all of the DNA extraction techniques and demonstrating that it was possible after all to obtain DNA profiles from old stains. The biggest achievement was developing the preferential extraction method to separate sperm from vaginal cells – without this method it would have been difficult to use DNA in rape cases.
Using
this technique, Jeffreys compared semen samples from both murders against a
blood sample from Buckland which conclusively proved that both girls were
killed by the same man, but not Buckland. The police then contacted the FSS to
verify Jeffreys' results and decide which direction to take the investigation.
Buckland became the first person to have his innocence established by DNA
fingerprinting.
Jeffreys
later said:
I have no doubt whatsoever that he would have been found guilty had it not been for DNA evidence. That was a remarkable occurrence.
The
Leicestershire Constabulary and the FSS then undertook an investigation in
which 5,000 local men were asked to volunteer blood or saliva samples. This
took six months, and no matches were found.
Later,
a man named Ian Kelly was heard bragging that he had obtained £200 for giving a
sample while masquerading as his friend, Colin Pitchfork, a local baker. On
September 19, 1987 Pitchfork was arrested at his home in Haybarn Close, in the
neighbouring village of Littlethorpe and a sample was found to match that of
the killer. During subsequent questioning, Pitchfork admitted to flashing
females over 1000 times, a compulsion that he had started in his early teens.
Flashing led to sexual assault and then to strangling his victims in order to
protect his identity. He pleaded guilty to the two rape/murders in addition to
another incident of sexual assault that he had committed. Pitchfork was
preparing to move to Littlethorpe at the time of the murder of Lynda Mann, and
resided at Haybarn Close in Littlethorpe at the time of the murder of Dawn
Ashworth. He was sentenced to life imprisonment and concurrent terms for rape
and murder, but with no minimum sentence (thus, presenting the opportunity for
release after ten years).
Appeal
On
14 May 2009, after an initial adjournment on 30 April 2009, Pitchfork’s legal
appeal was heard at the Royal Courts of Justice in London. He won a two-year
reduction in his original sentence of a minimum 30 years' imprisonment. As a
consequence, Pitchfork will now be eligible for release in 2016. The Lord Chief
Justice Lord Judge stated, however, that "he cannot be released unless and
until the safety of the public is assured." The court heard that Pitchfork
is now educated to degree level and had become expert at the transcription of
printed music into Braille, hoping one day to be able to help the blind. This
evidence was presented by his legal representatives as evidence of the
development of his character while incarcerated.
In
April 2009, a sculpture that Pitchfork had produced in prison was exhibited at
the Royal Festival Hall. Following outrage in The Daily Mail, it was
removed from display.
Work of art or monstrous cynicism? Convicted paedophile creates extraordinary paper sculpture in bid to win freedom
By
Sarah
Chalmers
UPDATED:
UPDATED:
By
any artistic standard, it is a striking piece of sculpture: an entire choir and
orchestra created in meticulous miniature detail by folding, cutting and
tearing the score of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony.
Yet
no degree of close inspection by concert-goers at the Royal Festival Hall on
London's South Bank - where the work has been exhibited - could reveal the ugly
truth behind the delicate, almost vulnerable figures.
For
the creator of this intricate, some would say beautifully exquisite, work is a
double rapist and child-killer, two-thirds of the way through a prison sentence
for having committed two of the most deplorable crimes of modern time.
Work of art: The paper sculpture made by
child killer Colin Pitchfork
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For not only has Colin Pitchfork gained financially from the work (he was given about £300 of the £600 sale proceeds), he also stands to win something far more valuable: his freedom.
At the end of this month, Pitchfork is due to appeal for early release (after serving just 20 years of the 30-year minimum term recommended by the then Home Secretary, Michael Howard, in 1994).
According to his legal team, Pitchfork has changed dramatically in prison and is no longer a threat.
The Court of Appeal at the Royal Courts of Justice will decide his fate, but for many in the court of public opinion the beauty of a man's art has no bearing on his soul.
Pitchfork
raped and murdered two Leicestershire schoolgirls in the mid-1980s.
|
This
move to try to win the release of one of the country's most notorious child sex
killers comes at a time when Justice Secretary Jack Straw has mooted a 'public
acceptability test' to decide whether offenders can be released into the
community.
But,
after decades of criticism of this country's justice system, many will view the
campaign for Pitchfork's freedom as clear proof that nothing has changed and
that penal reform do-gooders champion killers rather than victims.
Colin
Pitchfork gained notoriety in 1988 when, aged 27, he became the first criminal
in the world to be convicted of murder based on DNA fingerprinting, following
the first mass screening of 5,000 men in three neighbouring villages.
The
case revolutionised police work worldwide.
On
November 22, 1983, the body of 15-year-old Lynda Mann was found raped and
strangled on a deserted footpath running between a cemetery and a psychiatric
hospital in the Leicestershire village of Narborough. Lynda had left home the
night before to visit a friend and, when she did not return, her family alerted
police.
Almost
three years later, in July 1986, the body of another 15-year-old, Dawn
Ashworth, from nearby Enderby, was found in almost identical circumstances in a
wooded area, less than a mile from the scene of Lynda's murder.
The
dead girl had been taking a shortcut home from school instead of her usual
route, but there can be little doubt that her assailant, believing he had 'got
away with it' once, was on the look-out for other teenagers to assault,
terrorise and murder in the same way.
Initially,
a local man confessed to the second murder and his blood was found to be the
same group as blood found at the scene. There can be no doubt that had it not
been for advances in science, he would have been convicted while Colin
Pitchfork remained free.
However,
two years later, semen samples found at the crime scenes were used to match the
DNA of Pitchfork, a baker and convicted flasher. The court later heard that the
night after Dawn's killing, he callously returned to his home in the village of
Littlethorpe and baked a cake.
If
the girls had lived, they would now be in their 40s, perhaps with teenage
daughters of their own. Lynda Mann's mother, Kath, said paying her daughter's
'evil, wicked and cruel' killer for his work showed a 'lack of conscience'.
'For
a man who did that to be rewarded for making paperwork art - good or bad - is
not right.
'This
man is supposed to be in prison as a punishment for what he did. He raped and
killed two 15-year-old girls just because "they were there" and we
should never forget that.'
The sculpture features intricately folded musicians made from the score of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. |
Kelvin
Donaghey, who knows Dawn Ashworth's family and created a memorial website to
the dead girls, told the Mail: 'Lynda was good at art and so was Dawn. They
never got the chance to have their works exhibited, yet the man who took their
lives away not only has that, but earns money from it, too.'
Yet,
despite the manner of their murders, the charity that promoted Pitchfork's work
remains proud of its stance.
Tim
Robertson, chief executive of the Koestler Trust, said: 'It's not relevant to
us what the person's offence is. What's relevant to us is how good the art is.'
He
said the charity makes no distinction between prisoners' crimes and releases
artists' names only when it has the written permission of the inmates
themselves and the Prison Service.
In
the case of Pitchfork, the charity did not have that permission and refuses to
confirm his identity as the artist.
Mr
Robertson, who criticised the Press for making public the exhibition of
Pitchfork's work, said: 'We are extremely sorry if the display has caused
offence to victims of crime.
'Our
aim is to reduce the number of victims of crime and we would never have
released the artist's name and caused offence to relatives.'
However,
officials at the Royal Festival Hall this week removed the artwork from
display. A spokesman apologised for any offence caused and said it respected
the Koestler Trust's policy of anonymity, but would be reviewing future policy.
The paper sculpture was on display at the
Southbank Centre in London. It was subsequently removed after it was revealed
Pitchfork was the artist.
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It
is understood that Pitchfork completed the work in his cell at Frankland
Prison, Durham, before being moved to Full Sutton, near York. Having previously
studied Beethoven for an Open University Degree, he used a photocopy of the
composer's sheet music to fashion his piece over a number of weeks.
In
accordance with the charity's practice, he received 50 per cent of the sale
price for his sculpture, with 40 per cent retained by the charity and 10 per cent
going to Victim Support.
Former
Cabinet minister and ex-prisoner Jonathan Aitken, who served 18 months for
perjury and used his time behind bars to study New Testament Greek, sees
nothing wrong in the arrangement.
'Mr
Pitchfork is rebuilding his life behind bars through rehabilitation, including,
in his case, artistic endeavour. Society should be pleased by that rather than
condemning him or trying to stop him from benefiting from the proceeds,' he
says.
'The
Royal Festival Hall has made the wrong decision in withdrawing the work, for
while I deplore the serious crime in this case, the sentence is the punishment.
There also has to be rehabilitation.'
An
undated police handout photo of Pitchfork, who raped and murdered Lynda Mann
and Dawn Ashworth.
|
But
some disturbing questions remain. Rehabilitation of this kind - the opportunity
to produce art and then gain recognition and remuneration for it - will be seen
by many as a privilege only for lesser criminals and one that should be denied
to the more serious offenders, just as their freedom is withheld.
How
can it be right that two innocent children lose their lives while their
murderer loses his liberty for a relatively short space of time and emerges
from incarceration having earned money and with the potential for a new career?
Why,
also, do the artists under this scheme have to be paid (£300 may not be a lot
of money in the outside world, but it is a substantial sum for a prisoner who
has no outgoings while residing at Her Majesty's Pleasure). After all, most
prisoners have to work while in jail, but those in the laundry or canteen are
not being paid hundreds of pounds.
Pitchfork
is not the first criminal to produce art in a prison cell. A series of eight
landscapes painted on prison issue cards by East End gangster Ronnie Kray while
incarcerated in the Seventies sold for £16,550 at auction.
Also,
Jimmy Boyle, dubbed 'the most violent man in Scotland', turned to sculpture
while in jail and later wrote his autobiography, which became a film.
And
Charles Bronson, the murderer known as 'Britain's most dangerous inmate' and
about whom a controversial film was released last month, boasts no fewer than
11 Koestler awards for his art and poetry.
But
it is Pitchfork's cunning that should cause most alarm. He was, and is, a
clever man.
The
timing of the display of his work, Bringing Music To Life, and subsequent
unveiling of him as the artist, coincides neatly with his forthcoming High
Court appeal in which his lawyers will try to show he could be an upstanding
member of society.
Let
us not forget that although he was arrested and finally convicted on DNA
evidence, he initially bribed someone else to give a DNA sample in his place.
The 'substitute', Ian Kelly, switched passport photos, learned to forge
Pitchfork's signature and became word-perfect on the killer's family history.
This attempted deceit was revealed only after Kelly bragged to friends in a
pub.
In
a message beside the sculpture, Pitchfork wrote eloquently: 'Without this
opportunity to show our art, many of us would have no incentive, we would stay
locked in ourselves as much as the walls that hold us.'
Yet
despite this clever bid to sway public emotions, it is an inescapable fact that
the dead victims have neither the 'opportunity' nor ' incentive' their murderer
writes about.
The
judge at his trial, Mr Justice Otton, described Pitchfork as 'callous and
cunning'. More than 20 years on, it is hard not to still agree. Even the
sculpture's title seems calculated to offend.
Bringing
Music To Life? If only it were so easy to bring two innocent young schoolgirls
back to life.
Lynda Mann, 15
|
Dawn Ashworth, 15
|
MY
THOUGHTS:
Colin
Pitchfork is similar to Ian Huntley and Harry Roberts who are still alive in
prison and having three good meals a day with TV to watch. I feel that he is the older version of Ian Huntley, in the sense that he killed two girls, right now, he is
under protection custody. Their victims are all dead and gone, while the
killers can live even behind bars.
I
wished that they should not only remove his artwork from display but to burn it
in public for all to see. Here is one great example of why life imprisonment is
not justice at all, I thank God that we have DNA evidence now, so we can catch
the guilty.
I also wish that he
can join the list of executed child killers like Westley Allan Dodd, Mamoru Takuma and Al Rashidi. Please hear from the victims’ family member by going to
my other blog.
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