Ian Brady

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Mug shots of Ian Brady (right) and his partner Myra Hindley at the time of their arrest in October 1965.
Mug shots of Ian Brady (right) and his partner Myra Hindley at the time of their arrest in October 1965.

Ian Brady (born Ian Duncan Stewart on January 2, 1938 in the Gorbals, Glasgow) is a notorious British serial killer, born in Scotland and raised in England.

Brady is known primarily for his role in a series of murders that he committed along with his partner Myra Hindley in England between 1963 and 1965, which were dubbed the Moors murders, as all but one of the known victims were buried along the Saddleworth Moor near Oldham in Lancashire.

He was sentenced to life imprisonment in May 1966 and more than 40 years later is still imprisoned; since November 1985 he has been in a mental hospital. It is almost certain that he will never be released, and since 1999 has been trying to gain the right to take his own life through hunger strikes.[1] He has been force fed through feeding tubes intermittently since beginning the strike.[2]

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Early life

Ian Brady was born at the Rottenrow Maternity Hospital in Glasgow and grew up in the Gorbals. He was adopted into a local family at a young age who were named Sloane as his mother could not afford to look after her new-born. His father has never been identified; his mother claimed that he was a journalist who died a few months before their son was born. As a child Ian resented his illegitimacy. In 1949, at the age of eleven, he passed his exams and attended Shawlands Academy. Throughout school, he was recognised as a very bright pupil by his teachers, but one who never realised his potential. After starting at Shawlands, he became lazy, did not apply himself and began to misbehave. Apparently at school, he was hopeless at football, but demonstrated a talent for music and learned to play the piano. Ian left school early, with no formal qualifications to his name. Whilst in Glasgow, he developed a fascination with Nazi Germany, Nazi pageantry and Nazi symbolism.

Two years after starting at Shawlands, Ian made his first ever court appearance and was given five years probation for housebreaking and theft. In 1953 he was also given probation but on the third time he was brought before a court, in 1954, he was ordered him to leave Glasgow and live with his mother. She had since moved to Manchester and had married an Irish labourer, and so in November 1954, two months before his 17th birthday, Ian left the Sloane household and travelled down by train to join his mother and her new husband. Although he did not get on with Mr. Brady, Ian took his stepfather's surname and agreed to take a job as a porter at Manchester market, which his stepfather found him.

In Manchester, he developed an interest in the writings of the Marquis de Sade and Friedrich Nietzsche, giving particular attention to Nietzsche's theories of Übermensch and The Will to Power. He became increasingly interested in a philosophy that championed cruelty and torture, and the idea that superior creatures had the right to control (and destroy, if necessary) weaker ones. Brady avidly collected books about torture and sadomasochism and other paraphilias relating to domination and servitude. About this time, he left the porter's job and worked as a butcher's assistant. He also began drinking heavily and gambling. He found a job in a brewery but was sacked for aiding and abetting. The young man resorted again to thieving, and after being convicted several more times, once for pinching lead seals, he was sentenced to two years training, from 10 January 1956 at Borstal schools in Hatfield and Hull prison as well as serving a three months in Strangeways Prison.

While incarcerated, Brady learned illegal techniques for acquiring money. Hoping to avoid manual labour and aiming to appear respectable, he studied bookkeeping. His release, in November 1957 led to stretches of unemployment. His next job was as a labourer for Boddingtons brewery, rolling barrels and cleaning out yats, between April and October 1958, before spending four months unemployed. On 9 June 1958 he was fined £1 for drunk and disorderly behaviour in a Manchester street. Brady eventually found a job in February 1959 as a stock clerk at Millwards Merchandising. Almost two years later, in January 1961, he met Myra Hindley, who had just been hired at Millwards as a shorthand typist and they soon began a relationship.

[edit] Myra Hindley

Main article: Myra Hindley

The relationship between Brady and Hindley developed in concert with Brady's increasingly rabid identification with Nazi-era atrocities and his growing sadomasochistic sexual appetite. Hindley was Brady's eager student. Under his influence, she stopped going to church and started hating children.

Soon after they became a couple, Brady and Hindley began planning a series of bank robberies, which they never carried out. When Brady became fascinated with the idea of rape and murder for sexual gratification, Hindley actively participated in procuring child victims, as well as sexually abusing, torturing and murdering them.

With the aid of a time-delay camera and a self-devised darkroom, Brady and Hindley set about taking photographs of themselves acting out sadomasochistic fantasies. They later took pictures of each other standing or kneeling at the moorland burial sites of their victims.

Hindley later claimed that Brady had taken the compromising pictures of her while she was unconscious, and subsequently used them to blackmail her into participating in the murders. However, Brady has strenuously denied this suggestion and claims that Hindley was indeed a willing and enthusiastic participant in both the photographs and the murders. According to those police investigators who had examined the photographs, Hindley appears to be a fully complicit camera subject and is clearly enjoying herself as much as Brady was.

[edit] Moors killings

Main article: Moors murders

Brady was responsible for the murder of five children during the 1960s. In August 1987 he claimed to police that he had carried out another five killings and even said where he had buried the bodies, but the police were never able to prove whether these claims were true.

The five murders that Brady admitted carrying out were committed with Hindley as his accomplice. These were the infamous Moors Murders, which are still some of the most reviled crimes in Britain decades after they happened, with the judge at Brady and Hindley's trials even saying they were the worst murders in the past century. As a result, Brady and Hindley became two of the most hated individuals in British criminal history.

On July 12, 1963, the couple claimed their first victim. Sixteen-year-old Pauline Reade was enticed into Hindley's minivan while Brady followed behind on his motorcycle. They drove up to Saddleworth Moor where Hindley asked Reade to help her look for a lost glove. They were busy "searching the moors" when Brady pounced upon Reade and raped her. He then smashed her skull in with a shovel and slashed her throat so violently that she was almost decapitated. Brady then buried Reade's body on the moor, where it remained for over 20 years.

On November 23, Hindley lured 12-year-old John Kilbride into her car from a market place in Ashton-under-Lyne, and drove him to Saddleworth Moor. Brady was waiting there and ordered Hindley to wait for him in a nearby village in their hired Ford Anglia. While Hindley waited in her car, Brady raped and attempted to stab the boy with a knife, but the weapon was too blunt. Brady lost his temper and strangled him to death with a string before burying his body in a shallow grave.

On June 16, 1964 their third victim was another 12-year-old boy, Keith Bennett, whom they enticed from a street near his home in Chorlton on Medlock, Manchester, and drove to Saddleworth Moor. Hindley stood and watched from the top of an embankment while Brady raped Bennett in a ravine before strangling him to death with a piece of string and burying his body. His body has never been found.

The fourth victim, 10-year-old Lesley Ann Downey, was lured from a fairground in Ancoats and taken to the new council estate in Hattersley, where Hindley lived with her grandmother, Ellen Maybury. Brady took nine obscene photographs of Downey, showing her naked, bound and gagged (which were later found in a suitcase in a left luggage locker). Hindley recorded the scene of the child's rape and torture by Brady on audio tape. The tape clearly records the voices of Brady, Hindley and the child, who is heard to scream and protest and asks to be allowed to go home and plead for her life. It is believed she was killed by Brady. The following morning, Brady and Hindley drove Downey's body to Saddleworth Moor where it was buried in a shallow grave.

On October 6, 1965, the couple claimed their fifth and final victim, 17-year-old Edward Evans. Similar to the Downey murder, they enticed Evans from Manchester Central Railway Station to Hindley's home in Hattersley, where Hindley's 17-year-old brother-in-law, David Smith, was invited later that evening. Brady then crept up on Evans in the kitchen and smashed his head in with the blunt edge of hatchet, bludgeoning him fourteen times before strangling the young man with a length of electrical flex. Brady ordered Smith to help him carry the corpse to an upstairs bedroom and tie it up ready for disposal, but Smith then ran home and contacted the police. Smith explained later that, while apparently giving assistance to cleaning up, his sole concern was to escape the house alive.

Other sources say that Smith and Hindley were in the kitchen and when Evans started screaming in the living room, Hindley said, "Go and help Ian." Smith subsequently informed the police.

[edit] Sentencing

The death penalty was abolished just one month after Brady and Hindley were arrested. By the time they went on trial the following April, the punishment for murder was life imprisonment. This meant that a murderer was liable to be detained for the whole of his or her natural life, but could be released on life licence when no longer judged to be a risk. On 6 May 1966, Brady was found guilty on three counts of murder and sentenced to three terms of life imprisonment. Hindley was found guilty of murdering Lesley Ann Downey and Edward Evans and given two life sentences; she also received a concurrent seven-year sentence for harbouring Brady in connection with the murder of John Kilbride. The key evidence against the couple included the tape recordings of Downey made while they photographed her naked; the name of John Kilbride in a notebook; and a photograph of Hindley standing on top of the shallow grave where Kilbride was buried. Brady immediately admitted the murder of Edward Evans, but adamantly insisted that Hindley had no part in it. Brady finally confessed to the murders of Pauline Reade and Keith Bennett in November 1986.

[edit] Imprisonment

Brady spent 19 years in HMP Parkhurst, at one point befriending serial poisoner and fellow Nazi aficionado Graham Frederick Young. In 1985 he was declared mentally disordered and sent to Broadmoor Hospital, a secure psychiatric hospital for the criminally insane. He is currently an inmate of Ashworth Hospital, a high-security institution in the town of Maghull, a suburb of Liverpool, Merseyside.[3]

The trial judge spoke of his doubt at the possibility that Brady could ever reform, and described Brady as "wicked beyond belief"; and effectively granted little hope for an eventual release. Successive Home Secretaries have agreed with that decision, while Lord Lane (the former Lord Chief Justice), set a 40-year minimum term in 1982, meaning that he could not be freed until at least 2005. In 1990, Home Secretary David Waddington imposed whole life tariffs on both Brady and Hindley. His successor Michael Howard agreed with this judgement in 1994 and told Brady of his decision; after November 2002, politicians could no longer decide the minimum number of years that any life sentence prisoner would have to serve. He has had to be force-fed since going on hunger strike in September 1999, after the High Court refused him the right to starve himself to death. In 2001 Brady wrote a book called The Gates of Janus, which was published by the underground American publishing firm Feral House. The book, Brady's analysis of serial murder and specific serial killers, sparked outrage when announced in Britain.[4]

Despite his long incarceration, Brady (and his murders) still provide headlines for the UK tabloid press. Fellow prisoner Linda Calvey recently told the The Daily Mirror that, before her death in November 2002, Hindley confessed their killing of a young female hitch-hiker. It has not yet been established whether this murder really did take place.

It has been reported that Brady devised a secret code to stop the police from finding out where the body of Keith Bennett is buried, and that he is furious that a drama documentary based on the murder was shown on ITV1 in May 2006. He has bragged to various newspapers that he has stopped four previous films from being made. In early 2006, it was reported that a woman tried to smuggle 50 paracetamol tablets to Brady at the prison hospital. The amount could have been sufficient for a successful suicide attempt. Hospital employees foiled the attempt using X-ray screening, which revealed the pills in two sweets tubes inside a hollowed out crime novel.[5] Winnie Johnson, the mother of Brady's one undiscovered victim, 12-year-old Keith Bennett, received a letter from Brady at the end of 2005 claiming that he could take police to within 20 yards of her son's body, but the authorities would not allow it.[citation needed]

In September 2007, Brady embarked on the first step of a legal bid to be allowed to kill himself. He requested that he be moved out of a mental health unit to prison in order that he can starve himself to death.[6] His lawyer stated, "he should be allowed to move as he serves no purpose in life". It was later reported that Brady had written his autobiography and gave his solicitor instructions that it may only be published after Brady's death.[citation needed]

[edit] References

  1. ^ BBC News Online - Brady: My fight goes on
  2. ^ The Crime Library - Murder on the Moors: The Ian Brady and Myra Hindley Story
  3. ^ BBC News Online - Ian Brady wants only to die
  4. ^ BBC News Online - US publisher defends Brady book
  5. ^ BBC News Online - Brady drugs smuggling bid foiled
  6. ^ BBC News Online - Ian Brady refused public hearing

[edit] Biblography

  • The Moors Murders: The Trial of Myra Hindley and Ian Brady, Jonathan Goodman, David & Charles 1986. ISBN 0-7153-9064-3
  • "The Lost Boy" by Duncan Staff 2007
  • "Devil's Discples" by Robert Wilson 1986
  • "Return To Hell" by Robert Wilson 1987
  • Brady and Hindley: The Genesis of the Moors Murders, Fred Harrison 1986 Grafton. ISBN 0-906798-70-1
  • Myra Hindley: Inside the Mind of a Murderess, Jean Ritchie, Paladin 1991, paperback. ISBN 0-586-21563-8
  • On Iniquity, Pamela Hansford Johnson 1967, Macmillan.
  • The Monsters Of The Moors, John Deane Potter, Ballantine Books 1967.
  • Beyond Belief: A Chronicle of Murder and its Detection, Emlyn Williams, Pan 1992. ISBN 0-330-02088-9
  • Serial Killers and Mass Murderers: 100 Tales of Infamy, Barbarism and Horrible Crime, Joyce Robins. ISBN 1-85152-363-4.
  • The World's Most Infamous Murders. ISBN 0-425-10887-2.
  • "Behind the Painted Smile", Gary Cartwright 2004. ISBN 1-4120-2647-4.
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