The Cannock Chase murders (also known as the A34 murders) were the murders of three young school girls that occurred in Staffordshire, England, during the late 1960s. In a trial reported to have received "unprecedented public interest," Raymond Leslie Morris of Walsall was convicted at Staffordshire Assizes of the murder of Christine Ann Darby after one of the largest manhunts in British history.[1][2][3][4] Morris is also considered the chief suspect in the deaths of Margaret Reynolds and Diana Joy Tift.[1][5][6] In November 2010, he was granted a judicial review of his case in a bid to overturn his conviction.[7], which failed.
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Raymond Leslie Morris was born 13 August 1929 in Walsall, Staffordshire.[8] He lived in Walsall his entire life and was reported to have an IQ of 120.[6][8] Morris went through a variety of jobs before landing a position as a foreman engineer at a precision instruments factory in Oldbury, West Midlands, in 1967.[1][8][9] In 1951, he married 'the girl next door", who was two years younger than him, and fathered two boys.[6][10] He kicked her out of the house after eight years of marriage, then divorced her on the grounds of adultery when she had another man's child.[6] Morris's first wife would later describe him as a man with a need to express violent sexual dominance.[6] At the age of 35, Morris was married again, this time to a 21-year-old woman named Carol.[8] At the time the A34 murders were committed, Morris and his wife lived at Flat 20, Regent House, Green Lane, Walsall – a council-owned flat in Birchills, directly opposite the police station.[8][9]
On 12 January 1966, the bodies of Margaret Reynolds, age 6, and Diana Joy Tift, age 5, were found together in a ditch at Mansty Gully on Cannock Chase in Staffordshire.[11][12] Reynolds went missing on her way to school in Aston, Birmingham, on 8 September 1965 and Tift went missing on a short walk to her grandmother's house in Bloxwich on 30 December that year.[9][10] Two thousand people searched for Reynolds in the hours following her disappearance.[5]
On 22 August 1967, a soldier who was a member of a search party found the sprawled, naked body of seven-year-old Christine Darby beneath brushwood only a mile away from where Reynolds and Tift were discovered.[4][11] Christine had been enticed into a car by a strange man near her home in Camden Street, Caldmore, Walsall, on 19 August 1967.[13] Witnesses in Walsall explained that they saw a man in a grey car who spoke in a local accent, while two others who had been on Cannock Chase remembered seeing a grey Austin A55 or A60.[14]
The three murders were similar in that each victim was determined to have been coaxed into a car while near her home, then murdered after being sexually assaulted.[11] Darby, Reynolds, and Tift lived within a seventeen mile radius of each other and near the A34 road that passes through Cannock Chase. The murders were collectively known as the "A34 murders"[1] or "Cannock Chase murders".[3] The Cannock Chase/A34 murders sparked one of the biggest murder investigations in British criminal history.[2][4][12][15][16] The manhunt was larger than that of the infamous Moors murders.[8] Prior to making an arrest, 150 detectives would visit 39,000 homes, interview 80,000 people and check over a million car forms.[4][11] Culling 25,000 vehicles from 1,375,000 files, investigators checked every Austin A55 and A60 in the Midlands.[8] The hunt for the Cannock Chase murderer was led by Sir Stanley Bailey, Staffordshire’s Assistant Chief Constable at the time.[17][18]
On 4 November 1968, 10-year-old Margaret Aulton in Walsall managed to escape from a man who attempted to force her into his green and white Ford Corsair.[8][9] An 18-year-old housewife made a mental note of the vehicle registration plate, the car was traced back to Morris, and he was arrested in connection with the attempted abduction.[9][14] The police were aware that Morris, who had been interviewed four times in four years, had owned a grey Austin A55 similar to the one used in the abduction of Darby.[8][9] He had been considered a suspect in Darby's death, but his wife provided him with an alibi by stating that the couple were shopping together the day she went missing.[8][10][14] A police search of the Morris flat uncovered pornographic photographs of a young girl who was later determined to be Carol Morris's five-year-old niece.[8] Scotland Yard detectives arrested Raymond Morris for Darby's murder on 16 November 1968.[2] Two charges of indecent assault on the niece and one for the attempted abduction of Aulton would also be filed against Morris.[8]
Carol Morris would eventually become the chief witness for the prosecution and retract what she had initially told investigators about shopping on the day of Darby's murder.[8][10][14] On 16 November 1968, Raymond Leslie Morris was found guilty of the rape and murder of seven-year-old Christine Darby. His sentencing was delayed until the new year, when he was sentenced to life imprisonment.[5] As of August 2001, he was incarcerated at Wymott Prison and was planning to appeal against his conviction.[3]
Although convicted only of murdering Darby, Morris is considered the chief suspect in the deaths of Reynolds and Tift.[1][5][6] Reynolds's relatives consider Morris to be her killer.[5]
In November 2010, Morris was granted a judicial review of the refusal of the Criminal Cases Review Commission not to refer his case to the Court of Appeal, in a bid to overturn his conviction.[7] A statement from Morris's defence team said:
The application for a judicial review is the first stage in his attempts to have the matter referred back to the Court of Appeal after 42 years in prison. If Morris's conviction was overturned it would be the longest running miscarriage of justice in British history. It might also potentially mean that a child murderer had remained at large for more than 40 years during Morris's incarceration.[19][20]
However, Mr Justice Simon rejected the judicial review [21] and Morris later indicated that he had abandoned any further appeal [22].
Morris has been dubbed the Cannock Chase murderer.[5][6][23] A 1971 book compared and analyzed various English newspapers' handling of the widely reported discovery of Reynolds's and Tift's remains.[24] Morris was featured in a 1995 report in Central Independent Television's crime magazine series Crime Stalker[25] and a 2004 documentary of the Cannock Chase murders was televised on the ITV series To Catch A Killer.[26][27] Morris and the Cannock Chase murders are referred to in David Peace's novel Nineteen Seventy-Four.[23]