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Authors: Carol Ann Lee

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30.
   Harrison,
Brady and Hindley
, p. 113.
12
 
1.
     David Marchbanks,
The Moor Murders
(London: Leslie Frewin, 1966), p. 57.
2.
     
Myra: The Making of a Monster
, documentary (Map-TV, 2003).
3.
     Fred Harrison,
Brady and Hindley: The Genesis of the Moors Murders
(London: Grafton Books, 1987), p. 116.
4.
     William Mars-Jones QC, ‘The Moors Murders’ address given to the Medico-Legal Society, 9 November 1967.
5.
     Jean Ritchie,
Myra Hindley: Inside the Mind of a Murderess
(London: Grafton Books, 1988), p. 58.
6.
     Harrison,
Brady and Hindley
, p. 117.
7.
     Ibid.
8.
     David Rowan and Duncan Campbell, ‘Myra Hindley: My Life, My Guilt, My Weakness’,
The Guardian
(18 December 1995).
9.
     Emlyn Williams Collection, Preliminary Notes, Ref: L3/4, National Library of Wales.
10.
   Ritchie,
Myra Hindley
, p. 62.
11.
   John Deane Potter,
The Monsters of the Moors: The Full Account of the Brady–Hindley Case
(New York: Ballantine Books 1968), p. 266.
12.
   Emlyn Williams Collection, Preliminary Notes, Ref: L3/4, National Library of Wales.
13.
   Anon., ‘Special Report – Moors Murderers Jailed for Life’, BBC News online (6 May 1966).
14.
   Emlyn Williams Collection, Preliminary Notes, Ref: L3/4, National Library of Wales.
15.
   Ibid.
16.
   Patricia Ann Hodges, witness statement. See footnote 25, chapter 8.
17.
   Emlyn Williams Collection, Preliminary Notes, Ref: L3/4, National Library of Wales.
18.
   Anon., ‘Special Report: Moors Murderers Jailed for Life’.
19.
   Patricia Ann Hodges, witness statement. See footnote 25, chapter 8.
20.
   Emlyn Williams Collection, Preliminary Notes, Ref: L3/4, National Library of Wales.
21.
   Ian Brady,
The Gates of Janus: Serial Killing and its Analysis
(Los Angeles: Feral House, 2001), p. 151.
22.
   Emlyn Williams Collection, Preliminary Notes, Ref: L3/4, National Library of Wales.
23.
   Ibid.
24.
   James Stansfield, ‘Diary of a Supercop: The Mounsey Memoirs’,
Evening Gazette
(2 August 1988).
25.
   Ibid.
26.
   Margaret Mounsey, author interview, Preston, 14 July 2009.
27.
   Mike Massheder, author interview, Preston, 1 July 2009.
28.
   Margaret Mounsey, author interview, Preston, 14 July 2009.
29.
   Danny Kilbride, author interview, Manchester, 21 August 2009.
30.
   Emlyn Williams Collection, Preliminary Notes, Ref: L3/4, National Library of Wales.
31.
   Potter,
The Monsters of the Moors
, p. 280.
32.
   Emlyn Williams Collection, Preliminary Notes, Ref: L3/4, National Library of Wales.
33.
   Ibid.
34.
   Ibid.
35.
   Ibid.
36.
   Ibid.
37.
   Patricia Ann Hodges, witness statement. See footnote 25, chapter 8.
38.
   Topping,
Topping
, p. 101.
13
 
1.
     Hindley clearly recalled ‘Little Red Rooster’ was playing as they watched Lesley by the dodgems.
2.
     Peter Topping,
Topping: The Autobiography of the Police Chief in the Moors Murders Case
(London: Angus and Robertson, 1989), p. 103.
3.
     The transcript is included in full here, both because it was the most damning piece of evidence against Hindley and because there has been so much speculation about its content.
4.
     Jonathan Goodman,
The Moors Murders: The Trial of Myra Hindley and Ian Brady
(London: Magpie Books, 1994), pp. 113–7.
5.
     The music was taken from the 1962 album by Ray Conniff and the Ray Conniff Singers,
We Wish You a Merry Christmas
. Brady made two recordings of the original tape. Three issues remain unclear: why Lesley Ann had given her surname incorrectly (although that can be explained by the little girl’s terror); why she called her abusers ‘mum’ and ‘dad’ – whether that had been at their instigation; and the truth behind Brady’s slip in the witness box, when he said that after the photographs were taken ‘we all got dressed and went downstairs’. Under cross-examination, Brady refused to admit he had said it. But if it was a genuine slip of the tongue, it calls into question Hindley’s version of events following the photographs being made.
6.
     Lesley is alone in the photographs. Topping asked Hindley if there were other photographs – featuring her or Brady or both of them with the little girl – but Hindley insisted there were none.
7.
     Joe Chapman,
Out of the Frying Pan
(London: Chipmunka Publishing, 2009).
8.
     Ibid.
9.
     Robert Verkaik, ‘The Death of Myra Hindley: The Letters’,
The Independent
(16 November 2002).
10.
   Ian Brady,
The Gates of Janus: Serial Killing and its Analysis
(Los Angeles: Feral House, 2001), p. 15.
11.
   Chapman,
Out of the Frying Pan
.
12.
   Goodman,
The Moors Murders
, p. 111.
13.
   Ibid., p. 111.
14.
   Chapman,
Out of the Frying Pan
.
15.
   Ibid.
16.
   Myra Hindley, letter, 3 June 1998. From the David Astor archive, private collection.
17.
   Hindley could not recall what happened to the bloodstained sheet, but Hattersley was a smokeless zone so it could not have been burnt at home. Nonetheless, it wasn’t found with Lesley’s body when she was discovered a year later.
18.
   Anon., ‘Tracker Dogs Join Giant Search for Girl’,
Manchester Evening News
(28 December 1964).
19.
   Anon., ‘Lesley: 100 Police with Dogs in Big Hunt’,
Manchester Evening News
(31 December 1964).
20.
   Anon., ‘Have You Seen 10 Year Old Lesley? Big Search for Lost Girl’,
Gorton & Openshaw Reporter
(1 January 1965).
21.
   Patty Hodges testified at the trial that Myra had taped their conversation, not Ian.
22.
   National Archive, Assizes: Wales and Chester Circuit: Criminal Depositions and Case Papers, ASSI 84/427.
23.
   Jean Ritchie,
Myra Hindley: Inside the Mind of a Murderess
(London: Grafton Books, 1988), p. 67.
24.
   Robert Wilson,
Devil’s Disciples: Moors Murders
(Dorset: Javelin Books, 1986), p. 42.
25.
   David Marchbanks,
The Moor Murders
(London: Leslie Frewin, 1966), p. 24.
26.
   Ibid., p. 24.
27.
   Maureen Hindley, witness statement. See footnote 25, chapter 8.
28.
   Ibid. Hindley later refuted Maureen’s accusation. She told Peter Topping that she and Maureen had discussed the matter years after the trial and that Maureen had told her she must have confused the facts. Topping was unable to verify her claim; Maureen had died five years before.
14
 
1.
     Peter Topping,
Topping: The Autobiography of the Police Chief in the Moors Murders Case
(London: Angus and Robertson, 1989), p. 137.
2.
     Anon., ‘We Had Finished Killing, Says Brady’,
Manchester Evening News
(28 October 2005).
3.
     Ibid.
4.
     Anon., ‘Galway Man Who Turned in the Moors Murderers’,
Ireland on Sunday
(undated).
5.
     Trial transcripts. See footnote 25, chapter 8.
6.
     William Mars-Jones QC, ‘
The Moors Murders
’ address given to the Medico-Legal Society, 9 November 1967.
7.
     Emlyn Williams Collection, Preliminary Notes, Ref: L3/4, National Library of Wales.
8.
     Fred Harrison,
Brady and Hindley: The Genesis of the Moors Murders
(London: Grafton Books, 1987), p. 121.
9.
     Emlyn Williams Collection, Preliminary Notes, Ref: L3/4, National Library of Wales. When Topping asked if she ever suspected Brady was homosexual, Hindley replied that she used to wonder what he did all night with Dave. Otherwise, she felt that when Brady wasn’t with her he was probably with other women. But when Topping questioned Brady himself, Brady admitted with his head bowed that he was bisexual. It was probably men, not women, that he was interested in when he went out alone without her.
10.
   Emlyn Williams Collection, Preliminary Notes, Ref: L3/4, National Library of Wales.
11.
   Patricia Ann Hodges, witness statement. See footnote 25, chapter 8.
12.
   Ann West,
For the Love of Lesley: Moors Murders Remembered by a Victim’s Mother
(London: W.H. Allen & Co., 1989), p. 59.
13.
   Jean Ritchie,
Myra Hindley: Inside the Mind of a Murderess
(London: Grafton Books, 1988), p. 71.
14.
   
Myra: The Making of a Monster
, documentary (Map-TV, 2003).
15.
   Emlyn Williams Collection, Preliminary Notes, Ref: L3/4, National Library of Wales.
16.
   Anon., ‘Galway Man Who Turned in the Moors Murderers’.
17.
   Harrison,
Brady and Hindley
, p. 120.
18.
   The house was demolished in 1981.
19.
   Robert Bottomley, ‘The Babysitter with Blue Hair’,
Manchester Evening News
(18 November 2002).
20.
   John Deane Potter,
The Monsters of the Moors: The Full Account of the Brady–Hindley Case
(New York: Ballantine Books, 1968), p. 280.
21.
   Ibid.
22.
   Ritchie,
Myra Hindley
, p. 74.
23.
   Despite her insistence that she didn’t speak to Hindley or Brady after February 1965, Patty very loosely resumed her friendship with them, as indicated by photographs taken later that year.
24.
   Emlyn Williams Collection, Preliminary Notes, Ref: L3/4, National Library of Wales.
25.
   Ibid.
26.
   Potter,
The Monsters of the Moors
, p. 277.
27.
   
The Reporter
(17 December 1965).
28.
   Ibid.
29.
   Topping,
Topping
, p. 212.
30.
   Harrison,
Brady and Hindley
, p. 125.
31.
   Ian Brady,
The Gates of Janus: Serial Killing and its Analysis
(Los Angeles: Feral House, 2001), p. 154.
BOOK: One of Your Own
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