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Moors Murders: Eerie picture of Myra Hindley could be key to discovery of more bodies

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Daily Record

Author Michael Attwell has spent nearly 50 years studying serial killers Myra Hindley and Ian Brady

Pictures of sick killer Myra Hindley posing alone at Staffordshire’s Ramshaw Rocks could be a key clue to further murders. Dubbed the ‘tartan’ photographs, author Michael Attwell has spent nearly 50 years studying serial killers Hindley and Ian Brady.

He says there are striking similarities in the style of these and the notorious images taken on Saddleworth Moor – where remains of three of their child victims were found. Michael, a TV producer, director and author, whose new book The Moors Murders, is out this week, tells The Mirror: “The famous ‘tartan’ photographs show her and Brady at the Ramshaw Rocks in Staffordshire, doing exactly the same sort of thing that we see in the photographs on Saddleworth Moor.

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“They look like markers of some description.”

While there has been no evidence of children being abducted in the area at this time, he believes the photos – which along with those at Saddleworth were taken between August 1964 and October 1965 – could still be hiding a grim secret.

He says of Hindley’s eerie poses: “Those photographs are weird. It would not surprise me if one day it turned out there was something in that.” Sixty years ago this month Brady and Hindley were jailed for the Moors Murders, in which they abducted and killed five children between1963 and 1965.

The bodies of Pauline Reade, 16, John Kilbride, 12, and Lesley Ann Downey, 10, were found buried in shallow graves on Saddleworth Moor. Edward Evans, 17, was found murdered and trussed up in their house, while 12-year-old Keith Bennett’s body has never been recovered.

Hindley was serving a life sentence at Highpoint Prison in 2002 when she died, aged 60, at nearby West Suffolk Hospital in Bury St Edmunds from respiratory failure and bronchial pneumonia. Brady died from terminal lung disease, aged 79, in 2017, at Ashworth High Secure Hospital in Merseyside, where he was also serving life.

While many people believe Brady took Keith’s whereabouts to his grave as a final act of control, Michael disputes this. He thinks Keith’s remains could still be found at a location both killers gave.

He says: “Both Brady and Hindley, who weren’t in contact in prison, gave a location which the police searched, but found nothing. I believe they both thought the information was correct. At that point, Hindley was shopping Brady for everything – she was no longer protecting him. For them to share the same location makes me think it was the truth.”

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Searches of the area yielded nothing and bones found in 2022 by someone researching Keith’s murder turned out to be from an animal. But Michael believes advances in technology and detection methods may, in the future, show traces of Keith’s body at the site.

He says: “Radar imaging has improved to the point that it is now very good at finding physical remnants like rocks that leave impressions in the soil. Finding bodies is much harder because they’re organic and they decay. But I do believe the tech will get there and he may well be found. Either that or there will be an accidental discovery, after a time of erosion. Those are the two best hopes.”

Michael, who commissioned The Moors Murders docuseries in 1999 and produced Myra: The Making of a Monster in 2003, is deeply saddened that Keith’s mother, Winnie Johnson, died, aged 78, in 2012, without finding her son. Michael, who met her, says: “She was the sweetest, loveliest, perfectly ordinary woman in every way. You could just tell her whole life had been ruined.

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“She talked about how she’d started going up onto the Moors, taking flowers for his birthday, Easter and Christmas. She liked going up there and found a certain peace. She said, ‘I feel he is up there somewhere’. She just wanted him to come home and it’s terribly unfair, because in four of the five cases, the bodies were found. She never got that resolution.”

And, in 2025, a lawyer for Keith’s family hoped to gain access to two briefcases belonging to Brady. Held by his solicitor, they were rumoured to contain personal papers providing clues about Keith’s grave.

But Michael believes the subsequent silence means this was bogus. He says: “My strong suspicion is if there was anything in them that was of any use to anybody, no self-respecting solicitor would not have made that stuff available. I suspect the truth is there’s nothing there.

“I think it’s one of those myths that has been built up, like the idea that Brady went to his grave knowing where the body was and not revealing it. I think it’s highly improbable.” Michael’s extensive research of the serial killers has given him a unique insight into their warped minds.

Describing the male-female murder duo as “unheard of” at the time, he says: “It was worst nightmare territory. They photographed the victims, they tape recorded the whole thing, they killed them on the moors in the dead of night and buried them in secret.

“Brady was a psychopath, impervious to other people’s pain and suffering. If you look into serial killers, almost all of them come from highly abnormal, dysfunctional backgrounds. There may be a genetic predisposition but the environment is critical.” Before he met Hindley in 1961, Brady’s childhood had cultivated his dysfunction.

Michael says: “Brady was born in the middle of the depression at a time of extreme poverty to an unmarried waitress. She puts an advert in a shop window, when he’s a few months old, and a family in the Gorbals, Glasgow, takes him in. The environment is violent. He doesn’t know who his parents are. He knows that he doesn’t belong in this family.

“So he becomes this angry little boy, throwing tantrums, banging his head against the wall, screaming and shouting. From about 10, he’s carrying a knife. He starts breaking into people’s houses and becoming a thief. At a very early age he’s living beyond the law and justifies it by saying he’s getting his own back on the world. He starts showing sadistic behaviour towards other children. When he’s 13 he rapes another boy.”

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Infatuated by him, Hindley helps Brady to live out his sadistic fantasies in one of history’s depraved murder sprees. Michael says: “However much she was under his sway and influence, the truth is she must have enjoyed it. It was their little secret.” For now, the location of Keith Bennett’s and whether there were, indeed, further murders, remain unknown.

Only time will tell if the bespectacled boy with the big smile will ever be laid to rest or if the Ramshaw Rocks beauty spot is, indeed, hiding a very ugly secret. Michael says: “You could be searching for five years. It’s like finding a needle in a haystack. “So the mystery of the Moors Murders murders continues and we’ll be talking about it for years to come.”

*The Moors Murders by Michael Attwell will be published on 4th June by HarperCollins (HarperElement, £10.99).

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Iraina Mancini review: Brand new retro is a force to be reckoned with

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Iraina Mancini review: Brand new retro is a force to be reckoned with

Mancini, backed by Adam Chetwood on guitar, Marco Ninni on drums and Ben Simon on bass, showed an easy command of a space filled with a crowd who were, tellingly, 30% mods, 20% skins (or possibly bald mods) and 50% young and cool rock girls. What You Doin’ melded bright pop with garage rock, while one of her standout singles Undo the Blue was a reminder that all the best psychedelic-psych tunes had melancholy laced through them, as if knowing that the love revolution was going to fail somewhere in Altamont.

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Soldier acquitted at York Crown Court of 13 sexual offences

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Soldier acquitted at York Crown Court of 13 sexual offences

The six men and six women at York Crown Court took more than seven and a half hours to reach their verdicts at the end of a two-week trial.

Tobias Sampson, 35, of Harrowby Street, Stafford, was formally discharged. 

He denied seven charges of rape, four of voyeurism and two of sexual assault, alleged to have taken place in York and elsewhere in the country.

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He joined the Army when he was 17 and a half years old.

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Key points after week 16 of Noah Donohoe inquest

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Belfast Live
Key points after week 16 of Noah Donohoe inquest | Belfast Live

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EasyJet plane makes urgent landing after ‘something we shouldn’t have in the hold’

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Daily Record

The flight from Hurghada, Egypt, to Luton made an urgent landing

An EasyJet flight from Egypt to Luton was forced to make an urgent landing after the crew were informed a power bank was charging in luggage. According to reports, passengers onboard were in a state of panic when the captain said: “There’s something we shouldn’t have in the hold.”

The plane was forced to land in Rome at 11.30pm on Tuesday. According to reports, word got round that a woman told a stewardess about her powerbank — and the flight was diverted due to fire risks.

EasyJet told The Sun : “Flight EZY2618 from Hurghada to Luton on May 19 diverted to Rome Fiumicino as the crew were informed a power bank was charging in luggage.

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“The captain then diverted as a precaution in line with safety regulations. Safety is our highest priority.

“We would like to apologise to all passengers for any inconvenience.”

Passengers were put up in hotels or slept in the terminal as the carrier’s next Rome to Luton flight was 2pm on Wednesday, according to reports.

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Canadian Grand Prix 2026: George Russell takes pole for sprint race

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George Russell

George Russell bounced back after a difficult recent run to beat Mercedes team-mate Kimi Antonelli to sprint pole at the Canadian Grand Prix.

The Briton, who is 20 points adrift of the Italian after four races this season, headed Antonelli by 0.068 seconds after being fastest on both runs in final qualifying.

Lando Norris headed an all-McLaren second row, 0.315secs off pole and 0.019secs in front of team-mate Oscar Piastri.

Ferrari and Red Bull completed a two-by-two top eight with Lewis Hamilton ahead of Charles Leclerc and then Max Verstappen in front of Isack Hadjar.

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Russell came to Montreal looking to turn around what he admitted had been a “turbulent” start to the season, in which Antonelli has won three of the four grands prix so far, and he has started the weekend off well.

“It feels great after a tough Miami but I never doubted myself,” said Russell. “I always knew what I could do. This is an amazing circuit, high grip, and feels like you’re driving a proper grand prix car.”

Mercedes have a major upgrade on their car for this race and Russell said it had made a significant difference.

“It’s definitely feeling great,” he said. “The team have done a great job to bring this forward. Pleased to have it on the car and pleased to be back in P1. It’s been a little while but still a big focus for tomorrow.”

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McLaren also brought an upgrade to Montreal, their second in as many races, but while it kept them within range of Mercedes it was not enough to counterbalance the effect of Mercedes on this track, where the world champions have often struggled.

Hamilton was 0.361secs off pole and 0.084secs ahead of Leclerc on a circuit where he shares the record number of wins with Michael Schumacher.

And Verstappen, struggling with a car he said was “jumping” at the rear, was just 0.101secs clear of tea-mate Hadjar.

British rookie, in an upgraded Racing Bulls car, was ninth, ahead of Williams driver Carlos Sainz.

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Pasta with pistachio and ricotta pesto recipe

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Pasta with pistachio and ricotta pesto recipe

Diana Henry is the Telegraph’s much-loved cookery writer. She shares recipes each week, for everything from speedy family dinners to special menus that friends will remember for months. She is also a regular broadcaster on BBC Radio 4, and her journalism and recipe books, including Simple and How to Eat a Peach, are multi-award-winning. A mother of two sons, Diana can satisfy even the fussiest of eaters.   

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Stuffed Greek chicken with cayenne, oregano and orzo recipe

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Stuffed Greek chicken with cayenne, oregano and orzo recipe

Diana Henry is the Telegraph’s much-loved cookery writer. She shares recipes each week, for everything from speedy family dinners to special menus that friends will remember for months. She is also a regular broadcaster on BBC Radio 4, and her journalism and recipe books, including Simple and How to Eat a Peach, are multi-award-winning. A mother of two sons, Diana can satisfy even the fussiest of eaters.   

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Motor Fuel Group report successful start to Starbeck Greggs

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Motor Fuel Group report successful start to Starbeck Greggs

Balloons and banners also added to the spectacle of the opening.

Such was the success of the opening of a new Greggs Bakery at the Motor Fuel Group’s forecourt at Starbeck Morrisons.

MFG is the UK’s largest forecourt retailer and it says it came up with the idea of having a Gregg’s there as there were no food outlets like it in the area. They tend to be in Starbeck High Street.

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Manager Kuru Sellappan told the Press: “It was very busy when we opened the Greggs at 6am. There were 6-7 people queueing for the opening.

“We have been busy all the time. The sausage rolls and the sweets have run out,” he said this afternoon.

The interior of the new Greggs at Morrisons, Plumpton Park, Starbeck (Image: Pic supplied)

The opening comes as the forecourt has also opened a new jet wash.

As previously reported, the opening adds to others nationally from the Motor Fuels Group.

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In December a branch of Greggs opened at the Morrisons service station on the edge of Boroughbridge.

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City of York Council cracks down on blue badge misuse

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City of York Council cracks down on blue badge misuse

Two potential instances of misuse were identified and are now under investigation, the council said.

Cllr Katie Lomas, the council’s executive member for equality and inclusion and with portfolio for fraud, said it is “committed to ensuring that these badges are used legitimately and uphold the rights of the 7,200 York residents who hold blue badges”.

Council and fraud officers carried out the blue badge checks last Thursday (May 14).

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It came during the latest day of action, with 598 blue badges checked since the crackdown started in May 2023 and 17 potential instances of misuse identified in York.

Cllr Lomas said: “Days of action like this benefit disabled motorists by helping to stamp out blue badge fraud and misuse.

“It’s encouraging to see this relatively low level of suspected misuse.

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“It suggests that people parking in the city centre are largely respecting this scheme and that genuine blue badge holders are more likely to be able to find the accessible parking they need.”

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EasyJet plane forced to land after ‘power bank was charging in luggage’

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Wales Online

The airline said they diverted due to the fire risk adding ‘safety is our highest priority’

An EasyJet flight was forced to land when a passenger revealed their power bank was charging in luggage. The aeroplane was heading from Egypt to Luton before diverting to Rome at 11.30pm on Tuesday (May 19).

According to reports, word got round that a woman told a stewardess about her power bank, and the flight was diverted due to fire risks Irish Mirror reports.

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EasyJet told The Sun: “Flight EZY2618 from Hurghada to Luton on May 19 diverted to Rome Fiumicino as the crew were informed a power bank was charging in luggage. The captain then diverted as a precaution in line with safety regulations.

“Safety is our highest priority. We would like to apologise to all passengers for any inconvenience.”

Passengers were put up in hotels or slept in the terminal as the carrier’s next Rome to Luton flight was 2pm on Wednesday, according to reports.

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