Daily Record

Brady confessed to me: Of course I’ve killed many more

Journalist became his confidant to get him to reveal the truth

- BY FRED HARRISON FORMER CHIEF REPORTER FOR OUR SISTER PAPER THE SUNDAY PEOPLE

IT WAS the scoop of a lifetime, but Ian Brady had his price.

Meeting the Moors Murderer face-to-face in 1985 was the closest anyone could get to sparring with the Devil.

I knew it would be a drawn-out mind game the day I walked into top security Gartree Prison in Leicesters­hire.

Prisoners’ rights campaigner Lord Longford had opened the door to Brady’s cell for me by introducin­g us.

He believed that Myra Hindley was an innocent victim of evil Brady and he wanted her to be released on parole.

Little did Longford realise that introducin­g me to Brady would be the start of my campaign to prove that Hindley was a willing accomplice in a series of brutal child killings. And that she should never walk free again.

But to get the evidence, I had to joust with the psychopath who had created a killing cult.

To get Brady’s admission that more children were buried on Saddlewort­h Moor, I would have to befriend a man who stole children from the streets in broad daylight and tortured them.

I wanted to know about the fate of 12-year-old Keith Bennett and 16-year-old Pauline Reade but Brady made it clear that there were more victims.

“People don’t know the real story,” he said. “Of course there were many more deaths.”

I sat through eight meetings – a total of 16 hours – as I wrestled with Brady’s tortured mind. We had to meet in private so the first meetings were in the dentist’s surgery. I sat in the patient’s chair. Brady would squat on a stool.

Did Brady and Hindley kidnap and kill Keith and Pauline? We skirted the painful facts while Brady slowly disclosed the price he wanted me to pay for his cooperatio­n. Revenge.

He wanted Longford’s campaign to fail. Hindley, once she had made new friends in Holloway Prison, had abandoned him.

They were no longer lovers sharing sinful secrets in the coded messages they had swapped in the early years of incarcerat­ion. Now he wanted her to die in prison. That meant he had to implicate Hindley in the murders.

Brady was a psychopath who had not received psychiatri­c treatment. The five stone he had lost in weight reflected his haunted state of mind. He was kept under control with doses of mind-numbing tablets. That made conversati­on difficult. At times, his words came out as high-pitched whispers. I had to crane my face close to his to make out what he was saying.

Slowly, the truth emerged. Brady struggled as he leaked the painful facts, dredging up the words which he had suppressed for two decades. Of how he and Hindley had terrorised the people of Manchester as they lured children away.

He comforted himself by holding a hot water bottle to his stomach. The breakthrou­gh came at the sixth meeting. By now, we had swapped the dentist’s surgery for Cell 4, in which Brady expected to spend the rest of his life.

Tears coursed across the stubble and into the hollows of his cheeks. He was trying to describe one of his homicidal attacks.

His eyes were two slits squinting into the dark recesses of his mind. He was peering at a scene so vivid that it was a struggle to expel the words through his pursed lips.

That gaunt figure, silhouette­d against the fast fading autumn light, was a spectacle that haunts me to this day.

I had the evidence I needed. Brady admitted that he had lied in the witness box when he claimed Hindley was not involved in the killings. And two other children had been buried on the moors.

It was time to break the story. The evil deeds that had haunted a nation for two decades would change from a historical crime into a new hunt for graves on Saddlewort­h Moor.

So when I visited Brady for the eighth time, I knew we would never meet again. The Home Office would refuse to let me back into Gartree once my story appeared.

Brady sat in his armchair at the bottom of his bed, holding his hot water bottle to his stomach. After I revealed that I would be publishing his confession, we sat quietly in Cell 4. I passed him a packet of Gauloise, his favourite French cigarettes made with dark tobacco.

He knew he was about to stitch Hindley up and I was about to force the Manchester police to start digging on the moor.

He wanted Hindley to die in jail. That meant implicatin­g her in the murders FRED HARRISON

 ??  ?? Police officers recover the body of first victim, Pauline Reade, centre, in 1987 on Saddlewort­h Moor, where Brady and Hindley earlier took a self-portrait, right
Police officers recover the body of first victim, Pauline Reade, centre, in 1987 on Saddlewort­h Moor, where Brady and Hindley earlier took a self-portrait, right
 ??  ?? TERRIFYING
TERRIFYING
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom