South Wales Evening Post

Inquiry call after Fuller sex attacks

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SEVERAL MPS and a women’s charity have called for a public inquiry into how David Fuller was able to commit sex attacks against at least 78 victims in mortuaries over more than a decade.

Greg Clark, MP for Tunbridge Wells, where Fuller committed many of his mortuary crimes and two murders in 1987, said an investigat­ion into whether national policy is “stringent enough” is “the very least” the Government needs to do to give grieving families closure.

The Centre for Women’s Justice (CWJ), which has been supporting a mother whose daughter’s body was violated by Fuller at a mortuary, has spoken out about “the pain and the fury” of affected families as it joined calls for the inquiry.

Fuller, 67, pleaded guilty on Thursday to murdering Wendy Knell, 25, and Caroline Pierce, 20, in two separate attacks in Tunbridge Wells, Kent.

He had previously admitted to 51 other offences, including 44 charges relating to 78 identified victims in mortuaries where he was working as an electricia­n.

An independen­t review at the trust where Fuller worked is under way, but MPS are

calling for a wider national review about how he was able to carry out the attacks for so long, Mr Clark said.

He said: “It’s beyond the resources and capability of a local NHS trust.

“The questions that are raised include local ones about how this was allowed to happen. But there are also national ones as to whether national policy was good enough, was stringent enough, and whether it could have happened in other hospitals across the country.

“The scale of the inquiry, when you have over 100 victims, and very important evidence that needs to be taken from them and others, the local NHS trust doesn’t have the resources and the administra­tion to mount such an inquiry.

“I think it’s very important for the families. While they will be relieved that Fuller is now in jail and is likely to remain so for the rest of his life, they still need answers to the questions of how it was able to happen to their loved ones. The very least that we need to do to satisfy them is that we can make sure it never happens again and that other families don’t need to go through what they went through.”

Mr Clark said colleagues including Tom Tugendhat, Nus Ghani, Tracey Crouch, Helen Grant, Helen Whately, Laura Trott and Huw Merriman are also demanding a public inquiry.

A spokesman for Boris Johnson said: “We’re not ruling it out, but we need to let the investigat­ions that are already under way take place.

“It’s critical that we investigat­e this case thoroughly to see what lessons can be learned.

“The sickening nature of these crimes is very difficult to comprehend and, while words cannot describe the pain inflicted on these families, the Prime Minister has been profoundly moved by some of the experience­s that have been shared.”

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David Fuller

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