The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Bereaved mother’ s horror as double child-killer set free

- FLORA THOMPSON AND JOSH PAYNE

Double child-killer Colin Pitchfork has walked free from prison after bids to keep him behind bars for longer failed.

Now in his early 60s, Pitchfork was jailed for life after raping and strangling 15-year-olds Lynda Mann and Dawn Ashworth in Leicesters­hire in 1983 and 1986.

He was eventually caught after the world’s first mass screening for DNA – where 5,000 men in three villages were asked to volunteer blood or saliva samples – and admitted two murders, two rapes, two indecent assaults and conspiracy to pervert the course of justice.

Pitchfork became the first man convicted of murder on the basis of DNA evidence in 1988.

His 30-year minimum term was cut by two years in 2009, he was moved to open prison HMP Leyhill in Gloucester­shire three years ago, and he was released yesterday.

Dawn’s mother, Barbara Ashworth, said Pitchfork should have been kept behind bars for life, saying his crimes had reduced her life to an “existence” and adding: “I don’t think he should be breathing the same air as us.”

She said: “I can never put

out of my mind.

“I recoil every day with people talking about their daughters and grandchild­ren. As I say, it’s with you daily, what you’ve had taken and all that she could have achieved.

“I just think it should never have been allowed, he should never be walking the streets again. He should have been locked away for life without parole as far as I’m concerned.

“It’s an existence, it’s not a life.

“Something like this goes to pull the rug from under you and you don’t realise how shattered your life can be when you’ve just had everything taken away.”

Following a hearing in March, the Parole Board ruled that Pitchfork was “suitable for release”, despite this being denied in 2016 and 2018.

In June, Justice Secretary Robert Buckland asked the board, which is independen­t of the government, to re-examine the decision.

But the Parole Board rejected the government challenge against its ruling the following month.

South Leicesters­hire Conservati­ve MP Alberto Costa, who campaigned against the release, said he is “extremely saddened and deeply disappoint­ed” by the news, warning: “In my view, Pitchfork still presents a very real danger to the public.”

Pitchfork is now subject to more than 40 licence conditions, which the Ministry of Justice described as some of the strictest “ever set”.

He will be subject to a curfew, have restrictio­ns on using technology, and face limitation­s on where he can go.

The government plans to overhaul the parole system, with the findings of a review expected later this year. It has also sought to change the law so child killers face life behind bars without parole.

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 ??  ?? INFAMOUS CRIME: Colin Pitchfork, left, raped and murdered 15-year-olds Lynda Mann and Dawn Ashworth, above.
INFAMOUS CRIME: Colin Pitchfork, left, raped and murdered 15-year-olds Lynda Mann and Dawn Ashworth, above.

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