Yorkshire Post

Call him by his name, says son of Sutcliffe’s first victim

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THE son of Peter Sutcliffe’s first murder victim has pleaded for all references to him as the Yorkshire Ripper to stop.

Richard McCann said Sutcliffe’s death last Friday brought him a sense of calm but this was shattered by the constant references to his pseudonym.

Mr McCann – whose mother, Wilma, was murdered by Sutcliffe in Leeds in 1975 – said he also thinks the labelling of serial killers and other criminals encourages copycats. He said “I’m pleading, can we no longer use this term? Think about the families and what it does for those who were affected.”

In a video appeal, Mr McCann said: “I’m not going to use that word but it begins with R, the Yorkshire R.”

He said: “Please bear in mind the word, it serves to retraumati­se us families left behind because it’s a descriptio­n of how our loved ones, how they were maimed, how their injuries were inflicted.”

And he added: “In memory of those women that died, please no longer call him that name, the name we’ve had to endure for most of our lives.”

Mr McCann said he believed other notorious killers who idolised Sutcliffe were influenced by his pseudonym.

He gave the example of Stephen Griffiths, who was jailed for life in 2010 for killing three women in Bradford and entered his name as the Crossbow Cannibal when he appeared in court, copying a newspaper headline.

Mr McCann was only five when his mother was killed by Sutcliffe – the first of the 13 women he admitted murdering.

West Yorkshire Chief Constable John Robins issued a “heartfelt” apology last Friday to the families of Sutcliffe’s victimssay­ing the language used by senior officers at the time caused families “additional distress and anxiety”.

Sutcliffe died aged 74 after reportedly refusing treatment for coronaviru­s. His killing spree across Yorkshire and Manchester from 1975 to 1980 terrified northern England and prompted a huge manhunt and a botched police inquiry.

Sutcliffe had been serving a whole life term for the murders of 13 women and the attempted murder of seven more.

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