Yorkshire Post

Police issue apology for failings in ‘Babes in Woods’ murder case

- Grace Hammond NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

A POLICE force has apologised for failings in its initial investigat­ions into the 1986 Babes in the Wood murders of two nine-year-old girls and the wrongful arrest of one of their fathers.

Nicola Fellows and Karen Hadaway were sexually assaulted and strangled in woodland in Brighton, East Sussex, by paedophile Russell Bishop. Chief Constable of Sussex Police Jo Shiner said there were failings in the original investigat­ion into their deaths in 1986, and that Nicola’s father Barrie should not have been arrested as part of a connected investigat­ion in 2009. Bishop was acquitted at the end of his first trial in December 1987 due to weaknesses in the case presented by police and prosecutor­s, and lies told by his exgirlfrie­nd, who was later jailed for perjury.

After his acquittal he was left free to kidnap, molest and throttle a seven-year-old girl, leaving her for dead at Devil’s Dyke in February 1990.

Nicola and Karen’s families battled for more than 30 years to finally see Bishop jailed in 2018 after a retrial based on fresh forensic evidence as part of a prosecutio­n made possible under reformed double jeopardy laws.

During his second trial, Bishop tried to cast suspicion on Nicola’s devastated father Barrie.

Mr Fellows was also arrested by Sussex Police on suspicion of sharing indecent images in 2009, but the force confirmed on Wednesday that there was no evidence he had done anything wrong. The officers who arrested him were not aware that the allegation­s had already been investigat­ed and dismissed in 1988.

The families issued a statement through Sussex Police following the apology to say: “This two-fold apology from Sussex Police is very much welcomed by both our families. It will help with our reconcilia­tion of aspects that we had never fully understood, things that we always suspected but had never been addressed.

“There are still more answers to be sought in relation to the 1987 failures, but the part that Sussex Police had to play in the initial miscarriag­es of justice has now been answered and we appreciate the open and authentic way our apologies have been delivered. We are particular­ly relieved that Nicola’s father, Barrie Fellows, has also been fully vindicated of any wrongdoing. Barrie was made a public scapegoat whilst his life and that of his family, was already in pieces.”

Ms Shiner, who led an internal review following complaints made by the families in the wake of Bishop’s 2018 conviction, has met with them to apologise. Details of the review have not been released at their request, according to Sussex Police.

She said: “The murders of Karen and Nicola were horrific crimes which rocked the local community, and still resonate today.

“The impact on the community, however, pales into insignific­ance against the lifelong impact these crimes had on Karen and Nicola’s parents and families. Not only did they have to cope with the loss of two children in the worst possible circumstan­ces; following Bishop’s acquittal in 1987, they campaigned tirelessly to ensure that their children received some justice.”

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