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Man, 92, who raped and murdered Louisa Dunne in Bristol nearly 60 years ago, jailed for life
Man, 92, who raped and murdered Louisa Dunne in Bristol nearly 60 years ago, jailed for life

Sky News

timea day ago

  • Sky News

Man, 92, who raped and murdered Louisa Dunne in Bristol nearly 60 years ago, jailed for life

A 92-year-old man has been sentenced to life with a minimum term of 20 years in prison for the rape and murder of an elderly widow nearly 60 years ago. Ryland Headley was found guilty on Monday of killing 75-year-old Louisa Dunne at her Bristol home in June 1967, in what is thought to be the UK's longest cold case to reach trial, and was told by the judge he "will die in prison". The mother-of-two's body was found by neighbours after Headley, then a 34-year-old railway worker, forced his way inside the terraced house in the Easton area of the city before attacking her. 3:09 Police found traces of semen and a palm print on one of the rear windows inside the house - but it was about 20 years before DNA testing. The case remained unsolved for more than 50 years until Avon and Somerset detectives sent off items from the original investigation and found a DNA match to Headley. He had moved to Suffolk after the murder and served a prison sentence for raping two elderly women in 1977. Prosecutors said the convictions showed he had a "tendency" to break into people's homes at night and, in some cases, "target an elderly woman living alone, to have sex with her despite her attempts to fend him off, and to threaten violence". Headley, from Ipswich, who did not give evidence, denied raping and murdering Ms Dunne, but was found guilty of both charges after a trial at Bristol Crown Court. Detectives said forces across the country are investigating whether Headley could be linked to other unsolved crimes. Mrs Dunne's granddaughter, Mary Dainton, who was 20 when her relative was killed, told the court that her murder "had a big impact on my mother, my aunt and her family. "I don't think my mother ever recovered from it. The anxiety caused by her mother's brutal rape and murder clouded the rest of her life. "The fact the offender wasn't caught caused my mother to become and remain very ill. "When people found out about the murder, they withdrew from us. In my experience, there is a stigma attached to rape and murder." Finding out her grandmother's killer had been caught after almost six decades "turned my life upside down," she said. "I feel sad and very tired, which has affected the relationships I have with those close to me. I didn't expect to deal with something of such emotional significance at this stage of my life. "It saddens me deeply that all the people who knew and loved Louisa are not here to see that justice has been done." After her statement, Mr Justice Sweeting told Mrs Dainton: "It is not easy to talk about matters like this in public. "Thank you very much for doing it in such a clear and dignified way." The judge told Headley his crimes showed "a complete disregard for human life and dignity. "Mrs Dunne was vulnerable, she was a small elderly woman living alone. You treated her as a means to an end. "The violation of her home, her body and ultimately her life was a pitiless and cruel act by a depraved man. "She must have experienced considerable pain and fear before her death," he said. Sentencing Headley, the judge told him: "You will never be released, you will die in prison." Detective Inspector Dave Marchant, of Avon and Somerset Police, said Headley was "finally facing justice for the horrific crimes he committed against Louisa in 1967. "The impact of this crime has cast a long shadow over the city and in particular Louisa's family, who have had to deal with the sadness and trauma ever since." The officer praised Ms Dainton's "resilience and courage" during what he called a "unique" case and thanked investigators from his own force, as well as South West Forensics, detectives from Suffolk Constabulary, the National Crime Agency and the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS). Charlotte Ream, of the CPS, described Headley's crimes as "appalling". She said Louisa Dunne "died in a horrifying attack carried out in the place where she should have felt safest - her own home. "Mrs Dunne's death continues to have a traumatic impact on her family members: the passage of time has not lessened their pain. "For 58 years, this appalling crime went unsolved and Ryland Headley, the man we now know is responsible, avoided justice." Jeremy Benson KC, defending Headley, offered no personal mitigation on behalf of the defendant.

Glastonbury gobshites or the Southport hate-tweeter – throw the book at one, you must throw it at them all
Glastonbury gobshites or the Southport hate-tweeter – throw the book at one, you must throw it at them all

The Guardian

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

Glastonbury gobshites or the Southport hate-tweeter – throw the book at one, you must throw it at them all

News that Avon and Somerset police have launched criminal investigations into the bands Bob Vylan and Kneecap for their Glastonbury sets reminds me that we have a severe prisons crisis in the UK, and that we need to build more of them. Perhaps we should build a special one for all the people we keep criminally investigating for saying, rather than doing, bad things. I'm pretty sure they have a few of those types of prisons in other countries. Although, it must be said that those are normally countries run by people we consider bad. Confusing! But look, maybe we're becoming the sort of country where we imprison lots of people for saying awful things. I don't … love this look for us, I have to say. But no doubt someone has thought it all through very, very carefully. If so, they could put the two nasty idiots from Bob Vylan in it. Obviously all of Kneecap, too. Maybe those guys would have their cell on the same landing as Lucy Connolly, the woman who was imprisoned for two years and seven months for a repulsive tweet in the wake of the Southport child killings. They could be joined by whoever at the BBC didn't pull the Glastonbury live stream on Saturday after Bob Vylan started their repulsive chants, given that Conservative frontbencher Chris Philp is now officially calling for the corporation to be 'urgently' investigated. I see Chris is also calling for the BBC to be prosecuted – so I guess he's already done the police investigation for them, and all at the same time as absolutely aceing his brief as shadow home secretary for where-are-they-now political outfit the Conservative party. In terms of Spewing Hate Into The Nation's Living RoomsTM, it must be said that the footage of Bob Vylan's offending set is still embedded into multiple stories on the MailOnline website, all containing an exhortation to 'watch the full video'. Should whoever is leaving the videos up on MailOnline also be investigated and prosecuted? Perhaps Chris Philp could adjudicate. Either way, let's keep a cell or five for them in the special new prison. After all, why on earth shouldn't we imprison a few journalists, too? In for a penny, and so on. Needless to say, embattled prime minister Keir Starmer has made time to have plenty of official views not just on the behaviour of the two bands, but on any future decisions to book them. If all you have is a hammer, everything is a nail – and if your big job before politics was being director of public prosecutions, then I'm sure everything looks like a prosecutable offence. It certainly did to the prime minister after last summer's riots in the wake of the Southport murders, when Starmer seemed to relish the response happening the best way he knew how: by rushing it through the courts. Connolly was one of those prosecuted, in her case for a manifestly revolting and racist but also clearly tossed-off post responding to a false rumour the killer was an asylum seeker, saying people could set fire to asylum hotels 'for all I care'. She admitted inciting racial hatred in court, but has since become something of a cause celebre for the fact that she is a mother with an otherwise clean record (and one who had lost a young child herself), and that she has got a harsher sentence for this tweet that she later deleted than some convicted rapists. I wrote in the immediate wake of the riots that it was clear that something big had happened in the UK – though it wasn't yet precisely clear what. Unfortunately, the prime minister seemed to think it was fairly simple. 'Let me also say to large social media companies and those who run them,' he said, albeit to some reporters instead, 'violent disorder clearly whipped up online: that is also a crime. It's happening on your premises, and the law must be upheld everywhere.' Sadiq Khan seemed to think it was something to do with the Online Safety Act not being 'fit for purpose'. In more successful hot takes, it was also the moment that Elon Musk test-drove his epithet 'two-tier Keir'. That one has stuck, and it will stick even harder if, for example, sublebrity band Bob Vylan don't get the book thrown at them in the same way that no-mark Lucy Connolly did. To be clear, I don't think any of the aforementioned lot ought to be in prison, however vile and unacceptable their behaviour was. But if you don't deal with them in pretty much the same way, then people are going to be talking far more loudly about two-tier justice again. This type of talk has already reached all the way into the Oval Office where, in February, vice-president JD Vance suggested to Starmer that the UK had a free speech problem. You might have seen that Bob Vylan have just promptly had their US visas revoked for what the deputy secretary of state called 'their hateful tirade'. But we can't expect consistency from the Trump administration. What we expect of our own country is infinitely more important. I used to think masses of legislation around what horrible things people could or couldn't say was a niche-application civilisational advance, but I have changed my view, and now fear we are sleepwalking towards a society where half the people will think certain incarcerated miscreants are political prisoners, and the other half will think a different bunch of incarcerated miscreants are political prisoners. I am very much for living in a country where we don't think we have political prisoners at all. Getting there isn't simple – but stopping travelling in the wrong direction would be a good start. Marina Hyde is a Guardian columnist

Ryland Headley: Man, 92, who raped and murdered Louisa Dunne in Bristol nearly 60 years ago, jailed for life
Ryland Headley: Man, 92, who raped and murdered Louisa Dunne in Bristol nearly 60 years ago, jailed for life

Sky News

timea day ago

  • Sky News

Ryland Headley: Man, 92, who raped and murdered Louisa Dunne in Bristol nearly 60 years ago, jailed for life

A 92-year-old man has been sentenced to life with a minimum term of 20 years in prison for the rape and murder of an elderly widow nearly 60 years ago. Ryland Headley was found guilty on Monday of killing 75-year-old Louisa Dunne at her Bristol home in June 1967, in what is thought to be the UK's longest cold case to reach trial. The mother-of-two's body was found by neighbours after Headley, then a 34-year-old railway worker, forced his way inside the terraced house in the Easton area before attacking her. 3:09 Police found traces of semen and a palm print on one of the rear windows inside the house - but it was about 20 years before DNA testing. The case remained unsolved for more than 50 years until Avon and Somerset detectives sent off items from the original investigation and found a DNA match to Headley. He had moved to Suffolk after the murder and served a prison sentence for raping two elderly women in 1977. Prosecutors said the convictions showed he had a "tendency" to break into people's homes at night and, in some cases, "target an elderly woman living alone, to have sex with her despite her attempts to fend him off, and to threaten violence". Headley, from Ipswich, who did not give evidence, denied raping and murdering Ms Dunne, but was found guilty of both charges after a trial at Bristol Crown Court. Detectives said forces across the country are investigating whether Headley could be linked to other unsolved crimes. Mrs Dunne's granddaughter, Mary Dainton, who was 20 when her relative was killed, said in a victim impact statement that her murder "had a big impact on my mother, my aunt and her family. "I don't think my mother ever recovered from it. The anxiety caused by her mother's brutal rape and murder clouded the rest of her life. "The fact the offender wasn't caught caused my mother to become and remain very ill. "When people found out about the murder, they withdrew from us. In my experience, there is a stigma attached to rape and murder." Finding out her grandmother's killer had been caught after almost six decades "turned my life upside down," she said. "I feel sad and very tired, which has affected the relationships I have with those close to me. I didn't expect to deal with something of such emotional significance at this stage of my life. "It saddens me deeply that all the people who knew and loved Louisa are not here to see that justice has been done." After her statement, Mr Justice Sweeting told Mrs Dainton: "It is not easy to talk about matters like this in public. "Thank you very much for doing it in such a clear and dignified way." The judge told Headley his crimes showed "a complete disregard for human life and dignity. "Mrs Dunne was vulnerable, she was a small elderly woman living alone. You treated her as a means to an end. "The violation of her home, her body and ultimately her life was a pitiless and cruel act by a depraved man. "She must have experienced considerable pain and fear before her death," he said. Sentencing Headley to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 20 years, the judge told him: "You will never be released, you will die in prison." Detective Inspector Dave Marchant of Avon and Somerset Police said Headley was "finally facing justice for the horrific crimes he committed against Louisa in 1967. "The impact of this crime has cast a long shadow over the city and in particular Louisa's family, who have had to deal with the sadness and trauma ever since." The officer praised Ms Dainton's "resilience and courage" during what he called a "unique" case and thanked investigators from his own force, as well as South West Forensics, detectives from Suffolk Constabulary, the National Crime Agency and the Crown Prosecution Service. Please refresh the page for the latest version.

BREAKING NEWS Pensioner, 92, who raped and murdered woman in 1967 will die behind bars as he is jailed for 20 years
BREAKING NEWS Pensioner, 92, who raped and murdered woman in 1967 will die behind bars as he is jailed for 20 years

Daily Mail​

timea day ago

  • Daily Mail​

BREAKING NEWS Pensioner, 92, who raped and murdered woman in 1967 will die behind bars as he is jailed for 20 years

A 92-year-old man who raped and murdered an elderly woman 58 years ago has been told he will die in prison after being sentenced to 20 years in prison. In what is thought to be the UK's longest-running cold case ever solved, Ryland Headley was on Monday found guilty of murdering and raping Louisa Dunne. Headley, then aged 34, forced entry into the defenceless mother-of-two's home in Bristol in June 1967 before launching his terrifying onslaught against her. Her body was found by neighbours inside her terraced home in Britannia Road in the Easton area of the city the following day. A woman was heard screaming hours before Mrs Dunne, who had been twice widowed and lived alone, was discovered dead. However, the alarm was not raised. Mrs Dunne, who was using the front room as a bedroom, was found lying on a pile of old clothes and police discovered no evidence of any violent struggle in the house. The case remained unsolved for over 50 years until Avon and Somerset detectives sent off items from the original investigation for DNA testing. Those results provided a DNA match to Headley, who since the murder had moved to Suffolk, and had served a prison sentence for brutally raping two elderly women. Dramatic footage, shown to jurors, revealed the moment cops busted the startled sex predator at his home before arresting him last year. Headley, of Ipswich, had denied rape and murder but was found guilty of both charges by the jury at Bristol Crown Court. The defendant, now aged 92, did not give evidence during the trial. Detective Inspector Dave Marchant, of Avon and Somerset Police said Headley's conviction showed no case was 'too old or too cold' to be investigated. He said: 'We're unwavering in our determination to bring offenders to justice. 'For me, there is no cold case which is too old, too cold for us to complete a further review and investigation on. 'If there are lines of inquiry and evidence, we will pursue them relentlessly. We will do everything in our power to identify offenders to bring them to justice. 'My message to them is watch your back, we're coming after you.' Forces across the country are now examining whether Headley could be linked to other unsolved crimes. 'Ryland Headley has now been convicted of three rapes of elderly women within their own addresses, and in the case of Louisa Dunne, her murder as well,' DI Marchant said. 'In 1978, when he was sentenced, he admitted to a number of other burglary offences. 'I think there's every possibility that there are other offences out there - over the 60s, 70s, however long a time period - which Mr Headley could be culpable for. 'We are working with colleagues across the country and other police forces and the National Crime Agency to try to understand and identify those potential further offences, and if possible, can we match them through any forensic techniques etc and if we are able, hopefully then get him before a court to face justice over those matters too.' The court heard Mrs Dunne was a 'local fixture' who was always 'standing on her doorstep, watching the world go by, always wearing her headscarf.' Neighbours found her body when she failed to appear on her doorstep and they noticed a sash window was open. Mrs Dunne had suffered multiple bruising and a major haemorrhage, consistent with having her mouth forcibly covered to stop her breathing. At the time police tried to match thousands of potential suspects to a palm print left on a window. Prosecutors say the case went cold for decades until a DNA breakthrough. Sex predator Headley was identified after a cold case review last year matched his DNA with semen on Mrs Dunne's skirt and pubic hair - while his palm was also a match for a print left on a window. Granddaughter's shock as her relative's killer is finally caught The granddaughter of Louisa Dunne has told of the moment police broke then news they had caught her relative's killer - more than 50 years after she was murdered. Mary Dainton, 78, had 'accepted' her family would never know who murdered Mrs Dunne. However, this all changed last year when detectives announced they had caught Ryland Headley and were charging him with murder. Describing the moment police told her Headley had been arrested, Mrs Dainton said an officer revealed they had come to speak to her about her grandmother. 'I said "Have you caught him?",' she recalled. 'I never thought I'd say anything like that, "have you caught him?" And she said, we have a suspect. So I sat there completely stunned. 'I just thought "This is not real". When it sunk in, finally, there's not a word in the English language to actually encapsulate that. 'I was stunned, I think it is the only word, after all these years.' Opening the case for the prosecution earlier this month Anna Vigars KC told the jury: 'We are talking about the murder of an elderly and vulnerable lady in her own home. 'She was in no state to defend herself. Whether it happened 58 years ago or 58 days ago, the murder of any person, is, of course, a matter of concern to any of the rest of us. 'The fact that time has passed does not make the killing of anyone of us any less significant. 'The police have never given up on solving the case of Mrs Dunne's murder.' To give a sense of Headley's 'depravity', jurors heard the harrowing testimony of two elderly widows raped by the 'animal' in 1977. Headley, then aged 45, had broken into the homes of women aged 84 and 79 at night and raped them having threatened them with violence if they did not comply. Police mounted a massive fingerprinting exercise to try to find the attacker and Headley was arrested after a print found at the second scene matched his. He later pleaded guilty at Ipswitch Crown Court in 1978 for the pair of sex attacks and was jailed for seven years. Speaking about the testimony of the two victims, heard by the jurors sitting in Headley's murder trial, DI Marchant said: 'Hearing the voices of the victims of his 1977 offences, is just incredibly powerful and harrowing. 'I think it gives us an insight into probably what happened within 58 Britannia Road to some degree. 'Mr Headley has offered no evidence for explanation for what happened at that address that night so to hear those women, their accounts being read out in court, I think was very impactful, very impactful. 'It just gave a sense of how depraved and predatory Mr Headley's behaviour is. 'He's now three times convicted of rape, stranger rapes, breaking into elderly women's addresses overnight and subjecting them to just most abhorrent, heinous attacks for his own pleasure.' Anna Vigars KC, prosecuting, read statements the two women had provided after being attacked by Headley. The 84-year-old victim described how she had awoken in the early hours of October 1 1977 to the feeling of strong hands over her face and head. She said: 'I tried to push his hands away. I tried to bite his fingers but I didn't have my teeth in. 'I said 'Please go, haven't you got a mother, surely you wouldn't hurt an old lady of 84?' 'I said 'Don't touch me, I shall scream in a minute'. He said 'If you do, that will be worse for you'. 'I was crying. It hurt me. I said "Please go away and leave me alone". Headley then told the woman to comply, adding: 'If you don't, I will strangle you.' The woman recalled: 'I thought to save my life and get it over quickly, I should just give in. 'I thought he would kill me. I was crying and upset. I said to him "Now clear off". 'He said "Have you got any money?". I said "No, I am an OAP, I think you ought to give me some". 'I heard him go downstairs and heard the front door shut with a bang.' Timeline of key events in Mrs Dunne's murder Ryland Headley, now aged 92, has been found guilty of the rape and murder of Louisa Dunne in 1967. It is thought to be the UK's longest-running cold case ever to be solved. Here is a timeline of key events: - May 16, 1892: Louisa Dunne was born. Queen Victoria was still on the throne. - June 27, 1967: Mrs Dunne was murdered by Headley, 34, who had broken into her home overnight. She had been twice widowed and was living on her own in Britannia Road, Easton. - June 28: Her body was discovered by neighbours that morning who had become concerned for her welfare having not seen her, as she would regularly be stood on her doorstep. Investigators retained Mrs Dunne's clothing and other samples from her body for further examination. They also recovered a palm print from a window, which the intruder is believed to have used to gain entry to her home. The palm print was found on the upstairs window. He gained entry from the lower floor window. - 1971: Headley and his family relocate to St Pancras, London. - 1972: Headley and his family then move to Ipswich, Suffolk - Between 1973 and 1978: Headley carried out a series of 10 overnight burglaries, which included him stealing cash, cigarettes, gin and food. - October 1, 1977: Aged 45, Headley broke into the home of an 84-year-old widow in Suffolk and raped her. - October 27: Headley carried out an almost identical attack when he raped a 79-year-old woman after breaking into her home. - December 12: Headley is arrested in London on suspicion of the two rapes after being identified following mass fingerprinting in Ipswich. - May 1978: At Ipswich Crown Court Headley admits two counts of rape and also asks for the burglary offences to be taken into account. He is later jailed for life but this sentence was reduced on appeal to seven years' imprisonment. - Around 1980: Headley is released from prison. - 2009: Avon and Somerset Police carried out a limited review of the murder investigation. - 2012: Headley is arrested on suspicion for an unrelated incident. His DNA and fingerprints are taken. No further action is taken about the allegation. - 2014: Detectives did further work on the Dunne case but did not find any substantial leads to follow up. - 2023: Police examined the files of evidence collected in 1967, which had been stored in the major crime archives at headquarters. - May 2024: Items from the original investigation - Mrs Dunne's scarf and skirt, as well as other retained samples - were sent off for scientific investigation. - September 4: Forensic scientist Andrew Parry finds sperm on Mrs Dunne's skirt matches Headley's DNA, with it one billion times more likely to be his than another person. - November 19: Headley is arrested at his home in Suffolk. Fingerprint expert Elizabeth Hobbs carries out the first analysis of the palm print from Mrs Dunne's window and positively identifies it as belong to Headley. - November 20: Headley appears before Bristol Magistrates' Court accused of Mrs Dunne's rape and murder. A blind comparison analysis of Ms Hobbs's findings is completed by her colleague Neville Williams. He concludes Headley is not the owner of the palm print. He later carries out a further examination and concludes the palm print is Headley's. - November 21: Forensic identification manager Donna Honeybun carried out an open final verification of the palm print and concluded it was Headley's. - June 16 2025: Headley goes on trial at Bristol Crown Court accused of the rape and murder of Mrs Dunne. - June 30: He is convicted of both offences and faces life imprisonment. She went downstairs and called for police, noting that curtains were blowing in the bedroom from where Headley had opened a window. The 79-year-old woman told how she had got ready for bed, placing her false teeth in a cup in the kitchen, and secured her home - checking all windows and doors were locked shut. She said: 'The next thing I knew, I was woken up by my main bedroom light flashing on. I saw someone move on the floor. I realised it was a man. He was crawling towards the door. 'I was petrified. I shouted out 'Who are you, what are you doing there?'. I saw him jump up and switch the light off. It was so dark.' Headley then went over to the woman and told her to feel an object, telling her it was a gun. He then told her: 'If you do what I tell you, you will be all right. If you don't, I will kill you. If you scream or make a noise, I will kill you.' The woman described how she tried to fight Headley off by scratching his face and pulling at his watch before reaching for a lamp on her bedside table. Headley then used her sheet to tie her wrists. She told him: 'Leave me alone, would you want anybody to do this to your mother or sister?" Headley replied: 'I will put you on the floor in a minute if you don't do what I say, I will put a pillow over your face and smother you." Trevor Mason, who was a Special Branch detective involved in the 1977 investigation into Headley's double-rape described the monster as 'worse than an animal'. 'What those poor women suffered is just horrendous, absolutely horrendous,' Mr Mason told Channel 4 News. 'They were lucky, I suppose, that they weren't killed, but they weren't lucky at all, were they? 'They were obviously frail, they didn't stand a chance. Absolutely terrible. 'That's the man we were after, and thank goodness we found him.' The granddaughter of Mrs Dunne, who attended every day of Headley's murder trial, feared the killer would never be brought to justice. Mary Dainton, 78, told how she 'accepted' the man who raped and murdered her grandmother would never been found. In an interview released following Headley's conviction on Monday, Mrs Dainton said she was still 'stunned' he had been caught. 'I accepted that some murders just never get solved and some people have to live with that emptiness and sadness,' she said. 'The family sort of fell to pieces after the murder. We weren't a close family in the first place but what there was of the family fell to pieces. I didn't realise that was happening at the time but I do now.' She added: 'I never thought it would be solved. I thought he would never be caught. I never believed they would be able to trace him.' Describing the moment police told her Headley had been arrested, Mrs Dainton said an officer revealed they had come to speak to her about her grandmother. 'I said "Have you caught him?"," she recalled. 'I never thought I'd say anything like that, 'have you caught him?' And she said, we have a suspect. So I sat there completely stunned. 'I just thought 'This is not real'. When it sunk in, finally, there's not a word in the English language to actually encapsulate that. 'I was stunned, I think it is the only word, after all these years.' The family had not been informed that a cold case team had begun examining the case in 2023, nor that they had sent Mrs Dunne's blue skirt to a forensic laboratory the following year. Mrs Dainton is the daughter of Mrs Dunne's daughter Edna. Her aunt was Mrs Dunne's other daughter, Iris. They were the children of Mrs Dunne and her then-husband Teddy Parker - a leading figure in the early Labour party. He died and Mrs Dunne later married John Dunne, a night watchman in Bristol. Mr Dunne then died in the early 1960s, leaving Mrs Dunne a widow for the second time and living alone in her home in Britannia Road in Easton. She struggled with alcoholism and became estranged from her family, with Mrs Dainton remembering meeting her only once as a teenager. 'I remember my grandmother being very keen to be friendly with me and to make some kind of contact,' Mrs Dainton said. 'She held my hand very, very tightly and she frightened me. We left quite quickly after that.' Speaking outside Bristol Crown Court, Mrs Dainton, said: 'The death of my grandmother has had a far-reaching impact throughout my family. 'I was just 20-years-old when my grandmother died and I'm now almost the same age as she was when she was killed. 'I only have one memory of meeting my grandmother due to family circumstances. I was 14 at the time and visited her in hospital. 'My mother told me that Louisa's house in Britannia Road was a place of social and political activity. My grandfather, Edwin Parker, was a member of the early Labour Party and he loved my grandmother dearly. Sadly, he died in 1945 and the social and political elements of my grandmother's life went with him. 'Louisa's brutal death had a big impact on my mother and her wider family. I don't think my mother ever recovered from it. The anxiety clouded the rest of her life. 'When people found out about the murder, including friends, they withdrew - there is a stigma attached to rape and murder in my experience, so I have rarely talked to anyone about this until now. 'Since Ryland Headley was charged, I've struggled emotionally in ways I did not anticipate, and it falls to me to speak for people who are no longer here. It saddens me deeply that all the people who knew and loved Louisa are not here to see that justice is being done.' Charlotte Ream, of the Crown Prosecution Service, said Headley had avoided justice for 58 years. 'Louisa Dunne died in a horrifying attack carried out in the place where she should have felt safest - her own home,' she said. 'Mrs Dunne's death continues to have a traumatic impact on her family members: the passage of time has not lessened their pain. 'For 58 years, this appalling crime went unsolved and Ryland Headley, the man we now know is responsible, avoided justice. 'The hard work of the Avon and Somerset Police review team and the South West Crown Prosecution Service complex casework unit has resulted in justice being served, and Ryland Headley faces the prospect of spending the rest of his life in prison. 'This verdict is a demonstration of the commitment of the CPS, and our partners in the police, to relentlessly pursue justice for the victims of crime, no matter how many years - or decades - have passed.' Andrew Murphy, from Britain's own 'FBI' - the National Crime Agency (NCA), said the organisation's Major Crime Investigative Support assisted Avon and Somerset Police with the investigation. 'The unit provides specialist skills, niche capabilities and expertise to frontline officers investigating complex and serious crimes across the country,' he said. 'In this case, we provided behavioural investigative advice, interview and family liaison guidance, and support from our serious crime analysis section.' The NCA added it is continuing to work with police to identify whether Headley had committed any other offences. 'Our officers continue to work with colleagues from Avon and Somerset Police to identify other potential offences linked to this individual,' a spokeswoman said.

Man, 92, who raped and murdered woman nearly 60 years ago jailed
Man, 92, who raped and murdered woman nearly 60 years ago jailed

Sky News

timea day ago

  • Sky News

Man, 92, who raped and murdered woman nearly 60 years ago jailed

A 92-year-old man has been sentenced to life with a minimum term of 20 years in prison for the rape and murder of an elderly widow nearly 60 years ago. Ryland Headley was found guilty on Monday of killing 75-year-old Louisa Dunne at her Bristol home in June 1967, in what is thought to be the UK's longest cold case to reach trial. The mother-of-two's body was found by neighbours after Headley, then a 34-year-old railway worker, forced his way inside the terraced house in the Easton area before attacking her. 3:09 Police found traces of semen and a palm print on one of the rear windows inside the house - but it was about 20 years before DNA testing. The case remained unsolved for more than 50 years until Avon and Somerset detectives sent off items from the original investigation and found a DNA match to Headley. He had moved to Suffolk after the murder and served a prison sentence for raping two elderly women in 1977. Prosecutors said the convictions showed he had a "tendency" to break into people's homes at night and, in some cases, "target an elderly woman living alone, to have sex with her despite her attempts to fend him off, and to threaten violence". Headley, from Ipswich, who did not give evidence, denied raping and murdering Ms Dunne, but was found guilty of both charges after a trial at Bristol Crown Court. Detectives said forces across the country are investigating whether Headley could be linked to other unsolved crimes. Please refresh the page for the latest version.

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