FRED DINENAGE - MURDER CASEBOOK: COMP FIRST SSN

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FRED DINENAGE - MURDER CASEBOOK: COMP FIRST SSN

FRED DINENAGE - MURDER CASEBOOK: COMP FIRST SSN

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The Australian crime podcast series Casefile True Crime Podcast has covered the case of Harold Jones. This episode was first broadcast on 31 July 2021. [49] BBC News article pertaining to a 2017 campaign spearheaded by the Abertillery community to restore the children's graves

Upon performing this citizen's arrest on his own son, Phillip Jones stated: "I've got no money; I can't help you this time" before escorting his son to the family home. In 2006, McGreavy was around 56 – not 44 as a slip of the tongue indicates here. At this time, he was in an open prison and had even been allowed out on day release. Fortunately, someone leaked this information to the press, and after he was photographed walking the streets of Liverpool, he was returned to a Category C prison. There followed a battle to keep his identity secret, a battle which he lost and the press – meaning in this case the public – won.a b Dark Valleys: Foul Deeds Among the South Wales Valleys 1845 - 2016 ISBN 978-1-473-86181-7 p. 76.

In 1921, a sentence of "to be detained at His Majesty's pleasure" held a compulsory parole review every five years, although the judge at Jones's trial emphasised that in this instance, a parole hearing would only be held every ten years. [40] GRAHAM YOUNG. (1972b, June 29). Hansard. http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1972/jun/29/graham-younga b c "A Welsh Horror. Two little Girls Murdered; A Boy's Confession". nla.gov.au. 3 November 1921 . Retrieved 8 September 2018.

The Crime & Investigation Network have broadcast an episode focusing on the murders committed by Harold Jones as part of their Murder Casebook series. Presented by Fred Dinenage, this 45-minute episode was first broadcast in May 2011 and features interviews with several Abertillery residents. [47] Dinenage, Fred (21 July 2007). "Fearne and Reggie". BBC Radio 1 (Interview). Interviewed by Fearne Cotton.a b Dark Valleys: Foul Deeds Among the South Wales Valleys 1845 - 2016 ISBN 978-1-473-86181-7 p. 79.

a b "How a Welsh Child Murderer May Have Become one of London's Most Notorious Serial Killers". walesonline.co.uk. 26 April 2018 . Retrieved 21 September 2018. Apart from some interesting conversation with Kerr, the man who came across the bodies, and his apparent dictation from Valerie , mentioning the killer had used a .38, and a interview with Hanratty's brother, stating that he was 100 per cent certain of his innocence in 1961, now he is 200 per cent...[Without enlightening a reason]..very little else happened, apart from going over events portrayed by actors. With Jones's father's consent, the local superintendent, Henry Lewis, and a constable searched Jones's home at 8:30a.m. the following day as Jones himself discreetly exited the family home. [33] Noting the trap door to the attic was bloodstained despite evident attempts to clean it, the constable conducting the search entered the attic where he discovered Little's body outstretched across the rafters. Also discovered in the police search of Jones's home were the bloodstained knife Jones had used to murder Little, a small egg-saucepan filled with a mixture of blood and water beneath the sink over which he had cut the child's throat, a bloodstained plank of wood measuring nineteen inches in length concealed beneath the family boiler, and a bloodstained table close to the entrance to the attic in which Little's body had been concealed. [34] a b c Dark Valleys: Foul Deeds Among the South Wales Valleys 1845 - 2016 ISBN 978-1-473-86181-7 p. 86. The trial of Jones for the murder of Little began at Monmouthshire Assizes on 1 November 1921. He was tried before Mr Justice Bray, with the prosecution contending this murder had been primarily committed due to Jones having enjoyed being "a part of the public eye" due to the attention he had received following his arrest and acquittal of Burnell's murder weeks earlier, [27] adding that he had made evident attempts to conceal evidence of the crime within his home after the murder. [31]Tew, K. (1972, June 22). Storeman gave lecture on poison - detectives. Evening Standard, 6. Retrieved from Newspapers.com. Muriel Drinkwater Murder: Harold Jones Link Ruled Out". BBC News. 1 May 2019 . Retrieved 26 February 2020. a b Dark Valleys: Foul Deeds Among the South Wales Valleys 1845 - 2016 ISBN 978-1-473-86181-7 p. 85.



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