According to a new BBC documentary, the missing pages of an autobiography written by Moore Katil Ian Brady were thrown away by the peacock murderer Ian Brady, where his last missing victim was buried.
In the final 200 pages of Brady’s manuscript, it has been claimed that 12 -year -old Keith Bennett may have their own account in 1964. He is believed to have been deposited with Brady’s lawyer, but he has not commented.
Bennett’s brother, Allen, has called any missing material to the police to provide, as it may have “important information regarding the discovery of Keith”. He was informed about the discovery by the makers of Moore’s murders – the discovery of justice.
In a separate development, the defense files from the test of Brady and his partner, Myra Hindle, have recently been re -discovered by the writer and the writer presenting the documentary, the Duncan Staff by the journalist and the author. Photos contained within these files have raised new questions about the discovery of victims.
In the 1960s, Brady and Hindle achieved slander as Moore killers because they had buried four of their five young victims on Saddalworth Moore in the north-east of Manchester.
The fierce description of his crimes has since maintained a dark grip on public imagination.
Brady and Hindle were jailed in 1966 to torture and kill three children – Leslie N Downey, 10, John Kilbrid, 12, and Edward Evans, 17. Twenty -one years later, he also confessed to killing Paulin Ready, 16, and Keith Bennett – of which he was a long time suspicious.
Ready’s body was found in 1987 on Sadalworth Moore, but Bennett never found.
Brady died in 2017, at the age of 79. Shortly thereafter, Thiological Alan Keitly published a book about the killer, based on the hours of interview with him at Ashworth Special Hospital.
Citley died in 2023, but her widow, zone, has given documentary-makers access to the wider collection of her late husband. It includes an incomplete copy of a typed manuscript called “Black Light”, written by Brady.
Kitley writes in her own book that Brady told her “black light” that at least 600 pages were long. Shortly before the murder of John Kilbrid, Brady and the second victim of Hindle, suddenly stops on page 394 per their own collection.
The autobiography includes a detailed description, where the killers buried their first victim, Polyn Ride: “We counted back to a rock on the knot to find the site and be able to photograph it on the future date.”
If a similar details have been included for Keith Bennett, it will provide important information about where his body is buried, the new documentary says.
Kyitley wrote in his book that Brady once asked him to give him a “double seal parcel”, which he considered a Solicitor in London to include an autobiography.
The lawyer, Benedict Birnberg, died in 2023. His firm told the BBC that any of the material left with him was now sent to Robin Makin, another Solicitor of Brady in Liverpool.
The BBC approached Makin to comment on whether he was in the autobiography, but he did not reply.
The lawyer of the Bennett family asked the documentary-makers to tell the police about “black light”.
The Greater Manchester Police initially said that she wanted to see a large amount of material collected for the program, but then suddenly her mind changed.
In a statement, it told the BBC: “We will consider and reply carefully, in time and professional, for any reliable evidence shared with us that can lead us to find the Keith.”
Photographic clue?
Several original defense cases papers of Brady and Hindle tests, which were now conducted by documentary-maker Duncan Staff and his team, have not been made public earlier.
Files kept by one of the defense lawyers for decades include the interview log, notes written by Hindle during the police interview, and photographs taken by Braddy on Saddalworth Moore.
During the preliminary police investigation, it was believed that the photographs included clues – and Hindle confirmed in an interview with employees in the 1990s that Brady had taken him to recall where the bodies were buried.
In a shot, the Hindle is seen crawling on a rock, raising its dog, known as a hallin brown nall. It was later discovered as an accurate place where John Kilbrid was buried. The bodies of Leslie N Downey and, much later, Polyn Ride were also found nearby.
In the case of Keith Bennett, Hindle and Brady later claimed that he was murdered and buried in a bright brake in a mile or ahead, an area where Brady also took photographs. But nothing was found in search of a police there.
According to forensic archaeologist Prof. John Hunter, the importance of some other photos from Hallin Brown Nall is “disturbed”.
In one, the Hindle stands on the rocks, once and holding his dog. His posture completely, and perhaps intentionally, obscure a gas pipeline marker behind him.
The presence of the marker has surfaced in a police photo, which was found in defense files, which was taken at the same place.
According to Professor Hunter, these pictures can be important, as there is no clear relationship for any known buried sites.
Jyof Nupur, a former police officer working on the case in the 1980s, says he was told that, during the original investigation, it was “thought” [Bennett] The pipeline could be dealt within the gap “.
He says that this possibility was not ascertained because digging the pipeline was considered “very expensive”.
Nupafar says there was a decision “taken at some level within [police] Service or Home Office “Hindle and Brady were once convicted of three out of five murders to stop searching for missing bodies.
“I don’t want to criticize former colleagues a lot,” they say, “but it’s all very good and good if it is not your children who are missing.”
For families, employees say, lack of action has left them with “constant permanent pain”.
“They could raise the money, they could do something,” the niece, Jackie, documentary of Polyn Ride. “There was no need to stop them from searching.”
An officer is said to have been so upset with the decision to shut down the hunting for the bodies that he returned to make unauthorized discovery of the area with Snifer dogs.
“I can see why [the police] Thought, ‘This is really difficult, we are going to let it go’, “Tell the employees in the documentary.” But do I think this was the right decision? Well, deep, no, not me. ,
Greater Manchester Police say it is committed to finding answers to Bennetes: “Keith’s family is central for any action in this case and our views remain with them.”