Moors Murders: Mother Winnie Johnson Dies

Gman496

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After fighting "tirelessly" for 48 years to find where her murdered son was buried, Winnie Johnson loses her battle with cancer.


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The mother of Moors murder victim Keith Bennett has died without ever finding where her son was buried.


Winnie Johnson, 78, lost her fight against bowel cancer at a Greater Manchester hospice in the early hours of Saturday.

She had spent the 48 years since her son's death looking for his grave so she could properly lay him to rest.

Her death comes in the same week as the mental health advocate for Moors murderer Ian Brady was arrested for allegedly failing to reveal information about where the boy was buried.

Weeks ago, Mrs Johnson, who was a single mother, made a final plea to Brady to tell her where her son's makeshift grave was.

Mrs Johnson was described as "a much-loved mother, grandmother and great-grandmother" in a statement on her son Alan Bennett's website searchingforkeith.com.

"Winnie fought tirelessly for decades to find Keith and give him a Christian burial," the statement said.

"Although this was not possible during her lifetime we, her family, intend to continue this fight now for her and for Keith.

"We hope that the authorities and the public will support us in this.

"We would like to express our deep gratitude to all the medical staff who cared for Winnie during her illness, and also the public for their good wishes and support over the years.

"We hope that everyone will understand, however, that we would like to grieve for her in private, both at this time and during her funeral."

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Mrs Johnson, in 2010, wanted to giver her son a proper burial


Mrs Johnson's lawyer John Ainley told Sky News: "She certainly was a most courageous lady, never gave up the hope that she would find Keith, and pursued that to the very end.

"She always thought that she would find Keith but without information from Ian Brady, that became more and more difficult."

Asked if her death would change anything, he said: "I think that any information that's passed over is going to be too little too late, sadly, certainly as far as Winnie's concerned, but having said that, if any information that would identify where Keith's buried, was passed to the police and the family, then certainly they would be able to give Keith a proper family burial, and that would give them some closure."

Sky's Mike McCarthy said: "It's a tragedy for Winnie Johnson, it's a tragedy for her family. She was a feisty woman, very, very charming in one way, and very blunt and direct as well.

"She took on Ian Brady in a psychological way, she refused to be cowed by him.

"She refused to be afraid of him in one sense, and she on more than occasion appealed directly to him to give her what she waited 48 years for - and that is the location of her son Keith Bennett's body."

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The child killers buried their victims on Saddleworth Moor


A Greater Manchester Police spokesman said: "Our thoughts are with Winnie Johnson's family at this difficult and sad time."

On Friday, Jackie Powell, 49, was arrested at her home in South Wales on suspicion of preventing the burial of a body.

Ms Powell reportedly told a Channel 4 documentary that Brady gave her a sealed envelope containing a letter to Mrs Johnson, with strict orders it was only to be opened after his death - leading to speculation that it may contain the location of the boy's grave.

Mrs Johnson's lawyer said on Friday that there were no plans to tell her about the possible existence of the letter due to her ill health.

Keith was kidnapped on June 16, 1964, after he left home to visit his grandmother.


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Hindley and Brady were responsible for five children's deaths


He was killed by Brady and accomplice Myra Hindley - who were responsible for the murders of five youngsters in the 1960s.

The pair lured children and teenagers to their deaths, sexually torturing them before burying their bodies on Saddleworth Moor in Greater Manchester.

Pauline Reade, 16, disappeared on her way to a disco on July 12, 1963, and John Kilbride, 12, was snatched in November the same year.

Lesley Ann Downey, 10, was lured away from a funfair on Boxing Day, 1964, and Edward Evans, 17, was killed in October 1965.
 
I saw this earlier and realy felt for that poor woman,i hope brady and hindley burn and they dont wait for them to go to hell to do it
 
i hope brady and hindley burn and they dont wait for them to go to hell to do it


Myra Hindley died in West Suffolk hospital at Bury St Edmunds on Friday 15 November 2002 (while still a prisoner serving her 36th year) and was cremated. So, one down and one to go sinno.


The Moors murderer Myra Hindley died in hospital aged 60 today after suffering respiratory failure, the prison service said.

She was taken to West Suffolk hospital at Bury St Edmunds with a suspected heart attack earlier this month.

The prison service said that Hindley's next of kin had been informed.

"There will now be a coroner's inquest as is routine with a prisoner who dies in custody," a spokesman said.

Hindley, a chain smoker, had experienced ill-health for much of her 36 years behind bars, suffering from angina, suspected strokes and osteoporosis.

It was revealed today that Hindley was gravely ill in West Suffolk hospital, and had the last rites administered to her this afternoon.

Prison sources said Hindley's health deteriorated rapidly in the last 24 hours and that she had serious respiratory problems. Hindley, who had become a devout Catholic, was admitted to the hospital on Tuesday with a chest infection.

Before being re-admitted this week, she had spent several nights at the hospital after a suspected heart-attack at the beginning of the month.

It is understood that Hindley was cared for in a private room well away from other patients with prison staff keeping watch.

Hindley, a chain-smoker, also suffered from angina and osteoporosis.

Her illness came at a time when her prospects of release were growing due to a case which legal commentators expect will strip the home secretary of his power to keep prisoners in jail. The case is due to be heard next month and there was speculation that Hindley could have been freed within months.

The serial killer was serving her 36th year behind bars at nearby Highpoint Prison, Suffolk. Hindley and Ian Brady, 64, were jailed for life in 1966 for the sexual abuse, torture and murder of three youngsters. In 1987 they confessed to two more child killings.

Before an operation for a brain aneurysm two years ago, Hindley was understood to have given orders to her lawyers that she was not to be kept alive artificially if she lapsed into a coma.

She also ordered that none of her organs should be offered for transplant if she died. Instructions were given for a cremation and for her ashes to be scattered at a secret location, it was reported.

Earlier this month it was said that Hindley was being given free nicotine patches, worth £20 a week, on the NHS in an attempt to stop her smoking. She was reportedly taken to hospital for heart tests last month and specialists ordered her to give up the habit.

The court case that could have had a bearing on Hindley relates to the convicted killer, Anthony Anderson, who went to the House of Lords last month. He is appealing because the 15-year minimum term his trial judge said would serve as a minimum was increased to 20 years by the home secretary of the day.

The home secretary, David Blunkett, is expected to lose the case and his powers to set inmates' sentences. If the upcoming ruling goes against Mr Blunkett, a total of 225 inmates who have had their tariffs increased by a politician would be able to have them reviewed.

Around 70 have already served more time than originally recommended by the judiciary and could be freed immediately.

In Hindley's case, in 1982, the then lord chief justice, Lord Lane, advised she should serve no less than 25 years. But subsequent home secretaries fixed her minimum tariff at first 30 years and then "whole life", meaning she is one of 23 prisoners who have been told they will never be released.

If Anderson won his case in December, Hindley was expected to apply to the lord chief justice, Lord Woolf, for a new minimum sentence.

However, Mr Blunkett has vowed to pass a new law to keep high-profile killers in jail - even if Strasbourg rules the current system illegal.

Pauline Read was the first child to suffer the consequences of Brady and Hindley's actions. The 16-year-old vanished on July 12 1963 on her way to a disco near her home in Gorton, Manchester.

It was not until 1987 that her body was found in a shallow grave on Saddleworth Moor after Hindley and Brady's jail-cell confessions.

John Kilbride vanished four months after Pauline - the day after US president John F Kennedy's assassination in the United States. He was lured up on to the moor, sexually assaulted and murdered.

A photograph taken by Brady of Hindley posing on the edge of John's grave holding her pet dog would later lead police to the young boy's resting place.

The body of the murderers' next victim, 12-year-old Keith Bennett, has never been discovered. He vanished after leaving his home in Chorlton-on-Medlock in Manchester on June 16 1964.

Lesley Ann Downey was murdered on Boxing Day, 1964. The 10-year-old - the youngest victim of the pair - was enticed from a fairground to the house Hindley shared with her grandmother in Hattersley.

In Hindley's bedroom, she was stripped, sexually abused and tortured as they forced her to pose for pornographic photographs. The harrowing attack was recorded on audio tape by Hindley. The tape lasted 16 minutes 21 seconds.
 
Her illness came at a time when her prospects of release were growing due to a case which legal commentators expect will strip the home secretary of his power to keep prisoners in jail. The case is due to be heard next month and there was speculation that Hindley could have been freed within months.

I didnt know she was dead but perhaps some divine intervention took place
 
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