logo
Depraved serial rapist known as The Fox because he broke into homes and made secret dens before emerging died of a heart attack in his cell

Depraved serial rapist known as The Fox because he broke into homes and made secret dens before emerging died of a heart attack in his cell

Daily Mail​07-05-2025

One of Britain's most notorious sex attackers who targeted more than a dozen victims in 1984 has died from a heart attack in prison, an inquest has heard.
Malcolm Fairley, who became known as 'The Fox' for the way he built lairs in targets' homes so he could lie in wait before attacking them, carried out a series of sex attacks across Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire and Hertfordshire.
He was finally caught in September 1984 after sparking one of the largest manhunts in British criminal history.
Fairley was handed six life sentences the following year and has remained behind bars ever since.
However, it has been heard at an inquest at Hull Coroner's Court that 71-year-old was found dead at HMP Hull on May 28, 2024, reports the BBC.
The provisional cause of his death was a myocardial infarction, or heart attack, but assistant coroner Sarah Middleton could not conclude the inquest due to a prison investigation.
Ms Middleton adjourned the inquest for a later date, which is yet to be fixed, as she told the court she wanted to hear evidence of what happened during the night shift at the prison at the time of Fairley's death.
Fairley had been 'dead for quite sometime' before he was found, the court heard.
Fairley with his head under a blanket being led away by police after being arrested
His crimes were carried out in the hot summer of 1984, when national tensions were inflamed amidst the ongoing miners' strike.
Fairley's victims included both men and women, ranging in age from teenagers to pensioners.
He would break into victims' homes, help himself to food and drink and then build a lair out of furniture and blankets.
He would also remove all light bulbs and then wait in the dark, flicking through victims' family photo albums by torchlight before they returned.
At the height of his crimes, there were three attacks in the space of a week.
In a Channel 5 documentary aired last April, The Intruder: He's Watching You, Fairley is heard being asked by Detective Chief Superintendent Brian Prickett, who led the investigation that led to his capture, if he tried to stop.
He replied: 'Well I tried to. Many times. Every time I went I tried.'
Fairley was then asked by another officer: 'Do you still feel you want to do it?'
He said: 'Not really, it's... but I still... get a sexy drive type thing.'
Asked by DCS Prickett about an attack he carried out on an elderly woman, he said: 'Well, I felt disappointed in myself to do it. You know, like it's... it just weren't me.'
Bedfordshire Police ended up with more than 5,000 suspects and terrified residents resorted to sleeping with weapons under their beds, fearing that they might be next during the four-month spree.
Fairley, who wore a mask made from a trouser leg, also committed break-ins and sexual crimes in Milton Keynes, South Yorkshire and his native North East.
He was eventually arrested in at home in Kentish Town, North London, after forensic evidence linked his car to an attack.
At the time of his arrest he had committed 81 offences as 'The Fox'.
He had a string of previous convictions to his name and was the father of three children from his two marriages.
In one break-in, he stole a shotgun and ammunition and later used the weapon in other attacks, including in one where he shot a businessman at point-black range.
The victim had to have his finger amputated.
DCS Prickett added: 'Psychiatrists said that he was rational and that he was normal.
'Well, I never accepted that. As a police officer, you deal with him professionally, but as a human being to human being, you've got complete disgust, you've got almost hatred.
'I don't think I'll ever understand the motivation he had for the attacks he carried out.'
After sentencing Fairley to six life sentences, following his trial at St Albans Crown Court in February 1985, Mr Justice Caulfield said: 'There are degrees of wickedness beyond condemnatory description.
'Your crimes fall within this category. You desecrated and defiled men and women in their own homes.'
On February 27, 1985, the Daily Mail revealed Fairley's mugshot and declared: 'The Fox - evil beyond words.'
Fairley admitted 13 offences - three rapes, an indecent assault on a man and another on a 74-year-old woman, five burglaries and three aggravated burglaries with intent to rape while carrying a firearm.
He also asked for 68 other crimes, mostly burglaries, to be considered.
An 18-year-old girl who was among his victim said in the Daily Mail after he was convicted: 'I felt as if there was no one I could turn to and began crying and screaming.
'Memories of that night were always with me, yet no one seemed to realise what was happening inside my head.
'Eventually I could take no more and completely cracked up.'
In a three-hour ordeal, Fairley tried to force the young woman - who he had raped - to carry out sex acts with her 21-year-old boyfriend and 17-year-old brother.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sex offender who indecently exposed himself at train stations SEVEN times is fined just £1.43 for each offence
Sex offender who indecently exposed himself at train stations SEVEN times is fined just £1.43 for each offence

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Sex offender who indecently exposed himself at train stations SEVEN times is fined just £1.43 for each offence

A sex offender who indecently exposed himself at train stations seven times has been fined just £1.43 for each offence. Leon Clarke, 49, was handed a meagre £10 penalty and a one-year community order after admitting to the acts at Highbury Corner Magistrates' Court. He repeatedly exposed himself intending to cause alarm or distress at stations across London and Hertfordshire, including Herne Hill, Romford and Cheam. Jonathan Ash-Edwards, the Police and Crime Commissioner for Hertfordshire, led calls for the Government to tie up a loophole which prevents cases like Clarke's being challenged as too lenient. He told The Telegraph: 'Too often, victims bravely come forward to tell their story, the police do a great job to catch the offender and then the justice system just goes and lets everyone down. 'People will be horrified to hear that someone can commit seven sex offences in public and be fined just £10, effectively £1.42 per offence. 'It's not good enough and we need a more serious approach to sentencing for sexual offences and violence against women and girls.' Mr Ash-Edwards bemoaned the fact that people are helpless to challenge such sentences, as the complaints procedure does not appply to magistrates' courts. Clarke was also handed a five-year sexual harm prevention order, which means he cannot approach, touch or attempt to communicate with an unknown female in public. The order bars him from taking a seat next to or opposite a lone female or child on public transport or at a station, unless there is no alternative seating available. His name is now on the sex offender register and Clarke will be required to register with the police until 2030. Just one in 10 indecent exposure offences result in a charge, half the proportion of 10 years ago. This is despite the number of reported crimes soaring from 6,000 to 16,000 in that time, a rise of 160 per cent. In 2023, there were 13,000 before a sharp increase in the last two years. Official data shows that even when such offenders are actually prosecuted, they tend to be given shorter sentences than before. Just 39 per cent of those convicted of indecent exposure are now given more than six months prison time, dramatically down from 60.9 per cent in 2019. Ministers, police, judges and women's groups are in agreement that the crime can act as a precursor to more severe 'contact' sexual offences including rape, if no action is taken against the offender.

Protein review – gym-obsessed serial killer bites off more than he can chew
Protein review – gym-obsessed serial killer bites off more than he can chew

The Guardian

time5 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Protein review – gym-obsessed serial killer bites off more than he can chew

'It's basic detective work,' says veteran smalltown cop Stanton (Charles Dale), trying to justify pressurising a lead about her love life. 'Very fucking basic,' says Patch (Andrea Hall), a London colleague who has come to the sticks because of a possible connection with a grisly serial killer. That's the narky style of this ramshackle but moreish Welsh thriller, which takes place in the coke-sniffing milieu of endemic poverty and petty criminality, under ubiquitous sallow street lighting, in which everyone's looking for an out. Patch is right about the serial killer: drifter Sion (Craig Russell) has pitched up in town and blags a cleaning job at a local gym. A traumatised ex-squaddie with an inferiority complex, he takes offence at the group of hoodlums lording it over the machines. So he hammers in the skull of bouncer Dwayne (Kai Owen) and stores some choice morsels in a freezer; an extra protein source for his iron-pumping. But Sion is oblivious to Dwayne having recently cut in on a drug deal with rival Albanian gangsters – so his seemingly brutal murder threatens to kick off a turf war. The title suggests some kind of exposé or The Substance-style satire on modern gym-culture toxicity. And with the meatshake-quaffing Sion, and an ambient whiff of stale testosterone among most of the cast, it is to some extent. But the protagonist – for whom we're ladled out a facile backstory but who is also off the screen much of the time – is too marooned within the film to fully bring that aspect home. More nutritious are the ratty comic exchanges at which debut director Tony Burke excels, like a cokehead Mike Leigh. From five guys arguing about guns in a Yaris, to Stanton and Patch expeditiously shaking down suspects, the repartee not only effectively conveys the diminished expectations in this seedy bearpit, but also squeezes out unexpected vulnerability for the actors to capitalise on. The standouts are Dale, as the ironclad stalwart hiding tragedy, Hall with her personable cynicism, and Steve Meo as the would-be playas' whipping boy, spiralling out into uproarious panic. Too diffuse and unfocused it may be, but Protein has a hotline into great British bathos. Protein is released in UK cinemas from 13 June, and available on digital platforms from 14 July.

Drug dealer brother of former Liverpool football prodigy loses appeal
Drug dealer brother of former Liverpool football prodigy loses appeal

BBC News

time5 hours ago

  • BBC News

Drug dealer brother of former Liverpool football prodigy loses appeal

A gang member who had a "leading role" in an international drugs plot involving his brother, a former Liverpool football prodigy, has lost an appeal against his prison Cassidy was part of a drugs gang, along with his brother Jamie, which saw cocaine imported from the Netherlands and used to supply users across north-west England, Birmingham and younger Cassidy brother had played alongside Michael Owen and Jamie Carragher in the Reds youth team before injuries curtailed his was jailed 21 years and nine months alongside his brother last year. An appeal hearing in London to challenge his sentence was dismissed. Manchester Crown Court heard last year the operation dealt with 356kg of the drug, worth around £26m, with £10m in cash changing hands in the space of three told the court Jonathan likened himself to the infamous drug smuggler El sent an associate a picture of an actor playing the Mexican drug lord in the TV programme Narcos and joked how they shared the same admitted importing drugs, conspiring to supply drugs and conspiring to transfer criminal an appeal hearing in London last month, his lawyers claimed the sentencing judge gave him insufficient credit for his guilty pleas and that not enough weight was given to mitigating in a ruling published on Monday, three senior judges dismissed the challenge. Lord Justice Fraser, sitting with Mr Justice Hilliard and Mr Justice Constable, said that they were "not persuaded" the sentence was "manifestly excessive or reached after an error of principle".They also dismissed an appeal bid brought by Jonathan's co-defendant, Nasar Ahmed, who admitted the same offences and received the same jail Richard Wright KC told Manchester Crown Court last year that Jonathan played a "leading role" in drugs importation and the buying and selling of class A drugs while Ahmed acted as a middleman and "facilitator".One associate was arrested in a car in Liverpool, where police found two Asda bags for life containing almost £250, the encrypted EncroChat network used by Jonathan and Ahmed was infiltrated by law enforcement agencies, Jonathan travelled to Dubai in July 2020 and inquired with estate agents about purchasing a villa with a budget of £2.3m, including a £22,000 travelled back to the UK in October that year, but was arrested on his Jonathan and Ahmed's appeals, Lord Justice Fraser said that both knew "what their conduct had been and the degree to which it was unlawful".He continued that despite defendants in other EncroChat cases being given greater credit for guilty pleas, there was "no one single EncroChat discount" that should be applied. Listen to the best of BBC Radio Merseyside on Sounds and follow BBC Merseyside on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store