
Dad left chilling note for kids to find after strangling their mum in next room
The family of Kelly Morgan, who was strangled to death by her husband George just hours after the couple watched their children in a school assembly, have opened up to Killer Britain with Demot Murgnahan about a murder which shook Britain
It was a regular morning for Kelly Worgan and her husband George, who had been sitting with other parents in a school assembly. No one could have imagined that just hours later, she would be dead, strangled to death by the man who had been sitting next to her as they watched one of their children perform.
Teachers only began to suspect something was wrong after they failed to pick up their kids from school later that day, and didn't answer their phones. At 4.43pm the school called the police, who managed to get a key from their landlord to gain access to their house.
As soon as they opened the door, they saw a chilling note left in the middle of the stairs: 'Please don't let the little ones go into the front room.' The note continued: 'No more suffering. I'm sorry, got pushed too far this time. Daddy loves you.'
In the living room, detectives found Kelly slumped on the floor with the back of her head resting on the armchair, and ligature marks clearly visible on her neck. She had been strangled to death.
The horrifying murder in Avonmouth, just outside Bristol, in November 2018 is being retold in Sunday's episode of hit true crime series Killer Britain with Dermot Murnaghan on the Crime+Investigation channel. Detectives knew prime suspect George Morgan had to be caught quickly - but unbeknownst to them, police 300 miles away in Cumbria were already pursuing him, thinking his only crime was petrol theft and dangerous driving.
A BMW was driving dangerously on the northbound carriageway of the M6 after reportedly failing to pay for petrol. The driver had failed to pull over when a police vehicle approached.
Officers got ahead of him and deployed a stinger, puncturing his tyres. When police arrested him and put his name in the national computer, they discovered he was wanted for murder.
Speaking to the programme, Kelly's dad Paul, who is partially-sighted, remembers the moment he found out their son-in-law was suspected of strangling their daughter. 'After that telephone call, my wife was very upset and went upstairs crying, and my legs collapsed, and I fell on the floor crying like a baby. My guide dog came in and cuddled me. That's how bad it hit us. I'll always remember that,' he said.
Kelly's parents were given full custody of her two children. 'The landlord phoned us up to make arrangements for us to go down to get some of the children's belongings,' he remembers. 'What can you do? You're actually where your daughter took her last breath. I just sat there and cried.'
Charged with Kelly's murder, as well as dangerous driving, Worgan maintained his innocence, claiming he hadn't killed her and that he couldn't remember what had happened on that day. But as the investigation progressed, it became clear that behind the facade of a happy family, Kelly had been trapped in a violent and controlling relationship.
Kelly had met George in 2011 when he got a job as a bus driver in the Bristol company where she worked. Eight months into the relationship, he asked her father for his daughter's hand in marriage.
The family were delighted, but soon began to notice some worrying red flags. Kelly's sister Hannah remembers: 'They seemed to get on fine like a happy couple. But it was weird. She's very motherly, independent, her own person. But with George she was a completely different sister."
Within two years, Kelly was expecting their second child. Hannah remembers: 'When he was at our place, it was like a show, he would be more involved with the children, changing their nappies and playing with them, or feeding them their bottles. But when it was at his own place, it was like Kelly was doing everything, the cooking, cleaning, looking after the new-born children. When she got to our place it felt like she was just tired all the time.'
Dad Paul recalls: 'When George went to work on the buses, Kelly used to be alone in the flat, so we used to invite her up so she wouldn't be on her own. But Kelly always made up excuses.'
She also discouraged her family from visiting her. Sister Hannah says: 'My mum was like, 'Why don't you go down keep your sister company?'. And when I tried to ask you she was like, 'Oh I'll have to ask George'. And I'm like, But I'm asking you, you're my sister, and I'm not asking him when thats nothing to do with him. It was a bit weird. It got to a point where it felt uncomfortable for me, like I was invading their privacy.'
Tragically, only after her death would they find out the truth, after Kelly's medical records revealed she had suffered a series of injuries during this period, one of which resulted in a trip to A&E. A port-mortem also revealed old bruises on her body, while during an interview prior to trial the Worgans' children told how they had previously seen their father strangling their mother.
Worgan unexpectedly changed his plea to guilty at his trial in May 2019. He was sentenced to life in prison.
In their victim impact statement, Kelly's dad, Paul, and mum, Glynnis, described the effect on their grandchildren. 'Two days after the children came to stay with us and they have remained with us ever since. We had to tell them their mummy had died.
'Now neither of the children want to sleep in their own bed and and ask to go to her grave so they can talk to her. The biggest question we have is why? We trusted him and treated him as a son and as a part of our family. We now struggle with the concept of who we can trust."
Speaking to the programme, Paul says he still feels like he's living 'in a nightmare, and it's not going to end. I feel l made the biggest mistake ever. I feel I handed my daughter over to a murderer.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
3 hours ago
- Daily Mail
BREAKING NEWS Mass stabbing in downtown Salem as at least 11 people are rushed to hospital
A stabbing spree in downtown Salem, Oregon on Sunday left at least 11 people injured. Salem Police said they responded to a call about a stabbing incident involving multiple victims at the Union Gospel Mission of Salem at around 7.15pm, the Statesman Journal reports. Eleven people were then transported to Salem Health hospital with various injuries as the unidentified suspect was taken into custody. The identity of the suspect and a motive for the attack remain unclear. But witness Malik Law said he watched in horror as the man stabbed at least seven people. 'Everybody was basically trying to move out of his way,' Law told the Statesman Journal. 'He started attacking them.'


Daily Mail
4 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE Beau Lamarre-Condon, cop charged with killing Jesse Baird and Luke Davies, makes offer to police about 'who else' was allegedly involved: 'Two sets of white overalls'
The former policeman charged with murdering a television presenter and his partner says he has offered to provide information about a second person who he claims helped dispose of the bodies. Beau Lamarre-Condon is accused of shooting dead Jesse Baird, 26, and Qantas flight attendant Luke Davies, 29, at Paddington in Sydney 's eastern suburbs in February 2024. The 29-year-old is further alleged to have bundled the couple's bodies into surfboard bags before dumping them at a rural property in the Southern Tablelands. A source close to Lamarre-Condon has now revealed the alleged killer has offered to provide information about another person he says was involved with disposing of the bodies to police and prosecutors. 'Lamarre-Condon wants to do the right thing for the families and is happy to assist investigators with information about who else played a part in the incident,' the source said. 'So far both the DPP and the officer in charge have failed to reply to the offer made by Lamarre's legal team for assistance.' The source claimed that a witness had told investigators they had waited at the fence line of the Bungonia property where the bodies were found for 15 to 20 minutes. Phone records indicated Lamarre-Condon and the witness were at the farm for almost two hours, the source claimed. 'Police also located two sets of white overalls at the scene where bodies were located which indicates it was a two-person job,' the source said. NSW Police and the DPP have been contacted for comment. Lamarre-Condon has spent more than a year in prison since the shootings, which were allegedly the result of a months-long campaign of 'predatory behaviour' targeting Mr Baird. The onetime celebrity chaser reportedly briefly dated Mr Baird before the TV presenter began a relationship with Mr Davies. Suspicions of foul play were raised after possessions belonging to the dead men were found in a skip bin in the southern Sydney suburb of Cronulla, leading police to Mr Baird's blood-smeared terrace. The case returned to Downing Centre Local Court last month after confidential discussions between prosecutors and the alleged killer's Legal Aid lawyer Alex Curnick. Both sides agreed 'things are progressing,' magistrate Megan Greenwood was told. A forensic psychiatrist's report was also tendered after Lamarre-Condon was assessed in previous weeks. Lamarre-Condon has not entered pleas to two counts of domestic violence-related murder, and one count of break and enter with intent to commit an indictable offence. He was sacked by the NSW Police Force in March 2024. Lamarre-Condon joined the force in 2019 and previously ran a celebrity blog, posing in photos with dozens of A-listers including Taylor Swift, Selena Gomez, Katy Perry, Miley Cyrus and Harry Styles. He is expected to appear via an audiovisual link on June 17.


Daily Mail
5 hours ago
- Daily Mail
How Yorkshire Ripper hoaxer who derailed serial killer investigation 'tried to hide his voice when he was finally snared'
The Yorkshire Ripper hoaxer who derailed the investigation into the serial killer desperately tried to hide his voice when finally arrested, a retired police chief has revealed. Chris Gregg, 68, of West Yorkshire Police, has spoken out about the conman 20 years on from the investigation that unmasked him. The so-called Yorkshire Ripper, a reference to Victorian serial killer Jack the Ripper, killed at least 13 women from 1975 to 1980 in a reign of terror across northern England. Peter Sutcliffe was eventually identified as the man behind the killings and jailed for life in 1981. He died in prison in November 2020, aged 74. But it only came after a man named John Humble, dubbed Wearside Jack, had falsely confessed to the killings in 1978 and 1979, in a two-minute voice recording and three letters sent to police and journalists. West Yorkshire Police believed the letters and tape were genuine and diverted resources to Humble's home town of Sunderland. His cruel efforts hobbled police investigations - leaving Sutcliffe at large to kill three more women before his eventual arrest. No one knew it was Humble behind the hoax confessions for a further 24 years after Sutcliffe's conviction in 1981 - until a cold case review by police in 2005. And now investigator Mr Gregg has told The Mirror about finally snaring him - revealing Humble initially just 'kept nodding' in police interviews, knowing his voice would immediately give him away as the man behind the hoax tape. It was only when officers informed Humble a 'one in a billion match' had been made between his DNA and a tiny saliva spot on one of the letters that he eventually confessed - knowing he was caught. With Humble now speaking up in interviews, he then agreed to read aloud a transcript of his original manufactured tape. And only now, a quarter of a century on from that moment, has Mr Gregg re-listened to the recording - describing it as 'chilling' to hear it again. It was advances in forensic science, plus a new police record of Humble - from his arrest for being drunk and disorderly in 2001 - that finally created the breakthrough. With officers finally able to match his DNA to the saliva sample on the hoax letter, they soon found themselves closing in on the culprit. The former security guard was arrested at his home in in the Ford area of Sunderland, where he lived with his brother - just a few miles from the area voice experts had said the hoax taper's accent was from. He was soon brought to Yorkshire for interviewing by Mr Gregg, the new lead of West Yorkshire Police's Criminal Investigation Department (CID). And the cop soon knew he had got the right man, when Humble began reading aloud the tape transcript. The former Detective Chief Superintendent said: 'Humble had quite a remarkable memory. 'He took himself back to when he made it. It was an incredible moment to hear him read it out.' He continued: 'Those last three Ripper victims may not have died had it not been for Humble.' Barbara Leach, 20, of Bradford; Marguerite Walls, 47, of Leeds; and Jacqueline Hill, 20, also of Leeds, were all killed by Sutcliffe between September 1979 and November 1980. Sutcliffe was arrested just eight weeks later - but might have been apprehended sooner had Humble not derailed the inquiry. Mr Gregg, who had been at the heart of the £6million hunt for the hoaxer, said: 'It proved to be tragic. He did something that he never needed to do.' The envelope with a seal that bore the key saliva sample to enable the DNA match was only discovered due to Mr Gregg's sheer determination. Having worked on the Yorkshire Ripper inquiry, he knew he had to get to the bottom of it, enlisting the two original detectives for help. He first worked out the three hoax letters had been destroyed in the original forensics process, having been analysed using a chemical with a destructive effect. But he was not going to give up that easily - and remembered scientists often keep small snippets of evidence in high-profile cold cases such as this one. So, Mr Gregg wrote to the head of the forensics lab in the West Yorkshire town of Wetherby, asking if they could search for any remaining samples. And they were in luck. The police chief received a random phone call several months later to say the lab had found a 3cm sample of the final hoax letter. It was in perfect condition, preserved between two glass slides - and gave them the answers they had been looking for. Mr Gregg said it was one of the defining moments of his career in the police: 'If we had not found him, I am convinced that he would have taken that secret to the grave. 'He had not told a living soul what he had done.' Humble, who was sentenced to eight years in in 2006 after admitting perverting the course of justice, died on July 30 2019.