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I found my nan's semi-naked body after she was killed by tights fetish maniac.. and then he moved down the road from me

I found my nan's semi-naked body after she was killed by tights fetish maniac.. and then he moved down the road from me

The Irish Suna day ago
AS she walked into her grandmother's silent house, young Sharon Owens had a sense of foreboding.
It had been a sanctuary to the 12-year-old since her dad died, but was to become a place that would haunt her for ever.
6
Sharon was horrified to discover that her grandmother's killer had been housed in a hostel just minutes from her own home
Credit: - Commissioned by The Sun
6
Sharon found the bludgeoned body of her beloved nan Glenys
Credit: WNS
6
Sharon was informed that Donald Sheridan had been arrested and charged with the sickening crime
Credit: WNS
It was December 1985 and Sharon had just finished her paper round when she entered the living room to find the bludgeoned body of her nana Glenys on the floor.
The 67-year-old had been raped, killed and left wearing nothing but her pants and a pair of tights by a murderer with a twisted fetish.
Almost 40 years on, Sharon was rocked to the core when she discovered not only that the killer had been released from prison, but that he was located just 30 minutes from where she now lived.
'Nana was my entire world, my everything,' says Sharon, 52.
'It's nearly 40 years since I've felt her comforting arms around me. She was like a tiny bird, so petite at 4ft 9in tall, but she had the biggest heart I've ever known.
'That terrible day on December 13, 1985, will haunt me for ever.'
Glenys had been Sharon's saviour after her father, John — who was Glenys's son — had died three years earlier of cancer, aged 41.
Her mum, Beryl, had struggled and was emotionally distant. The family home was chaotic, so Sharon moved in with Glenys in Merthyr Tydfil, South
Wales
.
'My nana had become my sanctuary after losing my dad,' says Sharon, who was one of six children. 'Her three-bedroom house was filled with warmth.
'She didn't have much
money
, but she had a little leather purse she'd fill with coins and then give to me to spend when it was full.
'Mushroom killer' Erin Patterson GUILTY of murdering three relatives with deadly beef wellington
'She'd buy me Breakaway chocolate biscuits and we'd snuggle on the sofa watching
EastEnders
.
'She taught me life skills, too. How to be independent, how to manage money and, crucially, how to love and care for others.'
Earlier that fateful day, Sharon had popped in after school to tell her grandmother she would be doing her paper round before heading back for dinner. 'Nana was always happy to see me and gave me a big hug,' she recalls.
But Glenys was not alone. Donald Sheridan, a friend of Sharon's older brother, was at the house.
'He didn't say anything, he just stared at me,' says Sharon. 'Nana loved everyone, but I knew she wasn't keen on Donald. She didn't like my brother being friends with him, but she'd welcomed him in with her kind nature.'
It was 9pm when Sharon returned to Glenys's house and tried to let herself in.
She says: 'Nana always left a key on a string behind the front door. You could put your hand through the letter box and retrieve it.
'But when I put my hand through as usual, there was no key. I looked through the letter box and called out, but there was no answer, despite the living room and landing light being on.'
6
Sharon Owens pictured aged 11, a year before her grandmother was murdered
Credit: WNS
'She'd buy me Breakaway chocolate biscuits and we'd snuggle on the sofa watching EastEnders.
'She taught me life skills, too. How to be independent, how to manage money and, crucially, how to love and care for others.'
Earlier that fateful day, Sharon had popped in after school to tell her grandmother she would be doing her paper round before heading back for dinner. 'Nana was always happy to see me and gave me a big hug,' she recalls.
But Glenys was not alone. Donald Sheridan, a friend of Sharon's older brother, was at the house.
'He didn't say anything, he just stared at me,' says Sharon. 'Nana loved everyone, but I knew she wasn't keen on Donald. She didn't like my brother being friends with him, but she'd welcomed him in with her kind nature.'
It was 9pm when Sharon returned to Glenys's house and tried to let herself in.
She says: 'Nana always left a key on a string behind the front door. You could put your hand through the letter box and retrieve it.
'But when I put my hand through as usual, there was no key. I looked through the letter box and called out, but there was no answer, despite the living room and landing light being on.'
We walked into the house together and found Nana dead, semi-naked in front of the fire in her living room. I just screamed and screamed.
'I was thrust into a world without the unconditional love and the security Nana had given me, forced to move back into an uncaring home.'
'I didn't pass any of my exams, I truanted and I left aged 15 without any qualifications. I didn't care about anything,' she says. 'I experienced flashbacks and felt guilty for not being at home to protect Nana.'
As Sharon grew into a young woman, she tried to put Sheridan to the back of her mind. She says: 'I got married and had two children. But thoughts of my nana were always with me.'
Then, in 2021, a conversation with a relative spurred Sharon to search for Sheridan online.
'I felt a cold chill as his name popped up in a
news
article,' she says. 'I was shocked and extremely angry to read he had been released in May 2019.'
The Ministry of Justice has told us Sharon was not notified of the release because when Sheridan was jailed, there was no victim support scheme in place.
Sharon, now living in North Yorkshire, was horrified to discover that her grandmother's killer had been housed in a hostel just 30 minutes from her own home.
Worse still, he had struck again within a month of being freed, brutally attacking a mum.
She learned that Sheridan had been drinking rum at his probation hostel in Leeds, defying an alcohol ban, before taking money to meet a female sex worker. The woman made a phone call while they were behind a skip in a commercial yard and they began to fight, before some men turned up and stole Sheridan's money.
Later, he grabbed a woman around the neck as she walked home from the gym, forcing her into a bush. He then made her put on two pairs of tights and asked her to perform a sex act. The victim only managed to escape when a dog walker passed by.
Sheridan was caught after police found the tights at the scene, with his DNA.
Under questioning, he told detectives the victim was not 'my type' and he probably would have raped and killed her if she was older.
6
Sharon Owens as a child
Credit: WNS
6
That terrible day on 13 December 1985, when she was raped and killed in her own home, will haunt me forever, says Sharon
Credit: - Commissioned by The Sun
Sheridan also admitted he'd had a fetish for women in their sixties and seventies ever since he had seen a naked nun when he was in care as a child.
He had stolen her tights and wore them to bed.
Since then, he had carried women's tights around with him and had urges to rape and kill.
On his first
court
appearance for the latter attack, he even tried to strangle a female dock officer when she took him back to his cell.
In 2019, at Leeds crown court, Sheridan admitted robbery, false imprisonment, committing an offence with intent to commit a sexual offence and assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
'COLD CHILL'
He was given sentences of 11 years and life with a minimum of five and a half years. The judge said he should only be considered for parole if he 'is so enfeebled by age that he is no longer able to pose a danger'.
But Sharon worries that he will be released at the end of his sentence, if not sooner, given the growing pressure to let prisoners out early due to overcrowding.
While he could, in theory, be managed in the community, the Probation Service in
England
and
Wales
is already in crisis.
An annual report released in April found that the service has too few staff with too little experience and training. Martin Jones, the chief inspector of probation, said that attempts to 'keep others safe' are 'consistently insufficient'.
Sharon says: 'It beggars belief that this monster was deemed safe to be let out. I feel very angry that I was never even informed and to discover he was living so close to me . . . there are no words.
'He could have come to find me, as I was the main witness in the trial. Learning he had been released unleashed flashbacks and all sorts of trauma that I had tried to mask for years.'
It beggars belief that this monster was deemed safe to be let out.
Sharon
In February this year, Sheridan, 61, was eligible for parole again and Sharon successfully begged the authorities not to make the same mistake as last time, submitting a powerful victim statement.
His 11-year sentence is due to end in 2030, and he has served his minimum life term, so he will be able to apply for parole once more.
A spokesperson for the Parole Board said: 'The board has a thorough
review
process which closely examines and scrutinises any parole release decision after a serious further offence.
'This involves outside experts, judges, psychologists, psychiatrists, as well as senior management, and is in place to identify any lessons that could help prevent further tragedies.'
Sharon admits she finds the thought of Sheridan being back on the streets 'utterly terrifying'.
She says: 'This man is a real danger to women. He is evil, dangerous and has no conscience.
'Meanwhile, I've spent almost 40 years having vivid nightmares about finding Nana's body.
'This man can never be released. He will kill again, I know it.'
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I busted county lines gang that exports school kids like slaves…I've seen desperate kids leap from windows
I busted county lines gang that exports school kids like slaves…I've seen desperate kids leap from windows

The Irish Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

I busted county lines gang that exports school kids like slaves…I've seen desperate kids leap from windows

AFTER bashing down the door to a drug den on the third floor of a tower block, police officers were surprised to see a window open and a burner phone on the ledge. One of the 17-year-old 12 Jamal Andall was jailed for trafficking a child across county lines Credit: Channel 4 12 Dealers threaten to 'rub out' school children they've recruited in chilling texts Credit: Channel 4 12 An arrest following a raid on a drug den in Dunstable, Bedfordshire Credit: Channel 4 They were shocked to see the youngster survived the potentially fatal leap - but he didn't get away. The savvy officers were able to track him down and the mobile device led them to the kingpin behind an extensive county lines network. But a new episode of Channel 4's Gary Hales, an investigating officer from Bedfordshire Police's Boson guns and gangs unit at the time of the arrests, tells The Sun: 'When you are going into a top floor flat you don't expect someone to be jumping out of the window. Read More in The Sun "It was amazing he didn't break his legs. 'There is fear. A way the gangs keep these children street dealing is to threaten them and show a bit of force. 'When you are on a lower rung, you have the elders threatening you, you are around the knives, you are around the violence that goes on.' In the show, which airs on Sunday at 9pm, we see some of the messages sent to a 15-year-old boy called Gavin, not his real name, who has been roped in by the ruthless criminals. Most read in The Sun There are threats to stab his mum, including 'wil shank up u mum'. Officers believe that Gavin has been told he has a drug debt and constantly has to work to pay it off otherwise they will face violent consequences. Police start huge crackdown against county lines gangs ruining teenage lives They will be told, 'Where is the rest of the money? You had more drugs.' In fact the teenagers haven't lost any drugs, they are just being told they have in order to keep them in debt. Adult mob members recruit school children because they are less likely to be sent to prison due to their age. Gavin's mum has called the police in a desperate state, because he keeps going missing, sometimes for 10 days at a time. The police suspect he is being sent around various 'trap houses', an American term for a drug den, in different English counties. 'Saturated' Luton has become so 'saturated' with drug lines that dealers send children far afield. Gary says: 'In terms of drug lines there are over 100 listed that are Bedfordshire based. "But then you have county lines going to places like Essex and London trying to muscle in. Luton is exporting drug deal lines to places where they are not known to police. We have rescued children from Swindon Gary Hales 'Luton is exporting drug deal lines to places where they are not known to police. We have rescued children from Swindon. 'Drug lines in Luton are saturated, they are known to police.' Access to Gavin's phone leads the detectives to the flat in Dunstable which is part of a network selling class A drugs including crack cocaine. Inside the flat is a 14-year-old boy, who has also been recruited by the county lines gangs. The flat is rented by a 23-year-old former heroin addict who says he allows the dealers to use his property because he doesn't want 'to get my head kicked in'. He warns: 'Drugs get you involved with stupid people.' Criminal control 12 Investigating officer Gary Hales helped track down the adult gangsters Credit: Channel 4 12 Drugs were found in Andall's car Credit: Channel 4 12 Luton in Bedfordshire is exporting drug dealers to other counties Credit: Alamy The pay as you go burner phone found on the window ledge has been topped up in various shops. By studying the CCTV of those businesses, the police are able to identify an adult higher up in the operation. When they arrest Jamal Andall in 2020 they find more burner phones and SIM cards in his home, plus crack rocks in his Ford Focus car. After being questioned, Andall is told he has been given bail and can go home. But the gangster says: 'I'm not walking home. It's not safe around here. I've been shot. I've been stabbed.' Remarkably, the police accede to his request and agree to drive him home. It's not safe around here. I've been shot. I've been stabbed Jamal Andall Andall and his fellow drug dealer Alex Anderson, both 30, became the first members of a county lines gang to be convicted of modern slavery offences by Bedfordshire Police. In February last year Andall was jailed for seven years for being concerned in the supply of heroin, with Anderson receiving six years and four months for the same offence. They were also sentenced to six years for exploitation and three years for being concerned in the supply of cocaine, but those will be served concurrently. The court heard that the two men trafficked a 15-year-old boy from Bedfordshire to Lowestoft in Suffolk, where officers found the boy with £3,000 worth of crack cocaine. Saving the 'lost boys' 12 Jamal Andall (right) and his fellow drug dealer Alex Anderson (left), both 30, became the first members of a county lines gang to be convicted of modern slavery offences by Bedfordshire Police 12 Class A drugs were found on the teenager exploited by Andall and Anderson Credit: Bedfordshire Police 12 Incriminating texts found on a phone in Andall's home helped nail him Credit: Bedfordshire Police Gary, though, says that 'there is always someone higher up', and that dealers keep finding new recruits. He says: 'They go to schools and care homes to slip them some cannabis and form a relationship with them. 'They might give you a top up for your phone, you'll think it's free, but nothing is free, there is going to be a pay day for that. 'They pull them into what is an organised crime group." 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The lad who jumped out of the window was lucky - he might not be so fortunate next time. 24 Hours in Police Custody: Lost Boys, stream or watch live on Channel 4 from July 13 at 9pm. 12 Gavin kept going missing Credit: Channel 4 12 Drugs are ruining young lives Credit: Getty 12 Cannabis plants found during a raid in Luton Credit: Alamy

I woke up with Ted Bundy looming over me with log… he shattered my jaw & left me to die but I survived in stroke of luck
I woke up with Ted Bundy looming over me with log… he shattered my jaw & left me to die but I survived in stroke of luck

The Irish Sun

time4 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

I woke up with Ted Bundy looming over me with log… he shattered my jaw & left me to die but I survived in stroke of luck

KATHY Kleiner Rubin was in her second year at university when she was mercilessly attacked with a log by depraved serial killer, Ted Bundy. The Florida-born author is one of the few women to have survived an encounter with the sadist, who was later found guilty of rape, necrophilia, and murder. 11 Kathy Kleiner Rubin's first Christmas after she was attacked by Ted Bundy in 1978 Credit: Kathy Kleiner Rubin 11 Kathy (front right) with her Chi Omega sorority sisters Credit: Kathy Kleiner Rubin 11 Theodore Bundy, more commonly known as Ted, waved to a TV camera following his indictment for the murders of Lisa Levy and Margaret Bowman Credit: Getty Among his victims were 21-year-old Margaret Bowman and 20-year-old Lisa Levy, who were murdered just minutes before the 33-year-old launched his assault on Kathy. Bundy was executed in 1989, when he admitted to murdering at least 30 women in his four-year-long But his notoriety has lived on, with books and films often depicting the sadist as a charismatic killer who lured his victims with his good looks. Decades later, Kathy has revealed how she has found peace by giving a voice to his victims and exposing Bundy's "true" nature. Speaking exclusively to The Sun, she described him as a "loser and a sociopath" who craved the world's attention. NIGHT OF THE ATTACK When Kathy was attacked, she was a second-year student at Florida State University, living in Chi Omega sorority house with girls 'who felt like sisters'. She had spent the afternoon at a church friend's wedding but decided to head back early with her dormmate, Karen Chandler, to study for her calculus exam the following Monday. The pair's room was not dissimilar to any other dorm room: two single beds pushed against opposite walls, separated by a small trunk and a large bay window with curtains that remained open 'all the time'. Most read in The US Sun When they turned the lights off at around 11:30pm, Kathy fell straight to sleep. In the early hours of the morning, she awoke to the 'swish' sound of the carpet. I'm a criminologist - Ted Bundy stood no chance against one particular type of victim, it's why he never targeted them 'I remember squinting into the dark, not wearing my glasses, and seeing this black shadow standing above me, looking at me. 'I was just waking up a little bit and he had that log in his hand. "I can close my eyes and I can see my room. And I can see him standing over me. And this is something I'll never forget," she said. Wielding the same log he had used to kill her two much-adored sorority sisters, and which he had stolen from the house's fireplace, Bundy struck Kathy's jaw. The sheer force shattered the bone and splintered her chin - exposing her teeth and almost severing her tongue. "When he hit me, my first feeling was like hitting a bag of potatoes. You know, it didn't hurt," she added. But it wasn't long before adrenaline turned to agonising pain. 11 Kathy has found peace by giving a voice to Bundy's victims Credit: Kathy Kleiner Rubin 11 Kathy struggled in the period after the attack but held onto her faith to keep her going Credit: Kathy Kleiner Rubin 11 Kathy married Scott Rubin, who she has been with for over three decades and who has been a 'wonderful father' to her son, Michael Credit: Kathy Kleiner Rubin "It hurt so bad. The most intense pain I have ever felt," she recalled. Moments later, a rustle in the neighbouring bed turned Bundy's attention to Karen. Tripping over Kathy's trunk, he stumbled to his next victim, before mercilessly bludgeoning her too. In a stroke of immense fortune, the pair were saved when a couple returning home parked up beside the sorority house. I thought I was yelling and screaming for help but all I was doing was making gurgling sounds from all the blood in my mouth Kathy Kleiner Rubin The headlights flooded the room with light, startling Bundy, who ran away. Kathy said: 'I was moaning and groaning and I thought I was yelling and screaming for help but all I was doing was making gurgling sounds from all the blood in my mouth. 'He came back over to my side of the room so I tucked myself into the smallest ball. I thought if he didn't see me, he wouldn't kill me.' 'He looked at me. He raised his arm up over his head, but just as he was about to hit me again, a bright light shone through our window, 'He got real antsy and started moving around. Then he ran out of the room." I thought if he didn't see me, he wouldn't kill me Kathy Kleiner Rubin Whimpering, Kathy tried calling for help but managed no more than a few "gurgling sounds" through all of the blood. Karen was able to stumble to get help as Kathy passed out from the pain. She recalled: 'I woke up and a police officer was standing at the head of my bed looking at me. 'I touched my face and it was warm with blood. I was in excruciating pain – it felt like daggers and knives. But he just told me 'it's going to be OK.'' "I knew, having been so scared that this person was going to take care of me." PATH TO HAPPINESS Kathy never returned to university and spent the next nine weeks with her jaw wired shut at her parents' house in Miami. Therapy wasn't an option for the young girl who was raised by Cuban parents, where sweeping problems under the rug was the "done thing". Instead, her parents did all they could to help her physically recover and protect her from the trauma of what happened. "My mum wanted to shield me from the news and hearing about my sorority sisters so she would take the newspaper and cut all of the articles out that would mention Bundy," she said. One day they were a victim and the next day they became a survivor Kathy Kleiner Rubin Meanwhile, Kathy took "baby steps " to heal from the psychological wounds left from Bundy's attack - but also from the anger and sadness of leaving behind her freedom and friends at university. She said: "I walked outside and felt the sun on my face and looked up at the trees and saw each individual leaf, that's part of the branch, that's part of the tree. "And looking at the bugs on the ground and seeing how they interact. That's life. "And I wanted to be part of life. I wanted to be part of what was so natural." Kathy recognised exposure therapy would be crucial in her path to recovery so she got a job working at a lumber yard, where she would be surrounded by men everyday. 11 Kathy now lives in Florida with her husband Scott Credit: Kathy Kleiner Rubin 11 Kathy said sharing her story with the world has helped her heal and connect with other survivors Credit: Kathy Kleiner Rubin While she grew progressively less scared, dark thoughts of a figure standing behind her lingered. Leaning on her faith, she imagined herself walking away from the darkness - each day, taking one step closer to the "light" at the end of the road. She has since co-authored a book with writer Emilie Lebau-Luchessi, in which she revisited in painfully vivid detail the events of that night. Although challenging, Kathy said sharing her story with the world has helped her heal and connect with other survivors. "They just need to know that one day they were a victim and the next day they became a survivor. Read more on the Irish Sun "That survivor has to live the rest of their life and they can talk about it and they can feel it but they shouldn't dwell on it. "They need to move on and and not let this put them in a box but just take baby steps to heal themselves," she said. 11 Kathy graduating from high school Credit: Kathy Kleiner Rubin 11 Kathy in 1990, almost a decade after the attack Credit: Kathy Kleiner Rubin 11 Pregnant Kathy with her beloved 41-year-old son Michael Credit: Kathy Kleiner Rubin

O2 phone shops in high risk areas locking their doors after spate of armed robberies by crime gangs
O2 phone shops in high risk areas locking their doors after spate of armed robberies by crime gangs

The Irish Sun

time15 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

O2 phone shops in high risk areas locking their doors after spate of armed robberies by crime gangs

PHONE shops in high risk areas have been forced to lock their doors to customers after a spate of armed robberies by organised crime gangs. O2 has confirmed a 'locked door' policy is now in place at a number of high street stores across the country in response to the terrifying raids - including Richmond in south-west London, The Strand in central London and St Albans, Herts. 3 O2 has confirmed a 'locked door' policy is now in place at a number of high street stores across the country Credit: Andrew Styczynski 3 The move is in response to the terrifying raids - including Richmond in south-west London, The Strand in central London and St Albans, Herts Credit: Andrew Styczynski 3 Instead of just walking into the shops, customers now have to knock on the door and be let in by a security guard Credit: Andrew Styczynski Instead of just walking into the shops, customers now have to knock on the door and be let in by a security guard. The Sun found staff at the shop in St Albans on Friday were operating a one in one out system, only allowing up to three members of the public in at a time. According to a source, they were forced to bring in these measures after two terrifying robberies which left staff members fearing for their lives. They said: 'At the end of February we had an attempted robbery. Three guys came in and tried to force their way into the store room. Read More on UK News 'I saw them, all with their faces covered, out of the corner of my eye and I thought I was done for. 'We suspected they had a weapon and they were trying to force staff back there to open the door - the police came that time and they didn't manage to take anything. 'A few months before in October the shop was actually robbed, they took thousands of pounds worth of phones. 'There were two customers in the shop at the time, and because of the threats and the suspected weapon it was decided that the door would be locked. Most read in The Sun 'No one should come into work and be scared they're going to be stabbed over a phone - no one wants to lose their life over just a phone. 'It has affected trade a little, but you know now all the people coming in have the intention to buy and it makes staff feel safer while helping them so I think it's worth it.' Moment phone snatcher receives instant karma as he's knocked off his bike by furious Londoners In May, the O2 shop in Richmond was targeted by two armed men, with one swiftly arrested by police. Just a few months before in February, the same shop was raided by armed thieves who forced staff into the store room and made off with a number of mobiles. An O2 spokesperson said: 'In response to a growing number of thefts at stores in certain areas, we have introduced a 'locked door' policy at a small proportion of our stores, including in St Albans. 'These stores remain fully open for our customers, and the only difference they will experience is that instead of opening the door themselves, it will be opened for them by a security guard. 'This decision has been taken to prioritise the safety of both our employees and our customers, as well as the security of our stock. 'We are working closely with law enforcement, and with other providers who are facing similar issues, to tackle this problem.'

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