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I spent decade looking into twisted mind of Moors Murderer Ian Brady…reason he kept victim's body hidden made me sick

I spent decade looking into twisted mind of Moors Murderer Ian Brady…reason he kept victim's body hidden made me sick

Scottish Sun07-07-2025
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OF ALL the serial killers and mass murderers who have blighted Britain's history, Ian Brady is considered by many to be the most evil.
Even fellow serial killer the Yorkshire Ripper was horrified at the way he tortured and murdered children before callously dumping their bodies - crimes so twisted that bosses at Broadmoor refused to accept him as a patient.
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Ian Brady is considered to be one of Britain's most twisted killers
Credit: PA:Press Association
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Brady and his partner Myra Hindley tortured and murdered children in the early 60s
Credit: Hulton Archive - Getty
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Top amateur criminologist Alfie James exchanged letters with Brady for a decade
Credit: Mercury Press
Most people would recoil at the idea of delving into the dark recesses of the Moors Murderer's mind - but that's exactly what Britain's top amateur criminologist Alfie James did, for a decade.
He swapped scores of letters with Brady as he tried to work out the motivation for his unspeakable crimes, just as he has done with a string of other murderers on both sides of the Atlantic.
And he gained a unique insight into what made one of Britain's most notorious ever serial killers tick.
Speaking exclusively to The Sun as part of our Meeting a Monster series, Alfie said: 'He was very self-centred and had this over-inflated sense of his own superiority.
'He thought he was more intelligent than everyone, and he never took responsibility for anything.
'He was always trying to shift the blame onto others and could never accept that what he had done was wrong.'
Brady and his lover Myra Hindley sexually assaulted, tortured and murdered five children in Manchester in the 1960s in a series of crimes which shocked Britain.
At their trial in 1966 a horrific tape recording they had made of one of their victims screaming and begging for mercy was played.
The couple's relationship had been crucial to the crimes, and Brady was convinced they would remain close even after they were convicted and jailed for life.
But Alfie revealed how Brady became furious at what he saw as Hindley's lack of 'loyalty' over her attempts to secure parole and also when she struck up a relationship with a female prison warder.
Moors Murders viewers rage 'my blood is boiling' as CGI brings evil Ian Brady and Myra Hindley 'back from the dead'
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Brady and Hindley burried the bodies of their victims in the moors surrounding Manchester
Credit: SWNS:South West News Service
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Brady became furious when Hindley attempted to secure parole
Credit: Getty - Contributor
Bizarrely, he claimed he could have freed her from prison after just 15 years and was so angry with her he refused to use her name in letters he sent Alfie, instead referring to her as 'M'.
In one letter he said of her: 'Now, of course, I couldn't care less. All sense of obligation departed when she began lying against me to secure parole. Had she remained loyal, I could have had her out in 15 years.'
Alfie said: 'He never explained how he was going to secure her freedom, and in reality he never would have been able to, of course.
'But that was typical of him. He thought he was so intelligent that he could secure her release. It was another one of his superior boasts.
'He did like to reminisce about his earlier life with her, though. He used to talk about going on motorbike trips with her, riding over Shap in Cumbria on the Great North Road, heading from Manchester to Glasgow where he was from.
'He said, 'We would sit on a wall and have a couple of drinks, something to eat. I would discard a bottle and it would smash on the ground. That bottle will still be there now and will be for hundreds of years as a reminder that we once walked here.'
Brady was very self-centred and had this over-inflated sense of his own superiority. He thought he was more intelligent than everyone, and he never took responsibility for anything
Alfie James
'It was like ghost talk, about things linked to him that would be around long after he was gone.
'He would describe how they would get to Glasgow as morning was breaking with the streets all quiet. He liked that.
'And whenever he was travelling around he liked visiting churches, not for any religious experience, he liked the smell of them.
'As he was telling me these things I couldn't help but think about the things he had done and thought, 'You of all people should not be in a church.'
'Meeting Hindley was obviously crucial to their crimes but he even passed off any sort of responsibility for that, blaming it on 'circumstances' that led him to have to get a job at the chemical distribution company where she later got taken on as a typist.
'If circumstances had not led him to get that job he would never have met her and the murders would not have happened, he said.
'As if he didn't have any free will. I would think - you say you are so clever, then why couldn't you stop it happening?'
'Sick in the head'
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Even serial killer Peter Sutcliffe despised Brady, branding him 'sick in the head'
Credit: Getty
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Brady was considered by Broadmoor bosses to be too evil to be let in as a patient
Credit: Alamy
Alfie and Brady swapped around 150 letters over the years they were writing to each other, part of an incredible library of true crime material that factory worker Alfie, 49, has built up.
It includes a trove of letters and other material acquired over nearly 20 years from Peter Sutcliffe, which he turned into the definitive biography of the killer, I'm The Yorkshire Ripper, written with Sun reporter Robin Perrie.
It was during those conversations that Sutcliffe disclosed to Alife just how much he despised Brady.
Sutcliffe said: 'Ian Brady seems to actually enjoy people's suffering, but then that's the trademark of a psychopath.
'He had an air of… like he thought he was… like a snob, like very important.
'He's just a psychopath, an idiot, full of himself and he's shallow, very shallow and stupid, he's not intelligent really in the real sense of the word. Thinks he's the bee's knees. He's sick in the head.'
Sutcliffe wasn't the only one who thought Brady was beyond help.
Dr Pat McGrath, one of the medical experts who gave evidence at the Yorkshire Ripper's trial, was the medical superintendent at Broadmoor when the authorities considered transferring Brady there after he was diagnosed as a psychopath in 1985.
He's just a psychopath, an idiot, full of himself and he's shallow, very shallow and stupid, he's not intelligent really in the real sense of the word. Thinks he's the bee's knees. He's sick in the head
Peter Sutcliffe
But Dr McGrath refused to accept him, saying he was one of only two people he had met who he thought were evil, not sick, and therefore could not be treated.
Instead he was sent to top security Ashworth Hospital on Merseyside, which is where he was when he and Alfie started corresponding.
Those held at places such as Ashworth and Broadmoor are treated as patients, not prisoners, and have more freedom than criminals held in jails.
Alfie saw that first-hand thanks to the content of the letters Brady sent him.
He said: 'He poured out all of his hatred for the system on these pages of the letters he sent me. He said of the staff, 'I don't speak to any of the maggots'.
'I was amazed at the things he said about the staff. The letters were checked as they all had a little slip of paper confirming that the postal monitor had read them.
'But they never crossed anything out. They let all his hatred spill out from beyond the hospital walls, which I was surprised at.
'There were things crossed out in some of Sutcliffe's letters, so the post monitors seemed stricter in Broadmoor than Ashworth.'
Missing remains
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Keith Bennett was murdered by the pair when he was just 12 - but his body was never found
Credit: EPA
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Keith's mother Winifred kept up the search for his remains until her death in 2012
Credit: Alamy
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Brady was let out of prison in the late 1980s to pinpoint where he'd buried those he'd killed
Credit: Mirrorpix
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Further searches for the body of Keith Bennett were undertaken in 2022
Credit: PA
Alfie repeatedly quizzed Brady over the enduring mystery at the heart of the Moors Murders case – the location of Keith Bennett's body.
Brady and Hindley killed the 12-year-old in 1964 and buried his body on Saddleworth Moor, but despite repeated searches the police have never found him.
The pair were even taken back to the moor on a number of occasions but were unable to pinpoint the spot.
Brady later told Alfie he would never help the police to look again – for fear that others would take the credit.
Alife said: 'I asked him again and again. He said, 'It's history. I'll never repeat my offer to help.'
'He blamed the police for messing up the searches when he did go to the moor. So the fact that Keith's family couldn't have a proper funeral wasn't his fault, it was 'the police's fault'.
Brady blamed the police for messing up the searches when he did go to the moor. So the fact that Keith's family couldn't have a proper funeral wasn't his fault, it was 'the police's fault'
Alfie James
'It was another example of him refusing to accept responsibility.
'A few years later I asked him again, and this time he said he would be willing to help.
'But then he changed his mind, saying they messed it up and would be squabbling about who's going to get the publicity over it, who would get the glory if Keith was found.'
In one letter Brady wrote: 'Politicians, police and this penal warehouse spent their only effort on squabbling for the most PR for themselves. I won't repeat the offer.'
Dodged questions
In the early years of their relationship, Alfie keenly anticipated receiving one of Brady's letters, looking forward to fresh insights into his motivation for the crimes.
Alfie said: 'He was a good letter writer. He was intelligent, his punctuation was always spot on and he had a good memory for detail.
'His letters would be front and back, sometimes four pages, with really small writing, so there was a lot of detail. But he often dodged questions.
'Serial killers sometimes start out by hurting animals, and I had read about him throwing a cat off a roof, so I asked him about it.
'But instead of saying whether he had or had not done it, and if he had why, he ranted about the Royal Family killing animals by going shooting. Again, avoiding responsibility for his own actions.'
The letters were also becoming hate-filled rants.
He branded support for missing Madeleine McCann as "hypocritical hype" and accused people of 'whining' about the 7/7 attacks which killed 52 people in London in 2005.
It was all me, me, me - which I guess speaks volumes about how the mind of a serial killer works
Alfie James
He also branded the UK as 'the a***hole of Europe."
The letters became so bitter – and so boring – that Alife eventually called time on their relationship a few years before Brady died in Ashworth in 2017, aged 79.
He said: 'The letters were getting more and more repetitive and were all about the hardship he claimed he was suffering because Ashworth wouldn't let him starve himself to death.
'There was not a single word of remorse for his victims or their families.
'It was all me, me, me - which I guess speaks volumes about how the mind of a serial killer works.'
'I'm The Yorkshire Ripper' by Robin Perrie and Alfie James is published by Mirror Books and is available in paperback and as an ebook. Buy it on Amazon now.
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Brady's letters reveal a man who is egotistical and self-obsessed
Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd
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The killer ended up at Ashworth high-security hospital in Merseyside
Credit: Alamy
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Brady branded support for missing Madeleine McCann 'hypocritical hype'
Credit: PA
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Brady passed away in 2017 after becoming unwell
Credit: Mirrorpix
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Scottish Sun

time11 hours ago

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Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) IN the afterglow of shooting the ­Lionesses to Euros victory, striker Chloe Kelly told the watching world: 'I'm so proud to be English!' For a player from Scotland, Wales, ­Ireland, France or the US, a simple exclamation of national pride in their homeland nation would go unremarked. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 6 Hopefully Keir Starmer's new social media policing will not trouble our new net queen, hero goalie Hannah Hampton, who evoked her Englishness in a post-match interview Credit: Getty 6 In the afterglow of shooting the Lionesses to Euros victory, striker Chloe Kelly told the watching world: 'I'm so proud to be English!' Credit: Shutterstock Editorial 6 As Chloe and Hanna showed rare public pride in England — it was a striking moment in today's cautious national climate Credit: Getty Here in England it sparked a social media frenzy. Some half-jokingly wondered whether such publicly avowed patriotism would elicit a knock on the door from cops. One X user posted a picture of officers on a door camera with the caption: 'Hi Chloe Kelly, police here, we just need to speak to you about your nationalistic ­outburst.' Posters were referencing the new elite police squad set up by the Home Office to monitor anti-immigrant sentiment online, aimed to prevent a summer of riots. As we see time and time again, expressing a love for England and displaying a St George Cross flag can erroneously be interpreted by those who wish to divide us as Far Right rabble-rousing. So we shall watch and wait to see who gets caught up in this new net. Hopefully it wil not trouble our new net queen, hero goalie Hannah Hampton who also evoked her Englishness in a post-match interview. 'We've shown during this tournament that we can come back when we go a goal down, we have that grit, we've got English blood in us,' she told TV viewers. That two young women — part of a diverse team that reflects ­modern England — were happy to express pride in their homeland should be a wake-up call to our nation's elite, falling over themselves to praise Sarina ­Wiegman's aces since Sunday night's ­stunning win. This new flowering of Englishness comes in an era where it's become fashionable to talk the country down and smother it with colonial guilt. Chloe Kelly completes Lionesses' greatest comeback yet to retain Euros title Many on the metropolitan left in Britain have long had a sneering disdain for the emblems of the nation. In 2014, Dame Emily Thornberry's snobby tweet of a Medway home with England flags flying and a white van in the drive saw her resign from the then Labour Shadow ­Cabinet. The following year fellow Islington MP Jeremy Corbyn, who was then Labour's leader, failed to sing the National Anthem at a service to mark the 75th anniversary of the Battle of Britain. Not only did it appear an affront to the memory of 'The Few' — those who had lost their lives in the history-defining ­conflict — it was also bad ­politics. This new flowering of Englishness comes in an era where it's become fashionable to talk the country down and smother it with colonial guilt Labour signalled that it was drifting away from its traditional, patriotic ­working-class base who loved their country, their flag, their monarchy and their football team. Sir Keir Starmer recognised Labour's patriotic deficit late in the day, the piping up about his pride in the nation and ­instigating the singing of the National Anthem at party conference. Later, Corbyn, now in the throes of setting up a new hard left party (don't expect it to have a Union Jack emblem), called singing God Save The King at Labour's annual get-together 'very, very odd'. Such sentiments drove away ­voters in the so-called 'red wall' ­constituencies in the north. Little wonder that as the Starmer project flounders, Reform UK — unafraid to fly the flag — have now found fertile ground in once Labour heartlands. English patriotism has long hid its light under a bushel — not helped by the St George Cross being adopted by far-right knuckle draggers like the English Defence League. Compare the comparably muted St George's Day celebrations to the green carnival of St Patrick's Day. In America, with a bloody history to rival Britain's, Old Glory is hung from garden flag poles across the land, whether the owner is Republican or Democrat. Some argue that our patriotic reserve is part of the essence of Englishness. Chloe and Hannah showed the world they were gutsy, skilled, confident, joyous — and proud to be English Yet, Chloe Kelly and Hannah Hampton wore their national pride on their sleeve. It was remarkable for being such a rarity in English public life. Former Government special adviser James Price wrote on X: 'I haven't heard anyone on telly say that about England in so long. 'For all the sneering from some quarters, that's just such a wonderful thing to hear. Much more of this please, in all kinds of arenas.' Much has been made of the British — as well as English — preoccupation with our victorious role in World War Two. Yet, standing alone against Nazi Germany — real fascists not someone misgendering you on social media — was a crowning achievement of the British Empire, with theatres of war in Africa and Asia as well as Europe. Swell with pride The number of red poppies displayed on St George flags is testimony to how important it remains to our national story. After the war — under Clement Attlee's Labour government — a sense of patriotic purpose and unity helped rebuild Britain. A shared togetherness can work wonders for the economy and the national mood. Remember Cool Britannia in the 1990s when the nation revelled in its identity? It was a soft power and financial winner. Everyone has their own sense of Englishness in a land that produced the likes of William Shakespeare, Jane Austen, Charles Darwin, Florence Nightingale, John Lennon, Agatha Christie and Sir Isaac Newton, to name but a few. For some it's rolling moorlands of the Pennines and Cumbria, others might choose dining out on chicken tikka masala or dancing to dub reggae at the Notting Hill Carnival. Many will swell with pride re-watching Bobby Moore wiping his muddied hands before accepting the World Cup from the Queen. Now the Lionesses have roared and added their story to our national identity. Chloe and Hannah showed the world they were gutsy, skilled, confident, joyous — and proud to be English. 6 Keir's Labour signalled that it was drifting away from its traditional, patriotic ­working-class base who loved their country, their flag, their monarchy and their football team Credit: AFP 6 Remember Cool Britannia in the 1990s when the nation revelled in its identity? It was a soft power and financial winner Credit: EPA

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