Bible John
Bible John | |
---|---|
Details | |
Victims | 3 |
Span of crimes | 22 February 1968 – 31 October 1969 |
Location(s) | Glasgow, Scotland |
Bible John is an unidentified serial killer who is believed to have murdered three young women between 1968 and 1969 in Glasgow, Scotland.[1]
The victims of Bible John were all young brunette women between the ages of 25 and 32, all of whom met their murderer at the Barrowland Ballroom, a dance hall and music venue in the city. The perpetrator has never been identified and the case remains both unsolved and one of the most extensive manhunts in Scottish criminal history.[2] The case would prove to be the first time in Scotland in which the Crown Office authorised publication of a composite drawing of an individual suspected of murder.[3]
This unidentified serial killer became known as "Bible John" due to his having repeatedly quoted from the Bible and to have condemned any form of adultery while in the company of his final victim.[4] The known movements and modus operandi of convicted serial killer and rapist Peter Tobin gave rise to speculation that he might be Bible John, after his conviction for three murders in the late 2000s, but police later eliminated Tobin as a suspect.
First murders
[edit]Patricia Docker
[edit]On 23 February 1968, the naked body of 25-year-old auxiliary nurse Patricia Docker was found in the doorway of a lock-up garage by a man on his way to work; her body was discovered behind 27 Carmichael Place, Battlefield, Glasgow.[5] [6] The location of her body was a few hundred yards from her home in Langside Place. Her body bore evidence of extensive blunt force trauma, particularly to the face and head.[7] She had been strangled to death with a strong ligature, possibly a belt.[8][n 1] Docker's handbag, watch, and clothes were missing from the crime scene, although her shoes remained at the scene.[9] Her clothing was never found,[10] although her handbag and possibly her pants[5] were later recovered from the River Cart by an underwater search unit;[11] her watch casing and bracelet were recovered from a pool of water close to the murder scene.[12][5]
Extensive door-to-door inquiries in the area produced a witness who recalled hearing a female scream, "Leave me alone!" the previous evening. Little hard evidence was discovered at the crime scene. Nonetheless, an ambulanceman who retrieved the body informed investigators the victim had been a nurse who worked at Mearnskirk Hospital in nearby Renfrewshire.[13] Consequently, the victim was formally identified by her father the following day.[14]
Docker was a married mother of one, estranged from her husband.[15] The night of her murder, she informed her parents she would spend the evening dancing at the Majestic Ballroom on Hope Street, although for unknown reasons, she was believed to have chosen to spend the majority of the evening at the Barrowland Ballroom, probably because of the over-25s night which the venue hosted each Thursday.[16] When she failed to return home that evening, her parents assumed she had spent the night with a friend.[17] Police inquiries would only determine several days later[18] that in the late evening, Docker had left the Majestic Ballroom to attend the Barrowland.[19][13] However, there were no witnesses to the fact that Docker was at either the Majestic Ballroom or the Barrowland.[5]
A postmortem conducted by Gilbert Forbes at the University of Glasgow Medical School confirmed that the cause of death had been strangulation, and that Docker's body bore no clear evidence of sexual assault.[20][16] Investigators of the later reinvestigation of 1996 were also of the opinion that she had not been sexually assaulted or raped.[5] Furthermore, the stage of rigor mortis upon her body at the time of discovery indicated she had likely died shortly after she had left the Barrowland Ballroom.[8] Investigators surmised the perpetrator had likely grabbed Docker before repeatedly punching her and kicking her in the face as she twice screamed, "Leave me alone!"[12] He had then proceeded to strangle Docker to death, and leaving her naked body close to the doorway of the lock-up garage at Carmichael Place.[12]
It was not known for certain whether the place Docker was found was the murder site.[5] Police considered that she may have been dumped from a vehicle there, as the lane's gradient would have allowed a car to go down it quietly without using the engine.[5] A white Ford Consul 375 was sighted driving from Braemar Street into Overdale Street and then stopping at the junction with Carmichael Place.[5] Investigators noted that there were no signs of displacement at the scene or large blood staining, which would be expected had she been attacked at that site.[5]
Jemima MacDonald
[edit]On Saturday 16 August 1969, a 31-year-old mother of three named Jemima MacDonald also opted to spend the evening dancing at the Barrowland Ballroom.[21] MacDonald was a regular attendee of the Barrowland and, according to family custom, her sister, Margaret O'Brien, took care of her three children in her absence.[22] As midnight approached, she was seen by several people in the company of a young, well-dressed and well-spoken man of slim build, aged between 25 and 35 and between 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) and 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) in height.[23] This individual had short, dark brown hair with fair streaks,[24] likely spoke with a distinctive Glaswegian accent, and occasionally inserted brief biblical quotations into his conversation.[25]
MacDonald was seen leaving the Barrowland shortly after midnight on 17 August in the company of this individual and was last seen walking towards either Main Street or Landressy Street, in the direction of her home, at approximately 12:40 a.m.[23] O'Brien became concerned when her sister failed to return home. Later the same day, she began hearing local rumours that young children had been seen leaving a derelict tenement building in MacKeith Street discussing a body in the premises.[6] By the Monday morning, O'Brien was so concerned that she herself, fearing the worst, walked into the old building. There she discovered her own sister's extensively battered body lying face down, with her shoes and stockings lying beside her.[9]
A postmortem concluded that MacDonald had been raped and extensively beaten, particularly about the face,[12] before she had been strangled to death with one of her own stockings. Her murder had occurred approximately 30 hours before her body had been discovered.[26] Unlike Docker, the body of MacDonald was fully clothed,[6] although her underclothing had been torn, and, like Docker, she had been menstruating at the time of her death.[13]
Police inquiries into MacDonald's movements on the night of her murder produced several eyewitnesses who were able to accurately describe the man in whose company she had been seen at the Barrowland. Door-to-door inquiries on MacKeith Street also produced a woman who remembered hearing female screams on the evening of MacDonald's murder, although this individual could not recall the precise time. Consequently, police considered this information of little use to their inquiry.[27]
Initial investigation
[edit]Although the City of Glasgow Police noted several striking similarities between the murders of Docker and MacDonald, including that both women had attended the Barrowland Ballroom on the evening of their murder, been beaten before being strangled to death with a ligature, were menstruating, and had their handbags taken from the crime scene, initially both murders were not considered to be the work of the same perpetrator.[28]
Despite extensive public appeals, the investigation into the murder of Docker had quickly become a cold case. Police had little information, owing to both a lack of witnesses and hard evidence.[29] The investigation had also been severely hindered by investigators not discovering until three days after her death that Docker had attended the Barrowland on the evening of her murder. Eighteen months later, following the discovery of MacDonald, police became aware of remarkable similarities to the murder of Docker. Although police did not conclusively link both murders to the same perpetrator, they could not completely discount this theory. In addition, police were certain the perpetrator(s) held a high degree of local geographical knowledge. However, they may have been a stranger to the district, as none of the eyewitnesses with whom investigators conversed directly knew the man or men seen in the company of either woman prior to her murder.[15]
For the first time in a Scottish murder hunt, a composite drawing of the man with whom MacDonald had last been seen alive was given to the press, being widely distributed via both newspapers and upon television throughout Scotland in efforts to identify the suspect.[6] Moreover, both male and female undercover police officers performed discreet surveillance at the Barrowland Ballroom in efforts to identify the suspect.[30] Police surveillance at the Barrowland Ballroom would be terminated in late October 1969 due to the initiative failing to produce any suspects. Detectives were also blamed by proprietors for a sharp decrease in attendance figures.[31]
Helen Puttock
[edit]On 31 October 1969, a man walking his dog discovered the body of 29-year-old Helen Puttock behind a tenement in the Scotstoun district of Glasgow. Her body was found beside a drainpipe in the back garden of her Earl Street flat. She had been stripped partially naked, extensively beaten about the face before being raped, then strangled to death with one of her own stockings.[32] The contents of her handbag had been scattered close to her body, although the handbag itself was missing from the crime scene. Grass and weed stains upon the soles of Puttock's feet and shoes indicated that she had engaged in a ferocious struggle with her killer. She had evidently at one point attempted to scale a nearby railway embankment. Her body also bore a deep bite mark on her upper right thigh.[33] As had been the case with the two previous victims, Helen had been menstruating at the time of her murder.[7] Her murderer had placed her sanitary towel beneath her left arm.
The evening prior to the murder, Puttock and her sister Jean Langford had been to the Barrowland Ballroom, where both had become acquainted with two men, both named John. One of these individuals had said he worked as a slater and resided in Castlemilk,[34] while the other individual had been a well-spoken man who did not disclose where he actually lived. After being in the company of these two individuals for more than an hour, all four left the Barrowland to head home. The man named John who had been Jean's dance partner walked to George Square to board a bus,[n 2] while Langford, Puttock, and the man who had been Puttock's dance partner hailed a taxi. The trio set off from Glasgow Cross, making a 20-minute westward journey toward Langford's Knightswood home. During the trio's conversation in the cab, most of the crucial information pertaining to the killer's psychological profile became apparent.[6] Upon arrival at her home, Langford exited the cab leaving Puttock and her dance partner still inside. The cab then continued towards Puttock's home in Scotstoun.
Langford later informed detectives[11] that her sister's companion had been a teetotal individual[35] who repeatedly quoted from the Old Testament stories of Moses during the time she and her sister had conversed with him in the taxi. He had also referred to the Barrowland as an "adulterous den of iniquity," and of his disapproval of married women visiting the premises as the quartet had retrieved their coats at the end of the evening.[36] She had exited the taxi at Kelso Street, before seeing the vehicle turn towards Earl Street.[37][n 3][11]
Suspect
[edit]The suspect was described by Puttock's sister Jean Langford as being a tall, slim, and well-dressed young man with reddish or fair hair rounded neatly at the back,[38] aged between 25 and 30, and approximately 5 feet 10 inches (1.78 m) in height. This individual had given his name as either "John Templeton," "John Sempleson," or "John Emerson," and he had been a polite and well-spoken individual,[39] having frequently quoted from the Old Testament during the trio's taxi ride home, while also indicating he was neither Catholic nor Protestant.[37] Langford stated that it had become increasingly clear to her as the trio had ridden in the taxi that this man had considered her presence in the vehicle to be an inconvenience.[40] At one point during the ride, he had explained to the women the reason he refrained from consuming alcohol was due to his being conditioned by a strict parental attitude, before adding: "I don't drink at Hogmanay; I pray." He had also alluded to his father's belief that dance halls were "dens of iniquity," with any married woman who frequented these premises being "adulterous" by nature.[41][n 4]
Langford had informed detectives that the man accompanying Puttock had been a "slim, tall" individual who had been dressed in a well-cut brown Reid and Taylor brand suit[42] and who smoked Embassy cigarettes;[37] she also recalled his mentioning that he had been familiar with several drinking premises in the Yoker district of Glasgow,[34] and that he had at one stage worked in a laboratory.[43] She was able to describe the distinct facial features of this man, such as overlapping front teeth. However, bouncers at the Barrowland Ballroom dismissed much of this description, claiming that the man had been a short and well-spoken individual with black hair.[n 5]
The last possible sighting of the suspect was made by both the driver and conductor on a night service bus, who noticed a young man matching the description given by Langford alighting a bus at the junction of Dumbarton Road and Gray Street at approximately 2:00 a.m. on 31 October.[34] He was in a particularly disheveled state, with mud stains on his jacket and a livid red mark on his cheek just beneath one eye. Both witnesses also recalled his repeatedly tucking a short cuff of one sleeve into his jacket sleeve (a man's cufflink had been found alongside the body of Helen Puttock).[44] This individual was last seen walking towards the public ferry to cross the River Clyde to the south side of the city.[45]
Link to series
[edit]The murder of Helen Puttock held remarkable similarities to the two previous murders, further raising suspicions that all three murders had been committed by the same person. Each of the victims had been the mother of at least one child and had met her murderer at the Barrowland Ballroom. The handbag of each woman was missing. Each victim had been strangled to death, and at least two of these women had been raped prior to their murders.[4] In addition, each of the three women had been escorted home by her killer and murdered within yards of her doorstep, and all had been menstruating at the time of death.[26] Each had had her sanitary towel or tampon placed upon, beneath, or near her body,[33][46] leading to speculation that the women had been murdered for their refusal to engage in intercourse with their murderer excused by their periods.[47]
"It is quite incredible that this man has eluded us. I am positive this man comes from Glasgow or nearby. He is between 25 and 30, between 5 ft 10 in and 6 ft tall, has light red hair, good features, blue-grey eyes, and a smart modern appearance. I do not think he is a very religious man, but just has a normal intelligent working knowledge of the Bible which he likes to air ... there must be many people who know someone who looks like this artist's impression."
Detective Superintendent Joe Beattie, describing the prime suspect in the Bible John murders (1972).[13]
Ongoing investigation
[edit]Within hours of the discovery of the body of Helen Puttock, an additional composite drawing of the suspect was created using the detailed description provided by her sister.[48] Langford saw the earlier image created after the murder of Jemima MacDonald and believed it was an excellent likeness.[49][n 6] Detective Superintendent Joe Beattie asked the public to closely study this composite drawing, should it resemble anyone they knew. Due to the suspect's hair being unfashionably short for the era, over 450 hairdressers in and around Glasgow were shown the updated drawing of the suspect, and all dentists in and around the city were asked to examine their records to determine whether they held records of a male patient with overlapping incisors and a missing tooth in the upper right jaw. Both lines of inquiry proved fruitless.[42] The police also produced an artist's impression portrait, created by Lennox Patterson, Registrar of the Glasgow School of Art, based on the recollections of Puttock's sister. In June 1970, police employed the photofit system in an attempt to produce a better likeness of the suspect. This was the first instance this method of identifying a murder suspect was utilised in Scotland.[50]
More than 100 detectives were assigned to work full-time on the case, and 50,000 witness statements would be taken in subsequent door-to-door inquiries.[33][51] Ultimately, more than 5,000 potential suspects would be questioned in the first year of the inquiry alone, and Jean Langford would be required to attend over 300 identity parades,[43] although she was adamant none of the individuals required to participate in these identity parades had been the individual with whom she had last seen her sister, and all would be cleared of any involvement.[33] Fearing that the perpetrator would strike again, a team of 16 detectives was instructed to mingle with dancers at all dance halls in Glasgow. In particular, these detectives frequented the Barrowland on Thursday and Saturday nights at the over-25s events, where each victim was presumed to have met her murderer.[52][n 7]
Despite the extensive manhunt, no further developments would arise and the investigation into the three murders gradually became cold, with many officers assigned to the case believing that the perpetrator had either died, been jailed for an unrelated offence, had been incarcerated at a mental hospital, or that senior police officers had known his actual identity but had been unable to prove he had committed the murders.[10] Others speculated that he may have simply moved away from the Glasgow district, or murdered whenever in the vicinity;[54] this possibility prompted police to circulate multiple copies of the composite drawing at all British Army, Navy, and Air Force bases in the United Kingdom, Europe, and the Middle and Far East; this line of inquiry failed to produce any significant leads.[55]
Potential suspects
[edit]"John White"
[edit]One former detective chief inspector, Les Brown (then working with the Strathclyde Police), has supplied current investigators with details of the arrest of a suspect conducted in 1969 which he believes was of an extremely likely perpetrator, but which was dismissed, simply because he did not have notably overlapping front teeth.[56]
According to Brown, the man's arguing with a young woman in the Barrowland Ballroom immediately prior to his arrest had greatly raised investigators' concerns, yet this suspect was released from custody, despite the fact he had closely resembled the facial composite and had subsequently supplied police with a false name and address before revealing his true name and address in the Gorbals. Brown said that the simple fact that this particular suspect did not have notably overlapping front teeth – despite one police sergeant's acknowledgement of his being the best suspect yet – was sufficient for ordering his release.[56]
Several years later, Brown spoke at length to a detective who had taken the same man to a hospital after arresting him outside the Barrowland Ballroom at the time of the murders. Although the suspect had needed several stitches in his head following an altercation, as soon as his handcuffs had been released, he escaped from the hospital. At the time of this incident, this individual had also falsely given his name to medical personnel as John White.
In addition to this basic circumstantial evidence, the "whole demeanour" of the man had led Les Brown and several of his colleagues to believe he may have been the perpetrator.[56] However, after Brown wrote of his suspicions in his 2005 autobiography, the individual came forward and offered to provide a DNA sample in order to clear his name.[57] This has led to his elimination as a suspect.[58]
Anonymous Netherlands resident
[edit]In 1983, a Lanarkshire contractor named Harry Wyllie contacted Strathclyde Police. This individual claimed to conclusively know that his friend had been Bible John, adding that both he and his friend had been raised in the Cranhill district of Glasgow and both had frequented the Barrowland Ballroom in the 1960s. Wyllie had, he claimed, read an article in the Evening Times five years previously before suddenly realising his friend had been the perpetrator of the murders. The alleged suspect was traced living in the Netherlands, married to a Dutch woman.[59] Nothing more was ever heard from the claimant or the reputed suspect.
Hannah Martin rapist
[edit]In the years after the Bible John killings, a number of women came forward to claim that they had been sexually assaulted after an evening at the Barrowland.[60] One of these women, Hannah Martin, claimed that she had been assaulted and raped by Bible John and had subsequently given birth to his child at the Glasgow Royal Maternity Hospital in January 1970; a daughter she initially named Isobel.[60][n 8]
In April 1969, Martin had gone to the Barrowland;[60] she ended up leaving the dance hall in the company of a tall man with whom she then had sex. Martin then accepted his offer of a lift home.[60] However, during the drive, the man's sexual demeanour became more aggressive, and Martin, drunk and terrified she may be attacked, vomited in the man's car.[60] This individual then bundled her out of the car and drove off, leaving her standing on the pavement.[60] One author, David Leslie, has claimed that Martin's daughter could be the one indubitable link to the identity of Bible John.[60]
John Irvine McInnes
[edit]In 1996, Strathclyde Police exhumed the body of John Irvine McInnes from a graveyard in Stonehouse, South Lanarkshire.[62] McInnes, who had served in the Scots Guards, had died by suicide in 1980 at the age of 41, by severing the brachial artery in his upper arm. He was the cousin of one of the original suspects in the Bible John investigation[63] and related to a senior police officer.[64] A DNA sample was taken from McInnes's body for comparison with semen samples found on the stockings belonging to Helen Puttock and which had been used to strangle her.[65][66][n 9]
The results of the testing conducted proved inconclusive, with then-Lord Advocate Lord Mackay stating insufficient evidence[67] existed to link McInnes with the murder of Helen Puttock.[68] The Crown officially cleared McInnes of any involvement in the Bible John murders in July 1996.[69]
Strathclyde Police and the McInnes family pathologist confirmed in 2005 that further advancements in DNA testing had now enabled a match between McInnes's DNA and the killer's to be fully disproven.[70]
Peter Tobin
[edit]Several criminologists and investigators have speculated that convicted serial killer Peter Tobin may have been Bible John. Tobin was convicted in May 2007 of the 2006 murder of Polish student Angelika Kluk, who had been raped, beaten, and then stabbed to death;[71] he had relocated from Shettleston, Glasgow,[15] to England in August 1969 (before the final two murders committed by Bible John) after marrying his first wife, whom he had met at the Barrowland Ballroom in 1968.[72][73][74][n 10] That Tobin attacked Kluk so ferociously, hid her body, and then absconded to London prior to his arrest (in addition to the methods of violence perpetrated on the two 1991 victims unearthed from his Margate home's garden) did not suggest the work of an amateur.[75] However, one discrepancy is that Bible John displayed his victims' bodies in public places, whereas Tobin buried all his known victims.[76]
Some contemporary visual similarities exist between Peter Tobin when aged in his 20s and the 1969 composite drawing of Bible John, although the composite drawing showed Bible John with red hair and contemporary pictures of Tobin show he did not have this hair colour.[77] In addition, all three of Tobin's former wives have given accounts of being repeatedly imprisoned, throttled, beaten, and raped by him, and each has stated he had been driven to extreme physical violence by the female menstrual cycle (a factor long suspected by investigators as being the perpetrator's motive behind the murders). In addition, Tobin is known to have been a staunch Roman Catholic with strong religious views, and the alias Bible John may have given to Jean Langford and Helen Puttock in 1969 is similar to one of the pseudonyms known to have been regularly used by Tobin: John Semple.[74][n 11]
Criminologist David Wilson strongly believes the available evidence supports his theory that Tobin is Bible John, although others have criticised his theory.[58][78] He has stated that the moment he believed Tobin was Bible John occurred during Tobin's trial for the 1991 murder of 18-year-old Dinah McNicol, one of the women whose bodies had been found in his Margate garden. The circumstantial evidence which Wilson uses to support this theory includes striking similarities between trial testimony from an acquaintance of McNicol who had been in her company on the evening of her abduction and the conversation with Bible John that Jean Langford claimed to have had on the evening of her sister's murder; among the important points of overlap are both men mentioning they did not drink at Hogmanay and having a cousin who had once scored a hole-in-one in a golf match. This information, alongside other circumstantial evidence, led Wilson to state: "I didn't set out to prove Tobin was Bible John, but I would stake my professional reputation on it."[79]
Operation Anagram
As a result of a police investigation named Operation Anagram, which was initiated in 2006 to trace the movements of Tobin throughout the decades and to determine his potential culpability in any other crimes, a woman informed investigators she had been raped by Tobin after she had met him at the Barrowland Ballroom in 1968, shortly after the first of the murders believed to have been committed by Bible John.[80]
Elimination as a suspect
Tobin has since been eliminated as a suspect by police.[77] Although often reported that Tobin moved from Glasgow to Brighton after the 1969 murders, he in fact relocated from Glasgow to Brighton with his fiancée, Margaret Mountney, before the second murder attributed to Bible John.[72] Operation Anagram discovered that Tobin was in Brighton at the time of the final two Bible John murders.[77] He had married his first wife in Brighton on 6 August 1969, 10 days before the 16 August murder of Jemima MacDonald, as recorded on their marriage certificate.[81] Tobin's wife testified the pair were still on their honeymoon in Brighton at the time of the murder of the second victim, and she insists he was with her at the time.[82] Tobin was in police custody regarding an unrelated crime when another of the killings occurred. He was also still living in Brighton at the time of the third murder, meaning he would have had to travel without his wife's knowledge to Glasgow and back from Brighton to have committed the murder of Helen Puttock.[72]
Tobin's DNA was checked against the semen sample for Bible John as part of Operation Anagram. The results of this analysis conclusively proved the bodily fluid did not source from Tobin.[77] The doubts surrounding the DNA evidence notwithstanding, the police also have a record of the bite mark that was found on Helen Puttock's body which they can cross-check with Tobin's dental records, as had been done with John McInnes when he was exhumed and subsequently eliminated as a suspect in 1996.[83]
David Swindle, the senior investigating officer in charge of Operation Anagram, has stated that there is no evidence to link Tobin to the Bible John murders, and Operation Anagram eventually discounted the theory.[77] Swindle had previously presided over the 2002 review of the Bible John murders, four years before the initial discoveries of Tobin's murders.[84]
Although David Wilson claimed in his 2010 book The Lost British Serial Killer that Bible John was Tobin, his co-writer for the book Paul Harrison later recanted on the claims they made in the book. In 2013, Harrison published a new book, instead claiming Bible John was a police officer.[85]
Domestic violence theory
[edit]A former crime editor for the Daily Record newspaper, Jane Hamilton, has since stated that detectives whom she has interviewed who had reviewed the Bible John case files in the 1980s were of the belief that two of the murders linked to Bible John—Patricia Docker and Jemima MacDonald—were actually domestic incidents.[78]
Patricia Docker's estranged husband Alex had been an early suspect in her murder.[86] The two had married in 1963, but their marriage gradually deteriorated shortly after a posting to Cyprus, where Docker was alleged to have had affairs, followed by a brief move to Digby, Lincolnshire, where Alex Docker was an RAF corporal.[87][21][5] Docker had a daughter from an affair with an American airman in Edinburgh.[5] Docker had decided to return to Glasgow with their son (b. 1964) in April 1967, and lived there with her parents at the time of her murder.[88][21]
Alex—who claimed to have last seen Docker at her home in October 1967 to discuss divorce[21][5]—was considered by police to have had a possible motive to kill his estranged wife. Alex Docker wanted a hasty divorce in order to re-marry his new partner, who he stayed at a hotel with on the day after Patricia's murder as 'husband and wife'.[5] Furthermore, investigators discovered that he had also been on leave from RAF Digby in Scotland at the time of the murder.[86] Alex and Patricia had been corresponding about divorce in the weeks before the murder, and shortly after it Alex took their son from his grandparents to live with him and his new partner Anne in Lincolnshire.[21][5] The son confirmed in a BBC podcast in 2022 that Alex Docker was now dead.[5]
Jemima MacDonald had also recently separated from her husband and gone back to live in Glasgow at the time of her murder.[89][90][91] The press devoted extensive focus on the fact MacDonald had borne three children by two different men; her two youngest with a man described as a 'West Indian', and her eldest with a man described only as a Yugoslav national with whom she had reportedly become acquainted in Liverpool.[91][21] In a 2022 BBC podcast, MacDonald's former husband Elridge 'Bunny' Mottley (the 'West Indian') revealed that he had been considered a suspect by police and has been spoken to about this over the years.[92]
Contemporary police reports indicate MacDonald had visited the Barrowland for three successive nights in the week prior to her murder, and that she was "in receipt of public funds, plus maintenance from the fathers of her children".[21] MacDonald and Mottley had previously feuded over MacDonald's regular nights out, with Mottley feeling she was neglected the children, and they also clashed over the the maintenance money.[92] In 1964 MacDonald had taken legal action against him over the matter in order to force him to pay her maintenance payments for the upkeep of their children.[92]
Aftermath
[edit]No further murder victims killed in Scotland or elsewhere in the United Kingdom have ever been conclusively attributed to Bible John,[93] and the manhunt for this murderer was one of the most extensive manhunts in Scottish criminal history.[94] The murders of the three women remain unsolved,[9] although the case remains open, with many investigators remaining certain that the perpetrator(s)[66] of these crimes were highly likely to have been shielded by one or more individuals whom he had known.[95]
No uniform consensus exists that the three killings were actually the work of the same person.[96] It has been claimed that the gap of 18 months between the first two killings is unusual for a serial killer,[n 12] and that the later two murders may have either been copycat killings, or the sole two committed by the same perpetrator. Criticism has also been levelled against the police for potentially hampering their own investigation by prematurely jumping to the conclusion that all three murders had been committed by the same person.[98]
In 2004, police announced their intentions to genetically test a number of men in a further attempt to identify the perpetrator, with all individuals concerned being requested to submit blood samples.[67][99][100] This endeavour followed the previous discovery of an 80% genetic match from the semen samples retrieved from the final crime scene attributed to Bible John with a DNA sample retrieved at the site of a minor crime committed two years earlier. The sample was enough of a match to lead officers to believe that the person who committed the offence was related to the killer.[101][102][103]
The sole witness ever to have engaged in a lengthy conversation with Bible John, Jean Langford, died in September 2010 at the age of 74. Langford had given police the description used to form the second composite drawing created of the suspect, which continues to remain the most significant clue as to the perpetrator's physical appearance. Despite Professor Wilson's assertion that Peter Tobin may have been Bible John, when Jean Langford discussed her sister's murderer many decades later, she dismissed this theory, stating emphatically that Tobin had not been the man with whom she had shared a taxi on the night of her sister's murder.[104]
Media
[edit]Books
[edit]- Bavin-Mizzi, Jill (2024). Bible John: A New Suspect. London: Europe Books. ISBN 979-1-220-14978-5.
- Crow, Peter; Samson, Peter (1998). Bible John: Hunt for a Killer. Glasgow: First Press Publishing. ISBN 978-1-901-60300-2.
- García, Francisco (2023). We All Go into the Dark: The Hunt for Bible John. New York: HarperCollins Publishers Limited. ISBN 978-0-008-53145-4.
- Harrison, Paul (2013). Dancing with the Devil: The Bible John Murders. Skipton: Vertical. ISBN 978-1-904-09173-8.
- Malloy, Andrew D. (2011). Bible John – Closure. Kent: Pneuma Springs. ISBN 978-1-907-72816-7.
- Simpson, Donald (2001). Power in the Blood: Whatever Happened to Bible John. London: Bandwagon. ISBN 978-0-954-17810-9.
- Stoddart, Charles (1980). Bible John: Search for a Sadist. Edinburgh: Paul Harris. ISBN 978-0-904-50589-4.
Television
[edit]- The BBC has broadcast a 30-minute documentary focusing upon the murders committed by Bible John. Presented by Hugh Cochrane, this episode was screened on 18 September 1970, and concluded with a direct quote from Jeremiah, Chapter 23, Verse 24, appealing to the perpetrator to hand himself in to the police: 'Can any hide himself in secret places, that I shall not see him? saith the Lord?[43]
- Channel Four has broadcast a 25-minute documentary upon the Bible John murders. Titled Calling Bible John, this documentary was presented by Andrew O'Hagan and was first broadcast in March 1996.[105][106]
- The case of Bible John featured in a December 2005 episode of Unsolved. Narrated by Alex Norton, the program primarily focuses on the death of the final victim, Helen Puttock, and includes interviews with Puttock's husband George.[107]
- STV has broadcast a 45-minute documentary focusing upon the murders committed by Bible John. This documentary, titled In Search of Bible John, was initially broadcast in 2011, and explores the possibility Peter Tobin may have been the perpetrator of the three murders.
- A two-part documentary by BBC Scotland focuses on the manhunt for Bible John. Titled The Hunt for Bible John, this episode was first broadcast by BBC Scotland in November 2021, and across the UK on BBC Two in January 2022. The programme featured contributions from George Puttock, writer Andrew O'Hagan, journalist Magnus Linklater and psychologist David Canter.[107][50]
Radio/Podcast
[edit]BBC Sounds have broadcast a 13-part series focusing upon the murders committed by Bible John. Presented by journalist Audrey Gillan and titled Bible John: Creation of a Serial Killer, this series was broadcast between 29 September and 7 December 2022.[108]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ The item used to strangle Docker was later determined to have been her own stocking.
- ^ Police would later issue an appeal for this individual to come forward as a witness but he never responded to this appeal.
- ^ Helen Puttock had been married at the time of her murder, although she is not known to have disclosed this fact to her killer.
- ^ The suspect's repeatedly referencing quotes from the Old Testament led to Evening Times journalist John Quinn naming the unknown murderer "Bible John".[34]
- ^ Police initially considered the description provided by the bouncers to be a more reliable description than that provided by Jean Langford, as she had allegedly been intoxicated when she and her sister left the premises. Furthermore, police had reason to believe that the killer had not been quoting directly from the Bible, but had simply been referring to it. However, Jean strongly attested to her having been sober at the time she had left the Barrowland. A bouncer at the premises later stated that staff who worked at the premises were not "good with faces".
- ^ At the headquarters of the City of Glasgow Police, Jean Langford happened to view an earlier composite drawing created relating to the chief suspect in the murder of Jemima McDonald. Upon viewing this Identikit, Langford exclaimed, "That man looks just like him!"[48]
- ^ Two of the three victims murdered by Bible John had been killed on a Thursday, and one on a Saturday.[53]
- ^ The child was later renamed by her mother.[61]
- ^ According to a contemporary psychiatrist's report, the unusual method of suicide chosen by McInnes was akin to psychopathy, leading to suggestions McInnes may have opted to take his own life in search of the "ultimate thrill".[63]
- ^ A former detective named Joe Jackson, who had helped investigate the Bible John murders in the 1960s, has stated that he suspected Tobin may have been the perpetrator shortly after he was arrested for Kluk's murder in 2006, adding: "When I saw his photograph, I thought, 'This is as near to Bible John as you are going to get. This looks a winner.' He fitted the bill in every way, and he had connections with religion."[36]
- ^ Langford had claimed to investigators Bible John had given his name as either John Emerson, John Templeton, or John Sempleson.[74]
- ^ Professor David Wilson has stated that a lapse of time approximating 18 months is not unusual between a serial killer's first and second murders.[97]
References
[edit]- ^ Brown, David; O'Neill, Sean; Lister, David (14 November 2007). "'Bible John': The Sanctimonious Dancehall Killer who Vanished". The Times. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
- ^ Terry 2011, p. 112.
- ^ Whittington-Egan & Whittington-Egan 1992, p. 18.
- ^ a b Lane & Gregg 1995, p. 21.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Bible John: Creation of a Serial Killer 2. Patricia Docker". BBC Sounds. BBC. Retrieved 21 November 2024.
- ^ a b c d e Skelton, Douglas (10 February 1989). "20 Years on, the Mystery of Bible John Still Haunts a City". Evening Times. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
- ^ a b Whittington-Egan & Whittington-Egan 1992, p. 17.
- ^ a b Lane & Gregg 1995, p. 52.
- ^ a b c "Bible John: The Dancing Strangler". New York Daily News. 27 February 1972. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
- ^ a b MacDougall, Carl (9 October 1987). "Dark World of a Dance Hall Killer". Evening Times. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
- ^ a b c Lane & Gregg 1995, p. 53.
- ^ a b c d Day 1995, p. 34.
- ^ a b c d Maule, Henry (27 February 1972). "Bible John, the Dancing Strangler". Reading Eagle. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
- ^ Lloyd 1986, p. 191.
- ^ a b c "Fifty Years On, Britain's Top Serial Killer Expert Re-examines the Bible John Murders". The Herald. Glasgow. 18 February 2018. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
- ^ a b "Fifty Years On, Britain's Top Serial Killer Expert Re-examines the Bible John Murders". The Herald. Glasgow. 18 February 2018. Retrieved 10 July 2018.
- ^ "Did Bible John murder Helen Puttock, Jemima McDonald and Patricia Docker in Glasgow?". Glasgow Times. 18 July 2021. Retrieved 21 October 2022.
- ^ "Fifty Years On, Britain's Top Serial Killer Expert Re-examines the Bible John Murders". The Herald. Glasgow. 18 February 2018. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
- ^ "Bible John and the Barrowland Ballroom Murders". unsolvedcasebook.com. 22 May 2018. Retrieved 21 October 2022.
- ^ Lloyd 1986, pp. 191–192.
- ^ a b c d e f g "The Forgotten Women at the Heart of the Bible John Mystery". BBC News. 18 December 2022. Retrieved 19 December 2022.
- ^ Day 1995, p. 35.
- ^ a b Lloyd 1986, p. 195.
- ^ Lane & Gregg 1995, p. 253.
- ^ Maule, Henry (27 February 1972). "Bible John, the Dancing Strangler". Reading Eagle. Retrieved 10 July 2018.
- ^ a b "Bible John Killer May be Unmasked After 30 Years". The Daily Telegraph. London. 15 October 2000. Retrieved 19 June 2018.
- ^ Lloyd 1986, pp. 194–195.
- ^ Lloyd 1986, p. 194.
- ^ Lloyd 1986, p. 193.
- ^ Lloyd 1986, p. 196.
- ^ Lloyd 1986, pp. 196–197.
- ^ Lloyd 1986, p. 201.
- ^ a b c d Skelton, Douglas (18 February 1989). "Bible John: Final Part of a Harrowing Tale of Terror". Evening Times. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
- ^ a b c d Whittington-Egan 1998, ch. 15.
- ^ Newton 2004, p. 42.
- ^ a b "Former Detective Still Convinced Bible John is Behind Bars". STV News. 23 February 2018. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
- ^ a b c Day 1995, p. 36.
- ^ Lloyd 1986, p. 199.
- ^ "Dark Days and Dreadful Deeds that Haunt our City". Glasgow Times. 7 June 2005. Archived from the original on 8 February 2013. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
- ^ Lloyd 1986, p. 200.
- ^ McKay, Donna (5 December 2021). "Will We Ever Discover the Real Identity of Bible John?". The Herald. Glasgow. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
- ^ a b Lane & Gregg 1995, p. 54.
- ^ a b c Lloyd 1986, p. 204.
- ^ Day 1995, p. 37.
- ^ Wier 2011, p. 226.
- ^ Lloyd 1986, pp. 202–203.
- ^ "Was Peter Tobin Bible John?". The Scotsman. 6 December 2008. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
- ^ a b Lloyd 1986, p. 203.
- ^ Borland, Ben (4 November 2012). "I Am Sure the Famous Portrait of Bible John Shows the Wrong Man". Daily Express. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
- ^ a b "BBC One: The Hunt for Bible John". BBC. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
- ^ McKay, Ron (22 February 2018). "The True Story of Bible John and the Barrowland Killings". Glasgowlive.co.uk. Retrieved 18 July 2018.
- ^ Maule, Henry (27 February 1972). "Bible John, the Dancing Strangler". Reading Eagle. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
- ^ Lloyd 1986, p. 190.
- ^ "Bible John May be in England". The Herald. Glasgow. 16 October 2000. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
- ^ Maule, Henry (27 February 1972). "Bible John, the Dancing Strangler". Reading Eagle. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
- ^ a b c "Bible John Police Get New Information on Serial Killer's Identity". The Herald. Glasgow. 23 October 2005. Retrieved 31 July 2018.
- ^ Wilson & Harrison 2010, p. 64.
- ^ a b Wilson & Harrison 2010, p. 258.
- ^ Hildrey, Mike (7 February 1983). "Bible John: I Know it is Him". Evening Times. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
- ^ a b c d e f g Wilson & Harrison 2010, p. 66.
- ^ Leslie 2007, p. 26.
- ^ Blundell 1998, p. 21.
- ^ a b "DNA Tests Clear Bible John Suspect". The Herald. Glasgow. 5 July 1996. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
- ^ "Bible John Police 'Covered Up' Man in Taxi". BBC News. 24 November 2022. Retrieved 6 July 2023.
- ^ "DNA Breakthrough: Police Trace Family of Bible John Serial Killer". thefreelibrary.com. 19 December 2004. Retrieved 18 October 2004.
- ^ a b "Fifty Years On, Britain's Top Serial Killer Expert Re-examines the Bible John Murders". The Herald. Glasgow. 18 February 2018. Retrieved 17 July 2018.
- ^ a b "Men Give DNA in Bible John Case". BBC News. 12 December 2004. Retrieved 5 March 2019.
- ^ Freeman, James (5 July 1996). "DNA Tests Clear Bible John Suspect". The Herald. Glasgow. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
- ^ "DNA Tests Clear Bible John Suspect". The Herald. Glasgow. 5 July 1996. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
- ^ "Helen Puttock/Bible John". Unsolved. Season 2. Episode 6. 15 December 2005. Grampian Television.
- ^ Cram, Ausland (4 April 2007). "I'm Ashamed I Had Sex With Girl, Priest Tells Murder Trial". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 8 July 2018.
- ^ a b c Wilson & Harrison 2010, p. 239.
- ^ Cowell, Simon; Williams-Thomas, Mark; Winpenny, Adam; Ballantyne, Hugh (5 April 2018). The Investigator: A British Crime Story. ITV.
- ^ a b c "A Life of Crime: Professor David Wilson; Trying to Understand Why Serial Killers Kill". The Scotsman. 4 July 2010. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
- ^ Lindsay, Morag (12 July 2010). "Expert Convinced Tobin is Bible John Says More Murders Likely". The Press and Journal. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
- ^ Mullen, Stacey (1 November 2022). "Former Neighbour Claims Peter Tobin Buried Missing Victims Near Kent Home". The Glasgow Times. Retrieved 7 July 2023.
- ^ a b c d e "The Hunt for Bible John – Episode 2" (Television documentary). BBC. 29 November 2021. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
- ^ a b "Serial killers". David Wilson's Crime Files. Season 1. Episode 1. 21 July 2019. BBC Scotland.
- ^ "Fifty Years On, Britain's Top Serial Killer Expert Re-examines the Bible John Murders". The Herald. Glasgow. 18 February 2018. Retrieved 26 July 2018.
- ^ "Peter Tobin Crimewatch Appeal Gets 'Massive' Response". BBC. 6 July 2010. Retrieved 24 May 2013.
- ^ "Timeline: Peter Tobin". BBC. 16 December 2009 [15 December 2009]. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
- ^ Bobonich & Bobonich 2013, pp. 375–378.
- ^ Wilson & Harrison 2010, p. 68.
- ^ Mair, George (22 November 2021). "Peter Tobin Not Bible John Murderer, Says Former Detective David Swindle". The Times. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
- ^ "Dancing with the Devil: The Bible John Murders". goodreads.com. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
- ^ a b Wilson & Harrison 2010, pp. 32–33.
- ^ Wilson & Harrison 2010, pp. 26–27.
- ^ Wilson & Harrison 2010, p. 27.
- ^ "Bible John Killer May be Unmasked Ater 30 Years". The Telegraph. 15 October 2000. Retrieved 24 October 2024.
- ^ Wilson & Harrison 2010, p. 47.
- ^ a b "Will We Ever Know Who the Real Bible John Killer Was?". The National. 4 July 2023. Retrieved 24 October 2024.
- ^ a b c "Bible John: Creation of a Serial Killer 4. Pictures of Jemima". BBC Sounds. BBC. Retrieved 21 November 2024.
- ^ Lloyd 1986, pp. 207–208.
- ^ Booth, Jenny (15 October 2000). "Bible John Killer May be Unmasked After 30 Years". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
- ^ Day 1995, p. 38.
- ^ Lloyd 1986, p. 205.
- ^ Oak Kim, Myung (8 February 1993). "Serial Killer Says He'd Do It Again". The Seattle Times. Archived from the original on 25 January 2017. Retrieved 25 January 2017.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ Jeffrey 2006.
- ^ Freeman, James (5 July 1996). "DNA Tests Clear Bible John Suspect". The Herald. Glasgow. Retrieved 31 May 2013.
- ^ Seenan, Gemma (13 December 2004). "New Move to Identify 'Bible John'". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
- ^ Cawthorne 2014, p. 156.
- ^ "Six of the Most Notorious Serial Killers Who Were Never Caught". Business Insider. 6 June 2016. Retrieved 17 October 2024.
- ^ "The Polite, Fair-Haired Man ... and His Lust for Murder". The Scotsman. 26 September 2005. Retrieved 17 October 2024.
- ^ Whelan, Michael (21 March 2016). "Bible John – Unresolved". unresolved.me. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
- ^ "Calling Bible John". IMDb. imdb.com. Retrieved 22 October 2024.
- ^ "Channel 4". The Times. 16 March 1996. p. 87.
- ^ a b "Taggart Actor Steps in to Try to Solve Bible John Murder Riddle". The Scotsman. 17 September 2005. Retrieved 27 January 2019.
- ^ "BBC Sounds: Bible John, Creation of a Serial Killer". BBC Sounds. 7 December 2022 [29 September 2022]. Retrieved 2 May 2023.
Cited works and further reading
[edit]- Blundell, Nigel (1998) [1997]. Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. London: PRC Publishing. ISBN 978-1-856-48328-5.
- Bobonich, Christopher; Bobonich, Harry (2013). Bloody Ivy: 13 Unsolved Campus Murders. Bloomington: AuthorHouse. ISBN 978-1-4817-4019-7.
- Brown, Les; Jeffrey, Robert (2005). Glasgow Crimefighter: The Les Brown Story. Edinburgh: Black & White Publishing. ISBN 978-1-845-02801-5.
- Cawthorne, Nigel (2007). The Mammoth Book of Killers at Large. London: Constable & Robinson Ltd. ISBN 978-1-845-29631-5.
- Cawthorne, Nigel (2014). Bodies in the Back Garden: True Stories of Brutal Murders Close to Home. London: John Blake Publishing. ISBN 978-1-782-19986-1.
- Day, Jeremy (1995). Ultimate Crimes: The Hunt Goes On for Bible John. London, England: Nexus Media. ISSN 1358-8516.
- Harrison, Paul (2013). Dancing with the Devil: The Bible John Murders. Skipton: Vertical Editions. ISBN 978-1-904-09173-8.
- Jackson, Joe (2011). Chasing Killers: Three Decades of Cracking Crime in the UK's Murder Capital. Edinburgh: Mainstream Publishing. ISBN 978-1-845-96879-3.
- Jeffrey, Robert (2006). Crimes Past: Glasgow's Crimes of the Century. Edinburgh: Black and White Publishings. ISBN 978-1-845-02090-3.
- Lane, Brian; Gregg, Wilfred (1995) [1992]. The Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. New York City: Berkley Books. ISBN 0-425-15213-8.
- Leslie, David (2007). Bible John's Secret Daughter: Murder, Drugs and a Mother's Secret Heartbreak. Edinburgh: Mainstream Publishing. ISBN 978-1-780-57120-1.
- Lloyd, Georgina (1986). One Was Not Enough: True Stories of Multiple Murderers. London: Bantam Books. ISBN 978-0-553-17605-6.
- Malloy, Andrew D. (2011). Bible John – Closure. Kent: Pneuma Springs Publishing. ISBN 978-1-907-72816-7.
- Newton, Michael (2004). The Encyclopedia of Unsolved Crimes. New York: Facts on File. ISBN 978-0-816-07818-9.
- Stoddart, Charles (1980). Bible John: Search for a Sadist. Edinburgh: Paul Harris Publishing. ISBN 978-0-904-50589-4.
- Terry, Stephen (2011). Glasgow Almanac: An A-Z of the City and its People. Glasgow: Neil Wilson Publishing. ISBN 978-1-906-47625-0.
- Whittington-Egan, Molly (1998). Scottish Murder Stories. Glasgow: Neil Wilson Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-906-47647-2.
- Whittington-Egan, Richard; Whittington-Egan, Molly (1992). The Murder Almanac. Glasgow: Neil Wilson Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-897-78404-4.
- Wier, Nigel (2011). British Serial Killers. Bloomington, Indiana: AuthorHouse Publishing. ISBN 978-1-467-88139-5.
- Wilson, David; Harrison, Paul (2010). The Lost British Serial Killer: Closing the Case on Peter Tobin and Bible John. London: Sphere. ISBN 978-0-751-54232-5.
- Wilson, Colin; Wilson, Damon; Wilson, Rowan (1993). World Famous Murders. London: Parragon Publishing. ISBN 978-0-752-50122-2.
External links
[edit]- 2000 BBC News account detailing contemporary developments pertaining to leads in the Bible John case
- Bible John at CrimeLibrary.com
- Bible John at historicmysteries.com
- Contemporary edition of The Glasgow Herald, focusing upon the discovery of the body of Helen Puttock (p. 1)
- The true story of Bible John and the Barrowland killings at Glasgowlive.co.uk
- Trace-evidence.com article pertaining to the Bible John murders
- 1968 in Scotland
- 1968 murders in the United Kingdom
- 1969 in Scotland
- 1969 murders in the United Kingdom
- 1960s in Glasgow
- 20th-century Scottish criminals
- History of Glasgow
- Murder in Glasgow
- People associated with Glasgow
- Scottish rapists
- Scottish serial killers
- Unidentified British serial killers
- Unsolved murders in Scotland