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Authors: Joseph Wambaugh

Tags: #True Crime, #Murder, #General, #Social Science, #Criminology, #Law, #Forensic Science

The Blooding (14 page)

BOOK: The Blooding
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The reporter then asked, "Do you really think this increases the likelihood that it will happen again?"

"I'm certain that's so," the psychiatrist answered. "There's no doubt that this type of crime tends to be repeated."

David Baker publicly admitted that extensive inquiries were being made at Carlton Hayes Hospital, but he reassured hospital administrators by saying that the hospital had no patients with a record of extreme sexual violence, and the postmortem revealed a "horrific sexual assault" on Dawn Ashworth.

But despite what Baker said, and despite the opinions of the Leicester professor of psychiatry, members of the inquiry team were being directed to that hospital, whose twin campaniles could be seen from Ten Pound Lane, whose mere presence cast a sinister shadow taller than its giant brick chimney that towered over the villages.

Even though the journalists loved to write about police conducting searches "inch by inch"--and to show film clips of "fingertip searches," with gloved policemen on all fours, crawling shoulder to shoulder through the fields sifting debris--the fact is that during any police search, most just go through the motions. It's the same in a Leicestershire village as it is in the Los Angeles inner city, and everywhere in between. The officers, particularly the uniformed officers who get stuck with most of the searching, have lots of things they'd much rather do. They don't believe they're going to find anything, and often don't believe there's anything to find. In most cases they're right.

But in any police search, there are a few who actually look and pay attention. Some even make notes and write down names. One of them noted the name of a young kitchen porter who worked at the psychiatric hospital, and was seen loitering around the area of Ten Pound Lane when it was sealed off from the public by streamers of orange tape.

The kitchen porter was sighted more than once, seated on his motorbike, watching with great interest.

Chapter
14.

Confession

At the foot of Ten Pound Lane, by the farm gate on King Edward Avenue, the police parked a mobile incident room to take information from villagers and passersby. A large blue notice boar
d s
aid: MURDER HERE. DID YOU SEE ANYTHING?

After the videotaped reconstruction of Dawn Ashworth's last walk, the murder squad took about two hundred telephone calls, and dozens of people visited the mobile unit.

The most promising new lead concerned a motorcycle that had been parked under the motorway bridge. And there were several reports of a young man in a red crash helmet observed in the vicinity of the bridge, sometime between 4:30 and 5:30 P
. M
. on the day of the murder.

Most of the dense undergrowth by Ten Pound Lane had been hacked to pieces, leaving splintered stumps and gaping holes in the green tunnel. Still, the missing silver earring was never found, causing the police to wonder if it had been trampled in the field. Or had he taken it away, as a memento?

An editorial published as a service to the murder squad, headed KILLER IN OUR MIDST, prompted a spurt of calls over a two-day period:

It is now pretty certain that we have free in our community somebody who is very, very ill or extremely evil
. . . sufficiently ill or sufficiently evil to sexually abuse and strangle two teenage girls--girls just like your daughter or the one next door.

Nearly three years ago, an immense amount of police time and effort, backed by publicity from all the media, failed to trace Lynda Mann's killer. Now, it seems pretty certain he has struck again.

It is highly likely that he is local, to Leicestershire if not to Enderby or Narborough. Why then has he not been caught? Either he has not been interviewed by police or he has been given an alibi. In other words, he may be sheltered by a loving, but misguided wife, girlfriend, mother or friend.

That person now has another girl's life on his or her conscience. It is time they made sure that the killer was put somewhere that he can be treated or kept away from teenage girls.

The odds are that after Friday's murder he is marked. If one of the men in your life has a scratch, a bruise or a cut he has received since Friday it is your duty to tell the police at once.

If you suspect a neighbour, a friend, somebody who drinks in the same pub or works with you or near you then tell the police, in confidence, of your suspicion.

Catching this pervert is a job for all of us, not merely the police. For if we don't catch him it could be your daughter next.

The superintendent who commanded Wigston subdivision, responsible for policing the villages, had a meeting with the Narborough Parish Council and tripled his normal contingent of two beat officers. The county council agreed to cut back the undergrowth further and widen what used to be the most scenic shortcut between the villages of Narborough and Enderby. Some thought it a terrible shame, in that there were remnants of an old Roman road directly beneath portions of that lovely footpath. But members of the parish council remarked that in a world growing ever more mad and violent, how could an English village hope to remain exempt?

The next headline produced a rash of phone calls: PS15,000 REWARD.

NEW BID TO CATCH THE KILLER.

The reward for information leading to the killer's arrest and conviction was offered by a local businessman who asked to remain anonymous.

Hours after it was publicly announced, an event took place that would produce an infinitely more startling headline the very next day.

Supt. Tony Painter's murder squad had been assembling some information that actually began to connect with other bits and pieces. Four different witnesses had reported a motorbike. The first saw a red motorcycle parked unattended under the M I bridge at noon on the day of the murder. A second saw a motorbike parked there at about 4:45 the same day. Another saw a red crash helmet hanging from a motorbike near Ten Pound Lane, that sighting at 5:15 P
. M
. And yet another witness remembered a motorcyclist wearing a red crash helmet riding up and down Mill Lane on the evening Dawn's body was found, and the next day as well--riding up and back, very slowly, past the Ashworth house.

On August 1st, the day after Dawn was reported missing, but a day before her body was found, a policewoman and a detective saw a youth on a red motorcycle in a red crash helmet taking an interest in the search. He was sighted again, in the same spot, three hours later.

And most tellingly, a police constable on security duty at the checkpoint on Mill Lane in Enderby--at 9:20 P
. M
. on Sunday evening, the day after the body was found--was approached by a seventeen-year-old kitchen porter from Carlton Hayes Hospital. The boy was pushing his motorcycle. The officer questioned the boy routinely after the lad volunteered a bit of information.

"I saw Dawn walking up here Thursday night. Toward the gate," the kitchen porter told the policeman.

"Thanks," the officer said. "You'll be contacted in the near future by a member of the enquiry team."

A detective followed it up and spoke to the kitchen porter two days later, when the lad also reported seeing a suspicious boy on a bicycle.

The most astonishing information that crackled through the incident room on Thursday, August 7th, came from another employee of Carlton Hayes Hospital, a friend of the kitchen porter's. This friend had been on holiday the day Dawn Ashworth went missing, he said, but had gone to the hospital to collect his wages. The kitchen porter visited him at 10:00 P
. M
. the next night and excitedly told him that Dawn Ashworth's body had been found "in a hedge near a gate by the Ml bridge."

When the friend's father overheard the conversation he asked the kitchen porter where he'd gotten his information, for it hadn't been on the telly.

"Someone told me," the boy said mysteriously. "Her body was hanging from a tree!"

Well, she wasn't found hanging from a tree, but she was certainly concealed beneath tree limbs and other debris. And she was found inside an access gate leading from Ten Pound Lane to the fields, and it was just a ten-minute walk from the M1 bridge. And the kitchen porter had this information twelve hours before the denim jacket had been spotted!

Still another witness came forth who reported that the kitchen porter, cruising about on his motorbike, had stopped and told him, "Yeah, she was found dead." This, at 1:45 P
. M
. on Saturday, a few hours after she was found, but nevertheless before the press had even been informed.

On Friday, August 8th, at five o'clock in the morning, members of the murder squad drove to the young kitchen porter's home near the Fox-hunter Roundabout in Narborough to arrest him.

The boy's father was a gregarious, self-employed taxi driver in Narborough, and his mother, jolly and warm with a welcoming smile for everyone, worked at the Enderby Leisure Center near the home of Dawn Ashworth.

When the police knocked, the mother woke up shouting, "Who's that bumping the door?"

She thought she'd been dreaming at first, but the knocking continued. She got up, put on some clothes and went downstairs. Four members of CID entered the house, informing her that they had to see her older son.

"Is it important?" she asked.

"I'm afraid it is," one of the detectives answered.

"You've not found another one, have you?" she asked.

"I hope not," he answered.

Another detective said, "We've come to arrest your son for the murder of Dawn Ashworth."

"You're joking!" she cried.

"Do you think we'd be joking this time of morning, dear?" the detective asked.

The mother later remembered having to catch the side of the settee in the living room to keep from falling down.

"Where is he?" a detective asked.

"He's in bed!" she said. Then she gathered herself and shakily climbed the stairs, shouting to her husband. "You've got to come! The police want you!"

"Don't be bloody daft!" he muttered.

The first thing he remembered clearly about that morning was getting out of bed and looking at a detective who said, "We're arresting your son for murder."

"You're bloody joking!" he said. "You're crackers!"

When the police woke the boy and told him to get dressed, he said, "Is it about some more questions?"

"Something like that," the detective answered.

Putting on a track suit and tennis shoes, the boy said, "I've got to be at work."

"Don't worry about that," the detective said. "I'm arresting you on suspicion of being concerned in the death of Dawn Ashworth. I must tell you, you do not have to say anything unless you wish to do so, but anything you may say may be given in evidence. Do you understand that?"

The kitchen porter had his father's thick dark hair, but not his chiseled good looks, and certainly not his assertiveness. The taxi driver was considered a controlling parent, but anyone who knew his son might understand the need.

The father watched silently while they searched his son's bedroom. When the tallest detective was on his knees searching under the carpet, the taxi driver cried out, "I know my chappie! I know he's not done it because I know my lad!"

The detective answered, "We know him too."

And indeed, the murder squad did know a lot already and was about to learn many things about the boy that his parents did not know, and would scarcely believe.

The kitchen porter was driven to Wigston Police Station where DSgt. Dawe and DC Cooke taped the first of many interviews at 8:09 in the morning. The boy sat at a table facing the two detectives and talked quietly. In that first interview he said he'd known Dawn about three weeks and seen her walking about the village. When they asked about his whereabouts on Thursday, July 31st, he said he'd slept in until ten or eleven because it was his day off. Then in the afternoon he'd taken the motorbike for a trial run at half past four, down along King Edward Avenue toward Narborough village. "I were going toward the motorway bridge," he said. "You know where that is?"

"Yes," Dawe answered.

"I looked on the left and saw Dawn approaching the gateway." "How did you know it was Dawn?"

"By her hairstyle and the way she walked. So I knew it were Dawn," the kitchen porter said.

"Do you know her very well?"

"Just by looks. That's all."

"What was she wearing?"

"A sort of white skirt and a yellow or white jacket. I thought I'd stop and talk to her and ask her where she were going, and that. Then I thought, I've got to get home and do this oil because it might be running out quick. It got to leaking drip drip drip fairly fast, so I just drove straight home."

Dawe asked, "What did you think about her?"

"She were talkative."

"What did you used to talk about?"

"Things."

The sergeant asked him, "Have you ever been with a girl who wants sex?"

"No."

"Never? Never interested you?"

"No. Me dad's warned me," the kitchen porter said.

Then he began rambling on about motorcycles. He said he had another one he was repairing because the bearings were gone. And suddenly he put himself in another place on July 3 1st!

BOOK: The Blooding
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