Kiszko film angers Lesley family

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2 October 1998
Manchester Evening News
By NEAL SNOWDON


RELATIVES of murdered youngster Lesley Molseed have blasted a TV film about the man wrongly imprisoned for the killing.

The film, A Life For A Life, will be shown on ITV this Sunday.

It is based on the 16-year fight Charlotte Kiszko led when her son Stefan was wrongly convicted of Lesley's murder.

Lesley, aged 11, from Rochdale, was abducted and stabbed before her body was dumped on Yorkshire moorland in 1975.

Mr Kiszko, also from Rochdale, was convicted of the killing and only freed when his conviction was quashed in 1992. But both he and his mother died within two years of his release.

Lesley's family, who still live in the Rochdale area, have never stopped campaigning to see the real killer caught.

Lesley's sister Julie Anderson said hopes that the TV film would boost her family's efforts to track down the killer were dashed as soon as she saw it. She said: "The public relations woman for the film told us it would help our case but I don't think it will.

"It is just not hard-hitting enough. The police do not get the hammering they deserve for the mishandling of the case and there is no way the TV audience will be calling for the real killer to be caught.

"It is a very, very sad film. And I know it is very, very sad that Stefan Kiszko went through all he did. This film is all about Stefan Kiszko, Lesley only features in it for about two minutes."

Miss Anderson and her brother Fred Anderson were both angry after seeing the film. The family have campaigned to bring Raymond Hewlett to trial for Lesley's murder. He was named in a book and is the prime suspect. Stefan's aunt Alfreda Tosic was unavailable for comment.
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Murder crusade takes to streets

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13 November 1997
Yorkshire Post
Joanne Ginley


The family of murdered schoolgirl Lesley Molseed took their crusade to find the man they have named their prime suspect onto the streets of Todmorden yesterday. They handed out leaflets bearing the name of the man they claim killed the 11-year-old girl they refer to as "Our Lel" 22 years ago. Lesley's body was found in a lay-by at Ripponden, near Halifax, in October 1975.
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Mother 'knows identity of daughter's murderer'

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12 November 1997
Yorkshire Post
Joanne Ginley


April Garrett, the mother of murdered schoolgirl Lesley Molseed, is certain that someone somewhere holds vital clues that can put her daughter's killer behind bars. But for Mrs Garrett this is no ordinary search for information about a faceless murderer. Twenty-two years after 11-year-old Lesley was slain on moorland above Rochdale, she is now certain she knows who took her child's life. So sure is Mrs Garrett that she and other members of her family are to start an inquiry of their own.
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An American nightmare in Yorkshire

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3 November 1997
The Guardian


"It couldn't happen here," was the unanimous reaction of the British legal establishment to the Louise Woodward affair. Everyone seems to agree that the young woman's wrongful conviction was the fault of an alien system which exposes itself to the media and relies far too heavily on the judgment of irrational, vulgar juries, uncontrolled by rational well-bred judges.

While this view was being ceaselessly proclaimed, hardly anyone noticed the publication of another book on another monstrous injustice perpetrated by good old British bobbies, by good old British scientists and good old British courts, where juries are firmly directed by good old British judges and where the media and the public are kept in good old British ignorance of the important facts.
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Paedophile flees as town's parents learn of his past

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29 October 1997
The Scotsman
John Ross and John Smith


A convicted paedophile was in at a secret location in Scotland last night, after fleeing from Forres in Moray after his past was made public. Parents were incensed yesterday to discover the 52-year-old, originally from the Blackpool area and said to be a danger to young girls, had been living in Forres for two weeks. The man, who was convicted of a series of offences against young girls, is also said to be a prime suspect in the unsolved murder of 11-year-old Lesley Molseed in Yorkshire in 1975. Neither police nor council officials were officially told of his presence in Forres, although Grampian Police became aware he was living locally through its own intelligence network.
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Mother demands murder inquiry

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18 October 1997
The Herald



Lesley Molseed

The mother of murdered schoolgirl Lesley Molseed yesterday called on Home Secretary Jack Straw to open a new inquiry into her daughter's death.  Ms April Garrett spoke out for the first time in 22 years following the publication of a book which names a 52-year-old convicted paedophile as the killer. (Blogger note: refers to Raymond Hewlett)
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Mother of murdered girl believes daughter's killer is living in Cork

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18 October 1997
Irish Times
Catherine Cleary


The mother of a schoolgirl murdered in Britain 22 years ago has said she believes her daughter's killer is living in Ireland. Lesley Molseed (11) was sexually assaulted and stabbed 12 times in October 1975. Her body was found in West Yorkshire three days after she went missing when she went to buy a loaf of bread.
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Plea over Lesley's murder

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18 October 1997
Yorkshire Post
Nicola Megson
Schoolgirl's mother seeks inquiry after book 'names real killer' in false jailing case


The mother of murdered schoolgirl Lesley Molseed yesterday called on Home Secretary Jack Straw to open a new inquiry into her daughter's death. April Garrett spoke out for the first time in 22 years following the publication of a book which names a convicted paedophile aged 52 as the killer. (Blogger note: refers to Raymond Hewlett)  Eleven-year-old Lesley's body was found in a lay-by at Ripponden, near Halifax, in October 1975.
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Town not told of paedophile's stay

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12 October 1997
The Sunday Times
By Jan Battles and Maeve Sheehan


A RURAL community in Co Kerry is outraged at the gardai's failure to warn them about a suspected child-killer and convicted paedophile who stayed in a local hostel.

Raymond Hewlett, 52, an Englishman suspected of murdering 12-year-old Lesley Molseed in Yorkshire 22 years ago, has been living in Ireland for several months.

The paedophile arrived at Dromtacker, a quiet suburb one mile from Tralee, 11 days ago. Hewlett and his 21-year-old German girlfriend, Marianne Schumucker, checked into the Little River hostel for two nights. But he fled the hostel last Saturday after learning that gardai had called to make inquires about him.

Hewlett, who has a string of convictions for assaults on young girls, was in close proximity to children during his stay in Dromtacker. The hostel is in a cluster of bungalows, many housing young families.

Local people said this weekend that the gardai should have warned them that a paedophile was staying in the area. One local woman said she and her neighbours were unaware that the "very chatty" man who had stayed in a tent in front of the local hostel was a convicted paedophile.

She said Hewlett was often seen chatting up 19 and 20-year-old girls, asking them about younger members of their family. "I think the gardai should have told us, so we could mind our children," said one woman.

Hewlett and his girlfriend arrived in Kerry from Donegal, where they had lived for several months. The couple left when they became aware that they were being monitored by detectives.

Local gardai notified their colleagues in Kerry in early October when they learned that the paedophile planned to move there.

Two detectives called to the Little River hostel last weekend to check on Hewlett. The paedophile and his girlfriend left suddenly last Saturday morning.

Gardai believe that Hewlett intended to stay in Dromtacker for some time. In his two days there, he had signed on at the local unemployment exchange.

Hewlett's record is outlined in a circular distributed to garda stations in the southwest. It warns that Hewlett is a danger to children and should be kept under observation.

In 1972 Hewlett lured his neighbour's 10-year-old daughter into his car, knocked her out with paint thinner and raped her. He later ordered another young girl to strip at gunpoint.

He was jailed for six years in 1988 for kidnapping at knifepoint a 14-year-old girl, whom he dumped in woodland 100 miles away after unsuccessfully trying to rape her.

A new book by Trevor Wilkinson, a retired British police chief, claims that Hewlett should have been brought to trial for the killing of Lesley Molseed in 1975. Molseed's mutilated body was found on the moors 10 miles from her home in Rochdale.

Stefan Kiszko was wrongly convicted and served 16 years for Molseed's murder. A subsequent investigation, which cleared Kiszko, pinpointed Hewlett as the child's killer.
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Evening News names suspect in Lesley Molseed murder case

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7 October 1997
Manchester Evening News

The Evening News today names Raymond Hewlett as prime suspect in the Lesley Molseed murder. He is a paedophile who slipped the dragnet through his lies and police blunders. Innocent Stefan Kiszko spent 16 years in jail after being wrongly convicted of Lesley's murder 22 years ago.

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