Police open third inquiry into 1975 killing of girl, 11

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3 May 2001
Ian Herbert
The Independent

The long and ill-fated hunt for the killer of Lesley Molseed, the 11-year-old girl murdered and dumped on Pennine moorland 26 years ago, is to be relaunched. The case is infamous for the wrongful conviction and 16-year imprisonment of Stefan Kiszko, who died in 1993 - the year after he was eventually acquitted and freed. DNA evidence from semen, found on Lesley's body but not revealed in court, proved he could not have been the murderer.
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Lesley Molseed murder hunt to be re-launched - Police work on M.E.N. evidence

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2 May 2001
Manchester Evening News
Andrew Nott


THE hunt for the killer of 11-year-old schoolgirl Lesley Molseed, who was stabbed to death 26 years ago, is to be officially re-launched, it was revealed today.  Lesley, from Rochdale, was knifed 12 times in 1975 and the first inquiry led to innocent Stefan Kiszko spending 16 years in jail.  A second investigation identified another prime suspect - but failed to gather sufficient evidence to charge him.
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Mother waits with hope of seeing justice

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14 April 2001
Yorkshire Post


Twenty-five years after the murder of her 11-year-old daughter Lesley Molseed, April Garrett tells Robert Sutcliffe that recent police moves to find the killer means she can now see light at the end of the tunnel. Lesley Molseed was a born fighter. As a baby she underwent the trauma of open heart surgery and spent her first year in a Glasswegian hospital battling for survival. Her mother, April Garrett, recalls that she left the hospital a year later, the same weight, 7lb 4oz, as when she was born. She won that battle and grew up enjoying everything life had to offer. But her courage was no protection against the merciless brutality of an unknown assassin who stabbed her to death on a remote moor 25 years ago.
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Detectives name top suspect in hunt for child killer

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22 March 2001
Robert Sutcliffe
Yorkshire Post

A convicted child abuser has been named by detectives as the prime suspect they want to question in connection with the murder of an 11-year-old schoolgirl 26 years ago. Lesley Molseed's body was found near Ripponden on October 5, 1975. She had been stabbed a dozen times with a knife. The youngster had been abducted three days earlier while running an errand for her mum near their home in Rochdale. Det Chief Supt Max McLean, who is leading the investigation, said he was confident he would find Raymond Hewlett, a former Todmorden man, aged 56.  Officers are following up 148 leads in a dossier following a Sunday newspaper investigation.
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New leads on unsolved schoolgirl murder

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22 March 2001
Rochdale Observer


Among them is a former Rochdale man who subjected his daughter and stepson to five years of persistent sexual abuse. Following a 23-day trial in 1992 - in what was dubbed the orgies-in-the-attic trial - he was jailed for 10 years but has since been released. It is understood he is now living in a hostel in London. On Sunday, the News of the World said the 52-year-old was linked to Raymond Hewlett - a convicted paedophile already under suspicion of Lesley's death - and a third, unnamed man.

Lesley disappeared from her home in Turf Hill on 5 October 1975 on her way to buy a loaf of bread. Three days later her body was found on the desolate moorland above the A627 Oldham to Halifax Road. She had been stabbed repeatedly. The man convicted of her killing, Stefan Kiszko, who spent 16 years in prison protesting his innocence, was cleared of the crime in February 1992. He died shortly afterwards.

According to the News of the World, the man it names was known to Lesley and was spotted on the day of her disappearance luring her away from the shop with a bag of sweets. It says that, later that day, the distraught child was seen with her abductor, clawing to get out of the car. Early the next day, says the report, he and another man spent two hours scrubbing clean a blue van.

It says that Lesley's body was found five miles from a house where the man under suspicion - along with other paedophiles - subjected children to abuse. It claims he was a close friend of Hewlett at the time of Lesley's murder. The newspaper also says it has tapes of a meeting it set up between the man and his ex-wife. Quizzing him about Lesley's death, he is said to reply: "You're putting me in a coffin.''

A spokesman for West Yorkshire Police said: "We cannot name individuals but I can confirm that we are investigating information that stems from this document and 148 new lines of inquiry. "The investigation may take some time, but we have a team of officers involved in the case.''
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Did these monsters murder little Lesley?

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18 March 2001
The News of the World
Amanda Revell Walton, Terenia Taras
Additional reporting: Sarah Arnold, Neville Thurlbeck

25-year- old inquiry is reopened after NOW investigation

Two of Britain's most evil paedophiles are to be quizzed over the sex murder of schoolgirl Lesley Molseed 25 years ago-after new evidence was uncovered by the News of the World.

The 11-year-old-known as Little Miss Chatterbox was appallingly assaulted, knifed to death and left on moors. The News of the World has now linked the horror to pink-haired Michael Horgan, Raymond Hewlett and a third man we are not naming.

A hardened detective, who keeps a photo of Lesley on his desk, has opened 148 new lines of inquiry into her murder as a result of our dossier. Det Chief Supt Max McLean glanced at the picture and said:

"I've been looking at it for some time. This is a case that stirs you to want to do your best. Your dossier's been extremely helpful."

Lesley, who had a heart defect, was killed in October 1975 while on an errand for her mum. She was sexually assaulted, knifed 12 times and dumped near her home town of Rochdale, Lancs. Educationally subnormal Stefan Kiszko was found guilty of the murder, but freed after 16 years when DNA evidence cleared him.

Our dossier indicates that satanic child-sex abuser Horgan-now 52 and with a Mohican hairstyle-'groomed' Lesley leading up to her death. On the afternoon of her disappearance, loner Horgan - now at a hostel in London's Elephant and Castle-was spotted luring her away from the shops with a bag of sweets. Later that day he was seen with the distraught child clawing to get out of a car.

Early the next day he and the man we are not naming spent two hours meticulously scrubbing a blue van. We also discovered Lesley's body was found five miles from a house where Horgan and other paedophiles subjected children to satanic abuse. He was a close friend of serial child sex offender Hewlett, now 56, at the time of the murder.

Tapes

We have tapes of meetings we set up between Horgan and his ex-wife Eileen, 63.

She quizzes him about Lesley. He replies:

"You're putting me in a coffin."

Horgan's stepdaughter, a schoolpal of Lesley, vividly recalls Horgan bringing the 11-year-old back to their home. The 33-year-old stepdaughter said:

"My stepdad said, 'Do you want some sweets?' Lesley said, 'Yeah'."

Eileen recalls seeing Horgan leading Lesley away from a nearby sweetshop. She said:

"She was walking by the side of him."

Witness Sandra Creese, 57, saw him with a little girl in blue clothing crying in a car with a man.

"She looked very frightened," Sandra said. "She put her hands up to the window."

Eileen said the next morning Horgan ordered her to fill a bucket of water. Eileen said he and the unnamed man cleaned the van. She said:

"You name it, they cleaned it. Then we had to do the wheels."

Horgan and his associate then scrubbed up and dumped their clothes. Eileen was ordered to cut their nails-even scraping dirt from under them. Horgan also ordered his wife to cut his hair short.

"He used to love his long hair," she said.

Horgan was convicted in 1992 of hanging children from hooks and sexually abusing them in satanic rituals.

Hewlett has a string of convictions for abducting and raping young girls and has served long stretches in jail. He is believed to be working on trawlers under another identity.

Note:

Raymond Hewlett was considered to be the prime suspect in disappearance of Madeleine McCann. Questions have been raised regarding the McCann photofit of alleged abductor, bearing a remarkable resemblance to Hewlett as he appeared years younger than he was at the time of Madeleine's disappearance.

Det Chief Supt Max McLean traveled to Germany to interview Hewlett  prior to Hewlett's death in German hospital.

July 2011 Questions are being raised regarding the earliest examples of the News of the World hacking phones.  Was this article based on illegally obtained information?  

Why did the News of the World provide details regarding Raymond Hewlett and Michael Horgan and yet protect the identity of the third man they suspect was involved in the Lesley Molseed murder?


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`Attack' forces sex offender to flee

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`Attack' forces sex offender to flee
20 August 2000
Independent On Sunday
Robert Verkaik

AN ANTI-PAEDOPHILE campaigner convicted of assaulting young girls has been forced out of his home after a suspected arson attack.

Roger Gardener, 56, who was found guilty of indecently assaulting two young girls last month, is on bail awaiting sentence from Cardiff Crown Court. The unemployed lorry driver fled his home at Blackwood, Gwent, south Wales, after an extensive fire and was keeping his new address secret last night.

Before the court case, he had mounted a local campaign against internet pornography. Earlier this month, after the court case, he had been told to register as a sex offender.

In a separate development, Michael Horgan, 55, one of those targeted by protesters after being accused of being a paedophile, said yesterday that he was suing the News of the World, which had published his name - shared by a known paedophile - in its list of sex offenders.

The engineer from south London has instructed a leading firm of libel lawyers to sue the paper whose "name and shame" campaign sparked a month of mob violence. The defamation specialists, Peter Carter-Ruck & Partners, will bring an estimated #100,000 claim against the News of the World.

The Independent on Sunday reported last week that innocent victims of the tabloid's campaign will have a strong claim for damages. At least two more innocent victims of the vigilante attacks are considering court action.

Mr Horgan, who now lives with a round-the-clock police guard, was targeted by an anti-paedophile group after his "exposure" by the News of the World. His name, telephone number and address then appeared on an incorrect list of paedophiles that was circulated in the Lewisham area. Although he was able to convince some of his neighbours that it was a case of mistaken identity, he had become "terrified" for his family, he said. All telephone calls to his home are now diverted.

Cameron Doley, a partner at Peter Carter-Ruck, which will take the case on a "no win, no fee" basis, said the News of the World had refused to publish a clarification.
"We took the action before the paper withdrew its campaign. The paper has written back claiming it has done nothing wrong. But that is no consolation to my client. There can't be anything much worse than being described as a paedophile."
Mr Doley said the News of the World picture accompanying Mr Horgan's name in the list was too indistinct to make it clear his client was not the paedophile Michael Horgan. "It was simply a picture of a white, middle-aged man with glasses."

The paper began its campaign after the death of Sarah Payne, eight, who was murdered last month in Sussex. After the newspaper decided to print the names of convicted sex offenders, some people across the country took the law into their own hands. Four nights of rioting occurred in Portsmouth aimed at known and suspected paedophiles.
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Police alarm as paedophiles seek refuge in Ireland

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18 August 2000
The Independent
By Cahal Milmo


Sex offenders: Vigilantes have driven high-risk abusers across the Irish Sea, where the authorities fear they may strike again


Protests in Britain have provoked an exodus of sex offenders who believe they can find a haven from vigilantes in Ireland, Irish police said yesterday.

They believe a dozen British child abusers - including two considered "high-risk" paedophiles by the UK authorities - have secretly entered Ireland.

The men are feared to have gone to ground across Ireland, where there are no passport controls and no sex offenders' register. Child protection experts said the paedophiles believe they can evade detection.

There is increasing evidence that the violence which followed the name-and-shame campaign by the News of the World is forcing some sex offenders to seek isolated hideaways after one abuser, Thomas Maxwell, escaped jail because he was living in "voluntary exile" in the Hebrides.

Residents in the village of Leverburgh, on Harris in the Western Isles, last night vowed to campaign to force out the 60-year-old, who has gone into hiding and failed to contact his probation authority.

In Ireland, surveillance at ports and airports has been stepped up after officers received tip-offs from British police that paedophiles from their areas were heading across the Irish Sea.

One offender, a 36-year-old Birmingham man convicted of offences against young boys, was arrested at Dublin airport last week as he tried to enter and ordered to return to the UK.

But Irish police admitted that others running scared of protests in places such as Portsmouth and Manchester have managed to gain clandestine entry and present a risk of further offending.

Brendan Costello, spokesman at the police headquarters in Dublin, said: "Paedophiles coming from Britain to Ireland are slipping through the net. The numbers are not huge but they have increased since the protests. It is impossible for us to monitor every individual coming into Ireland from Britain and the risk is that they may offend again."

The police said 80 per cent of known paedophiles entering Ireland were being monitored, thanks to tip-offs from British police and information from residents where offenders settle.

But a Dublin police source added: "The system is far from ideal because we are reliant on word of mouth from our opposite numbers in Britain and historically there has been little monitoring of paedophiles here. We think there are around a dozen men who have stolen their way in over the last few weeks and feel they are safe from detection. Until or unless they commit crimes again, that is probably true."

Detectives have drawn up a list of paedophiles in an attempt to track down the most dangerous individuals at large.

One serial sex offender, Raymond Hewlett, 55, is in hiding after disappearing from an isolated cottage in Carlingford, Co Louth, in the north-east of the country last year.


The father-of-eight, who has convictions for kidnapping and raping or molesting four young girls in England, is wanted for questioning in connection with a series of attempted abductions in the republic.


Hewlett was also the main suspect for the murder 25 years ago of 11-year-old Lesley Molseed on the Yorkshire Moors. In one of the most high-profile miscarriages of justice, Stefan Kiszko was jailed for life and served 16 years before his conviction was quashed in 1992. He died a year later.


Hewlett was arrested on suspicion of killing Lesley after his release from a separate prison sentence in 1993. He was eventually freed through a lack of evidence.

Officials at the National Criminal Intelligence Service in London, which keeps a list of around 300 British high-risk itinerant paedophiles, said they were aware of offenders heading for Ireland. It is understood two child abusers on the NCIS serious sexual offenders' database have crossed the Irish Sea in the past month. Their details have been passed to the police.

Child protection experts warned that signals from the British government that stricter sentencing could be introduced for paedophiles will drive more offenders overseas.

An Irish sex offenders' register, similar to that in Britain, will not come into force until end of the year, welfare workers said.

Paul Gilligan, chief executive of the Irish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, said: "The name-and-shame campaign in Britain has made Ireland an attractive option for British paedophiles. The evidence is strong from police officers and social workers that some abusers have already come into the country and gone to ground. There is a definite perception that Ireland is a haven for their kind."

Ireland's Sex Offenders Bill 2000 will require those with convictions for sex crimes to register with the police when they arrive. But campaigners say the Bill does not go far enough in providing public access to information. It will also include only those convicted of offences after it comes into force.

In Scotland, community leaders among the 400 people in Leverburgh vowed that their village would not become a paedophile haven after Thomas Maxwell was found to be living in their midst. This week, the blacksmith escaped prison for sexual offences against a 12-year-old girl in Alloa but went into hiding in Stornoway on Lewis when his conviction became public knowledge.

John Mitchell, chairman of the South Harris Community Council, said: "We have a system where living in this village is deemed a punishment equivalent to prison. We will not stop until this man has left."

Neil Galbraith, chief executive of the Western Isles Council, the probation authority responsible for Maxwell, said: "He has not been in touch. We do not know whether he intends to stay or where he is. The effects of the publicity about him are clear to see."
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Girl killer suspect's hideaway

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6 August 2000
The News of the World
Amanda Revell Walton


A ruthless sex fiend and suspected child killer is in hiding in Ireland after dodging cops who had been tracking him for years. Detectives want to question paedophile Raymond Hewlett, 55, in connection with a series of attempts to abduct children in the Republic. Hewlett has a string of convictions for kidnapping, raping and indecently assaulting young girls. He is also the main suspect for the murder of 11-year-old schoolgirl Lesley Molseed who was molested and then stabbed to death on Britain's Yorkshire moors 25 years ago.
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Kiszko case file may be reopened - Murder

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20 March 1999
The Times
By Robin Young


A MAN who was interviewed about the murder of a schoolgirl more than 23 years ago, but never charged, could face a private prosecution brought by the girl's family.

The family of Lesley Molseed, who was 11 when she disappeared from her home in Rochdale, Lancashire, on October 5, 1975, have instructed lawyers to demand access to police evidence so that they can consider proceedings against Raymond Hewlett, 54.

Lesley's body was found on Rishworth Moor, near Oldham. She had been sexually assaulted and stabbed. The next day Mr Hewlett left for Ireland with his girlfriend. When he returned a month later he was interviewed by police, but released, and another man, Stefan Kiszko, was eventually convicted of the murder.

Mr Kiszko's conviction was quashed and he was released in 1992, after it had been established that he had been bullied into signing a confession, and that his medical condition made it impossible for him to have committed the crime.

Mr Kiszko's mother, Charlotte, had campaigned ceaselessly for his release. He died of a heart attack a year after being freed and his mother died six months later.

Now Lesley's father, Fred Anderson, her mother, April Garrett, and her sister, Julie, are insisting that the case should be reopened.
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