The title of this article is the same as a book by a former
police detective and criminologist Duncan Staff. It has been adapted into a
two-part TV series by the BBC and it concerns the principle remaining mystery
of some of the most shocking murders ever committed. Following a number of
disappearences in Greater Manchester during the early 1960's the police
eventually arrested Myra Hindley and Ian Brady, and to their horror discovered
that the couple had been torturing and killing the missing youths on the remote
highlands of Saddleworth Moor. Over the years more and more information has
come to light, but the dark shadow remains of the fact that the body of the
couple's third and youngest victim has never been found. Twelve-year-old Keith
Bennett was abducted on the 16th of
June 1964 and taken to Saddleworth Moor where he met his cruel fate.
Myra Hindley claimed she never knew where Keith was buried and Brady refused to
tell anybody. Both killers are now dead. The fence along the roadside by the
place the murderers used as a killing ground is a touching sight. To the
present day it is covered with cards, gifts and other tributes left by local
people, including Keith's mother Winnie whose only ambition was to give her son
a proper funeral. She died in 2012 without achieving that. The search for the bodies
has only been seriously restarted once, in 1987 because Brady himself agreeed to
help the police find the remains of sixteen-year-old Pauline Reade which was
accomplished. Greater Manchester Police will probably not try again unless they
have an "X marks the spot", a pinpointed location. Critics have
argued that Keith could be found if the police were willing to carry out a
broad sweep of the entire area using ground penetrating radar, satellites and
other sophisticated technology, but this is half a dozen square miles and it would
take several years, costing millions of pounds; and they don't consider committing
the funds worthwhile. Healing the hearts of ordinary people has never been high
on the government's priority list. However, a new clue has emerged. Brady wrote
an unpublished autobiography called Dark
Light, a reference to his occult beliefs. The investigators have half of
the manuscript and it includes detailed descriptions of the shallow grave sites
of the first two children; but frustratringly the other half is missing. Staff
and his team believe that Brady's law firm have a copy of the entire book in
their archives, but they are refusing permission to release it, for reasons
they never explain. The book could tell us where Keith is buried. He could be
found, given a decent burial and this might bring some peace to his surviving
relatives. Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episodes/m002fxrd/the-moors-murders-a-search-for-justice.
This programme includes something I've never heard before, a recording of Ian
Brady's voice. He has an educated Scottish accent but is very foul mouthed. His
psychiatrist described him as highly intelligent. He sounds emotionally cold, a
true psychopath. He has never expressed remorse for his evil action; in fact he
seems to relish it as some kind of victory or accomplishment. Duncan Staff said
finding Keith Bennett will mean Brady and Hindley never truly won. I really
hope they get hold of the rest of Dark
Light and find Keith.
See here for more information: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2013/06/demonic-moors-murderers.html.
See here for more information: https://hpanwo-voice.blogspot.com/2013/06/demonic-moors-murderers.html.
2 comments:
Well done for posting this. I don't think the darkness and sadness of it should stop us from revisiting this topic.
Greater Manchester Police never seem to aspire to anything beyond wet-lettucey defeatism and their approach to this case has been no exception. I asked an AI assistant about the cost of GPR and got this response:
Here are some rough estimates for a square kilometer of open flat land:
A basic, high-speed GPR survey with a lower resolution (e.g., 1-2 meters depth,10-20 cm point spacing) might cost between $2,000 to $5,000 per square kilometer.
A standard GPR survey with a moderate resolution (e.g., 1-5 meters depth, 5-10 cm point spacing) could cost between $5,000 to $15,000 per square kilometer.
A detailed, high-resolution GPR survey (e.g., 1-10 meters depth, 1-5 cm point spacing) might cost between $15,000 to $30,000 per square kilometer or more.
Moorland is more challenging than arable land to survey but has the advantage of less disturbance over time so potentially more meaningful results. It's also perfectly accessible and less challenging than an urban or forested environment. So you might be facing a bill of 2 or 3 million for 6 square miles and it might take a few years, all the more reason to get on with it if, as is the case, the odds of getting a result are high.
To put the cost in perspective, the total GMP budget for 2024/25 was £786.2 million. Their highest paid employee earned £0.23 million (The Chief Constable?). So GPR should be seen as something cheap. Greater Manchester is populous and crime-ridden but not much matches the horror of this case. If they were not so hide-bound by protocol and political correctness thay could also have tried spending a couple of days on the phone to find some geophysicists who would have done it for free. No-one likes to beg, but it is a good cause.
Was remote viewing or clairvoyance ever tried with this case?
Thanks, MT. There are many mediums, remote viewers and psychics who have tried, none with any success. Thanks for the budget breakdown. If I were a billionaire I was honestly donate the money.
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