- 5 giờ trước
Britain's Most Evil Killers - Season 10 Episode 4 -
George Naylor
George Naylor
Danh mục
😹
Vui nhộnPhụ đề
00:00Hãy subscribe cho kênh La La School Để không bỏ lỡ những video hấp dẫn
00:30Hãy subscribe cho kênh La La School Để không bỏ lỡ những video hấp dẫn
00:59Hãy subscribe cho kênh La La School Để không bỏ lỡ những video hấp dẫn
01:29Hãy subscribe cho kênh La La School Để không bỏ lỡ những video hấp dẫn
01:31A routine traffic stop that escalated into a high-speed car chase
01:37had incredibly unveiled George Naylor as one of Britain's most evil killers
01:43When George Naylor was convicted of murder in February 1999,
02:13he'd brought an end to his reign of terror.
02:17It was a relief to the women he'd spent a lifetime torturing
02:22and closure for the investigators who'd hunted him down.
02:27George Naylor was one of the few truly evil people I ever met in 31 years
02:33of being a police officer in Bradford.
02:35I'm absolutely convinced in my own mind that any time Naylor had his liberty then women were not safe.
02:46Naylor targeted vulnerable women throughout his life, never showing remorse for what he'd done.
02:53What always saddens me is that these girls just became a headline.
03:02Naylor became the story and the girls are almost forgotten.
03:07There were many opportunities to put Naylor away for life,
03:13but he managed to evade justice for years.
03:17Naylor's only conscience was about himself.
03:20He had no sense of anybody else, particularly when he came to women.
03:24He was a brute, a cold, calculating brute,
03:28who killed because he could.
03:30This killer's story begins in West Boulding, Yorkshire, in 1944.
03:40We don't know a great deal about George Naylor's early life.
03:45We know it was troubled, but we know very little about his parents or indeed siblings.
03:51Even as a child, George Naylor showed his violent tendencies.
03:57He used violence to manipulate others.
04:00It wasn't just that he couldn't control it, it was his power.
04:06He's using violence to gain status,
04:08so that people will maybe steer clear of him, respect him,
04:14all of those kinds of things, and give himself a little bit of power and control.
04:19As a young person, his violence was noticed,
04:23and it escalated to the point where, as a teenager, he was sent to Borstel.
04:28Firstly, a series of petty crimes, robbery and theft.
04:33But then his crimes seemed to get more and more extreme and more and more violent.
04:44When Naylor was just 17, he committed his first serious offence.
04:49He's broken into a house where the resident was an elderly female.
04:55He's beaten the female occupant up with his fists.
04:58He's threatened her with a gun.
05:00He's stolen her property and her money.
05:02Now, that's a really serious offence.
05:05He'd been building up to violence for quite a long time.
05:08He also used that violence, committed that robbery on a woman.
05:14And that suggests it's that bully thing about him
05:18where he's going to target somebody who's maybe weaker than him,
05:24easy to overpower.
05:26By the summer of 1967, the now 22-year-old Naylor
05:33already had a long list of criminal charges to his name.
05:38But that didn't affect his luck with the ladies.
05:42Naylor was a charmer.
05:45Throughout his life, he managed to charm two women to becoming his partner.
05:50But very quickly, they began to realise that he had a very different soul
05:55to the charming man they had fallen for.
05:58And he was violent towards them.
06:01George Naylor met his first partner in a pub,
06:05and she literally fell for his charm.
06:08He was, like his character or not, capable of being truly charming.
06:13The two of them went on to have two children together.
06:15What I can absolutely guarantee is that relationship had problems
06:21from the very beginning.
06:24People like Naylor are inherently manipulative.
06:27This is a man who forces what he wants.
06:30Naylor's first partner was subject to six years of physical and sexual abuse.
06:36When you're experiencing coercive control from a partner,
06:40and Naylor was undoubtedly coercively controlling,
06:43the one thing you can't do is leave, escape.
06:48Because all of those things that he's been doing to her
06:51are to trap her right where she is,
06:54because he believes very strongly he owns her, he possesses her.
07:00She had desperately tried to seek help.
07:03They'd had children together, and she'd be contacting social services
07:07to say, I need to get away.
07:09He is violent.
07:11I am frightened.
07:12And I think the thing that strikes me,
07:15the response was so typical of that era.
07:19They told her, better a bad father than none at all.
07:24In 1973, his partner managed to get away from him,
07:30but Naylor refused to let her go.
07:33He wanted to frighten her back to him.
07:36He would break into her house, he would attack her,
07:39he was stalking her.
07:40She must have been absolutely terrified.
07:49In 1974, Naylor was living in a flat in Bradford,
07:54where his crimes took an even darker turn.
07:57He broke into a neighbour's flat, a block in which he lived,
08:02and he donned a mask.
08:07And he attacked a 60-year-old woman,
08:11viciously,
08:12and raped her.
08:15He'd set upon her just because he could,
08:17and because it was another example
08:19of his growing pathological hatred of women.
08:26He committed some very serious,
08:30the most horrific acts against this woman.
08:34Stripped her naked,
08:36beat her,
08:37bitter,
08:38he raped her,
08:40and he committed serious, depraved sexual acts.
08:48This, even for him,
08:49is an escalation.
08:53I think the wearing of the mask shows the premeditation.
08:56He knew what he was going to do.
08:58He knew that it was going to be a serious offence,
09:02and he did not want this lady to be able to identify him.
09:07As a police investigation began,
09:11Naylor seemed determined to do whatever it took
09:14to cover up his crimes.
09:17He had the gall
09:19to go back to the scene of his crime
09:22and play the part of worried neighbour,
09:26concerned friend,
09:27asking if there was anything that he could do for her.
09:31He knew that if he went back,
09:34if fibres from his clothes were found,
09:37if his fingerprints were found,
09:39he could say,
09:40well, of course,
09:41I merely went to check that this poor woman was okay.
09:46It appeared that Naylor had tried to outwit the police,
09:50but there was one thing he'd overlooked.
09:53Shards from the very window he'd broken
09:56in order to access the flat
09:58were found in his coat pocket,
10:00which would lead police to eventually arrest
10:03and charge Naylor.
10:05There were also some traces,
10:08fibres, from his pullover on her pyjamas.
10:12In the end, those small things caught Naylor.
10:16He hadn't expected them.
10:23Naylor was sentenced to 15 years
10:25for the horrific attack,
10:28but was released before serving his full term.
10:31The rape was brutal.
10:33It was horrific.
10:33And yet he served less than 10 years.
10:38Within weeks of his release from prison,
10:40he was hunting on the streets of Bradford.
10:42He would have been honing those skills of manipulation
10:46and showing his status and gaining status for a decade.
10:51And then we let him out on the streets again.
10:55And he's not going to stop.
11:00In 1985, George Naylor walked out of prison a free man,
11:06but he was far from rehabilitated.
11:11Just eight weeks after his release,
11:14he would escalate from brutal rapist
11:17to cold-blooded killer.
11:19In 1985, 40-year-old convicted rapist George Naylor
11:35was released onto the streets of West Yorkshire.
11:46Bradford in the 80s and 90s
11:48was only just recovering from the reign of terror
11:51that Peter Sutcliffe had caused.
11:55But during that time,
11:57women selling sex hadn't stopped.
12:01What had changed was the reason for it.
12:05By the time Naylor was prowling the streets,
12:09drugs and alcohol had become the main reason.
12:14So, if a young woman became addicted,
12:18that was a way to feed her addiction.
12:21The sex worker community was forced to operate in the shadows.
12:26Lindsay Walton is CEO of a charity
12:29trying to raise awareness of their stories.
12:32Street sex workers often find the need to operate
12:35in areas where they are a bit more off the beaten track.
12:40Obviously, that then increases the danger.
12:42You have to make very quick decisions on if you trust someone.
12:47The vulnerability of sex workers
12:49was about to be exposed in the most horrific way.
12:59In the early hours of the 17th of December, 1985,
13:03police officer Mark Plovey was on duty in the red-light district
13:08when something caught his eye.
13:12I saw a car.
13:14It was parked off City Road
13:16in an area which I found suspicious.
13:20The car, to my mind, was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
13:24So, they begin to follow the car
13:28and then the car speeds up
13:30and they give chase, literally, through Bradford.
13:36The distance is starting to increase.
13:39He's starting to pull away from it,
13:41which was concerning.
13:43The driver actually made a right turn
13:45at 70-plus miles an hour.
13:49So, you can imagine what happened then.
13:51And the vehicle actually came to a rest
13:56in the middle of this traffic island.
14:00Much to my surprise,
14:01the driver's door was flung open
14:03and the mail's out and he's off running.
14:08The driver of the car continued to run,
14:12scaling numerous walls,
14:14desperate to outrun the police,
14:16closing in behind him.
14:17It took the officers some time
14:20to catch the individual on foot.
14:24And eventually, they tackled him
14:26and brought him to the ground to arrest him.
14:30The man the police had captured
14:32was 40-year-old George Naylor.
14:36We arrested him on suspicion of stealing the car,
14:43but then we noticed that he was sweating
14:46absolutely profusely.
14:49He was emotional, he was agitated,
14:52he was crying, he was sobbing.
14:56They've just had a chase.
14:58They know that this person has got something to hide.
15:00They then present as emotionally strange as well.
15:05It's just going to keep layering over
15:07with the suspicions that they might have.
15:12Why had he tried to get away from us?
15:14Had he stolen the car?
15:16And then he came out with a reply,
15:18which I will never forget.
15:20And that reply was,
15:23OK, lads, you've got me for murder.
15:26I'm glad you've caught me.
15:28Which prompted me, of course, to ask him,
15:30what do you mean by that?
15:32To which he replied,
15:33there's a dead prostitute in the back of the car.
15:42That one sentence says so much about him.
15:46There's a dead prostitute in the back of the car.
15:48It's almost saying to the police,
15:52it's not the most serious offence you've ever seen.
15:54And I think that reveals about him
15:58how absolutely awful he is as a human being.
16:02A routine traffic stop had intensified rapidly
16:06and was now looking like the beginnings
16:08of a full-blown murder investigation.
16:12I had a look in the back of the car
16:15and I saw the body of a female.
16:21There was blood around her head and face.
16:24Her legs were behind the front passenger seat
16:28down in the well
16:29and her torso was on the back seat
16:32behind the driver's seat.
16:35When police looked into the name George Naylor,
16:39they discovered a man with a long history of offences.
16:45We put him in the back of the transit van
16:48and then I started to take a closer look at him
16:52and I could see that he'd got blood all over his hands
16:56and he'd got blood all down the white jumper
17:00that he was wearing.
17:05Naylor would have gone through
17:07quite a few different emotions.
17:10He is trapped and he does not like being trapped
17:13so he's going to be looking for any chink in the armour
17:17to get out of that entrapment.
17:21Naylor was handcuffed in the day cell.
17:24He became increasingly agitated
17:27and then he ran to the toilet
17:31and he shoved both hands down the toilet bowl
17:34and began to very, very quickly
17:37rinse the blood off his hands.
17:40He then turned to myself and said,
17:42that will make it more difficult for you, you bastards.
17:51But the police were already one step ahead of Naylor.
17:56Mark recognised the victim from his work
17:59in the red light district.
18:01She was 22-year-old sex worker Deborah Kershaw.
18:07It's really sad that we know so little about Deborah
18:10and I think that does speak to the way
18:14that sex workers were viewed at the time.
18:17That she wasn't notable in society enough
18:21for them to keep a record of this wonderful woman's life
18:24and what she meant to people.
18:28Sex workers are very, very often targeted
18:32by men who specifically want to hurt and kill women.
18:37It's not the fact that they're sex workers,
18:40it's the fact that they have access to them.
18:44He wanted a woman and he got a woman.
18:48Naylor had been caught red-handed
18:50and was swiftly charged with murder.
18:53But, faced with prison time, he started to change his story.
18:58He was going to put the blame on his victim.
19:01Deborah, he said, had become aggressive, uncooperative
19:04when he'd said to her that he didn't have enough money.
19:08His excuse was, she died after he'd put her in a headlock.
19:14In other words, the killer was blaming the victim
19:18for her own death.
19:21This is a man who will try every possible escape route
19:26with no moral code whatsoever.
19:29No shame, no remorse, no guilt, no nothing.
19:31Just me, me, me, I want to get out of here.
19:39The trial began at Leeds Crown Court.
19:42The jury weren't allowed to know about Naylor's violent past.
19:47They had to make a judgment
19:48based purely on the evidence of Deborah's murder.
19:54The post-mortem on Deborah
19:57said that Deborah had been strangled
20:00and the strangulation was done by both hands
20:04around the neck,
20:07repeated gripping over and over,
20:12which in essence caused a patchwork of bruising
20:16around the neck from the front to the back.
20:19When Naylor gets to trial,
20:23the defence make a great play of the fact
20:25that Deborah had a very frail windpipe
20:28and suggest that it was perhaps their client
20:32who's suggesting it was a tragic accident
20:34during consensual sex.
20:36In a crushing blow to prosecutors
20:39and the family of Deborah Kershaw,
20:42the jury believed Naylor's version of events
20:45and found him guilty not of murder but of manslaughter.
20:51That was a huge error of judgment.
20:56Naylor's obviously a really clever performer
20:58to persuade a jury
21:00that somehow his crimes were not as bad as they were,
21:05that he was not a murderer
21:07but an unfortunate killer who'd made a mistake.
21:11That's unforgivable.
21:12It was, I suppose, an indication to him
21:16that he could get away with whatever he wanted.
21:19After the verdict,
21:21the jury were made aware of Naylor's criminal background
21:24for the first time.
21:26It was clear to me, looking across
21:29at the 12 members of the jury,
21:32that they were hashing, white-faced,
21:35indeed quite shocked
21:36when they heard about his character and background,
21:39and I have no doubt in my mind
21:42that perhaps as some of them returned home,
21:45they obviously thought,
21:46perhaps we've got this one wrong.
21:52Despite escaping a murder conviction,
21:56George Naylor was still sentenced to life in prison
21:59and even behind bars,
22:01the rage remained inside of him.
22:04At one point, he made threats
22:06that should he ever get out of prison
22:09for killing Deborah,
22:11he would pay me a visit.
22:13That's putting it politely.
22:15He's trying to assert his status.
22:20You're not better than me,
22:22so you better be careful.
22:24When I get out of here, I'm going to hurt you.
22:27Throughout his life,
22:28he's used fear to try and control people.
22:31Just the same old, same old.
22:33He had nothing else, really.
22:36Just one year into his imprisonment,
22:39Naylor appealed his sentence
22:41and went before a new judge.
22:43His legal team claimed
22:45that he no longer posed a threat to the public.
22:49Staggeringly,
22:50especially when you look at his previous history
22:52and now know what was to follow,
22:55the judge agreed with him.
22:57He said virtually
22:59that he posed no threat to the general public,
23:02that that threat was barren.
23:04And, in fact,
23:06his sentence was reduced
23:08to just 11 years.
23:13Well, I don't want to use expletives,
23:15but, of course, I was furious.
23:17That must have been heartbreaking
23:19for the family,
23:21friends and loved ones of Deborah.
23:27Police thought they had finally put George Naylor
23:31behind bars for life,
23:33but, in a stunning turn of events,
23:36after serving just seven and a half years,
23:39he was out again,
23:40no longer just a rapist,
23:42but a practiced killer.
23:44Emboldened by the legal system,
23:47Naylor was a free man and primed
23:49to kill again.
23:52In 1993,
24:0248-year-old George Naylor
24:04was once again a free man,
24:06with a record for both rape and manslaughter.
24:10But prison hadn't slowed him down.
24:13Behind bars,
24:14he'd kept up his talent for charm
24:16and had even left prison
24:19with something no-one expected,
24:21a new wife.
24:29He managed to persuade a woman
24:32that he was a man who should be
24:34and could be loved.
24:35He was actually married in prison.
24:38The woman who married him
24:41knew nothing of his past,
24:43but this was not
24:44a man who could be tamed.
24:47When Naylor left prison,
24:49he moved with his new wife
24:51to South Shields
24:52in the northeast.
24:53She thought he was a nice person,
24:57a different person
24:58to the one he actually was.
25:01And unfortunately,
25:03when he was released,
25:05she found out very quickly
25:07what a dangerous person Naylor was.
25:11Eventually, his wife was forced
25:13to get a restraining order on him.
25:16He tried to strangle her.
25:17She thought she was going to die
25:19and the marriage was over.
25:21Naylor moved back to Bradford
25:24with tragic consequences.
25:35On the 9th of June, 1995,
25:39police were called to the home
25:41of 18-year-old Maureen Stepan,
25:44where her boyfriend
25:45had found her dead.
25:48A murdering cry was launched.
25:49I was a detective sergeant
25:52working at the local police station
25:53in Bradford,
25:54so I was part of
25:55the investigation team.
25:57The investigation began
26:00by learning more
26:01about the 18-year-old.
26:06Maureen was a young girl,
26:08an attractive girl,
26:09came from a good family.
26:11We met her mother and father.
26:13but, like many young people,
26:16she eventually got involved in drugs.
26:21Her parents tried desperately to cope.
26:24They went to social services
26:25and they said,
26:26please help us.
26:27She was sent to establishments
26:30in London and elsewhere in the country,
26:32but she never could quite kick the addiction.
26:36Once she'd become addicted to heroin,
26:40then it was incredibly difficult
26:41to fund that addiction.
26:43Working in the sex trade
26:45was just one way
26:47of actually funding that heroin addiction.
26:50Frequently,
26:51she was found
26:52walking the streets of Bradford
26:54and looking for customers.
26:56On the night of her murder,
26:58Maureen had been working on the street.
27:00investigators needed to figure out
27:03who she'd met that night.
27:06We just simply had
27:08other accounts from her friends
27:10who had said
27:10she was standing
27:11on this particular street corner.
27:13A car pulled up,
27:14she got in,
27:15she went off,
27:16but then she came back
27:17and we saw her again later on.
27:19But then we realised
27:20after a while
27:21that after one particular meeting,
27:24then she disappeared.
27:26Clearly, this would seem
27:27to be when she met her killer
27:30went back to her house
27:32and was killed.
27:37Police had a timeline,
27:39but nobody could identify
27:41her abductor.
27:42It was a dead end.
27:45Investigators went back
27:46to Maureen's body.
27:48Maybe it could provide clues
27:49as to who had brutally murdered her.
27:52Her clothing had been removed
27:54and she'd been strangled
27:56with her own tights.
27:57We saw cigarette burns
28:00on her body,
28:01so she'd been mutilated
28:02after death.
28:04It was clearly
28:05a sick individual
28:07who'd done that to somebody.
28:10That shows to me
28:11a lot of rage,
28:14a lot of hatred
28:15towards what
28:17the victim represents,
28:19women.
28:20He absolutely
28:23wanted to show
28:24you are
28:25nothing.
28:27I am
28:27better.
28:28I am
28:29above you.
28:31You are
28:32literally
28:33nothing to me.
28:41Investigators
28:41appealed to the public
28:43for help in catching
28:44this violent killer.
28:46Someone came forward
28:47saying they had
28:48information about
28:49a local resident,
28:52George Naylor.
28:55George had
28:56recently
28:57visited
28:58a friend of his
28:59and
29:00had asked him
29:01if he would
29:01wash some clothing.
29:04That was very unusual.
29:05Why would
29:06George Naylor
29:07need someone else
29:08to wash his clothing?
29:11So he became
29:12a very strong
29:13person of interest
29:14from our point of view.
29:15It's hardly
29:17a surprise
29:18that Naylor
29:18becomes a possible
29:19suspect.
29:20He's known
29:21as a sex offender.
29:22He's killed
29:23before.
29:24So he gets
29:26onto a shortlist
29:27very quickly.
29:28As police
29:29investigated
29:30the now
29:3150-year-old
29:32George Naylor,
29:33they found
29:34more and more
29:35red flags.
29:37We discovered
29:38that he had
29:39fled Bradford
29:40where he had
29:41a house.
29:42That in itself
29:43was unusual.
29:44In fleeing,
29:46he drew
29:47even more
29:47attention
29:48to himself.
29:50It's one
29:50of those
29:51panic decisions
29:52that really
29:53he should have
29:54thought about it
29:55more.
29:55Police discovered
29:57that Naylor
29:57hadn't gone far.
29:59He was back
30:00at his
30:00estranged wife's
30:01home in
30:02South Shields.
30:03On the
30:0416th of June
30:051995,
30:06the police
30:07felt that Naylor
30:08was a strong
30:09enough suspect
30:10to arrest him
30:11for the murder
30:12of Maureen
30:13Stepan.
30:14Having arrested
30:15many, many
30:16people,
30:17his reaction
30:17was quite unusual.
30:19He didn't panic,
30:20didn't protest,
30:22he wasn't shocked.
30:24One of the first
30:25things he asked
30:26is he wanted
30:26to go to the toilet.
30:28Now,
30:28something about
30:29George's manner
30:31and demeanour
30:32at that stage
30:33told me that
30:34something strange
30:35was going to happen.
30:35turned his back
30:38on me
30:38and he began
30:39to urinate.
30:41I could see
30:42he was fumbling
30:43around and
30:43something strange
30:44was going on.
30:46George had
30:46a load of pills
30:48and he was trying
30:49to get those pills
30:50out and
30:51to swallow them.
30:57So we very
30:58quickly disabled
30:59him,
31:00overpowered him,
31:01removed the pills
31:02from his hands
31:03and took them
31:04away from him
31:05and placed him
31:06in handcuffs.
31:10Now in
31:11police custody,
31:13Naylor denied
31:14knowing Maureen
31:15and said he had
31:16nothing to do
31:17with her murder.
31:19Detectives needed
31:20to find evidence
31:21to link him
31:22to Maureen.
31:23They started
31:24by searching
31:25his marital home.
31:27We noticed
31:28that the house
31:29had a telephone
31:30answering system.
31:31A lot of calls
31:32coming into the house
31:33were logged.
31:34So we were able
31:35to see the numbers
31:36that had been
31:37ringing the house.
31:39When we spoke
31:40to his partner,
31:42she informed us
31:43that on the night
31:44of the offence,
31:46she had gone out
31:47with a group of friends
31:48and he was not
31:49happy about that.
31:50In fact,
31:50he was furious.
31:52While she was out,
31:53he kept on
31:54ringing and ringing
31:55and ringing her house
31:57to find out
31:58where she was.
31:59but that gave us
32:01a little goldmine
32:02of evidence
32:03because all those
32:04numbers that we
32:06found on the
32:07tele-on-answering
32:08machine
32:08were Bradford numbers.
32:11That allowed us
32:12to prove
32:13that George
32:14was in the red light
32:15area,
32:16very, very close
32:17to where Maureen
32:18Stepan
32:19had been last seen
32:20and had actually
32:21been working
32:22that night.
32:24Naylor was forced
32:25to admit
32:25that he had been
32:26in the Bradford area
32:28but it still
32:28wasn't enough
32:29to charge him.
32:32Fortunately,
32:32the police were able
32:33to retrieve the clothing
32:35that he'd been wearing
32:36that night.
32:37It had been washed
32:38but they were able
32:39to actually still
32:40find enough material
32:42to make a test on.
32:44They were able
32:44to say that
32:45the jeans
32:46that George Naylor
32:47had dropped off
32:47to be washed
32:48had the blood
32:50of Maureen Stepan
32:51on the knee.
32:55Investigators
32:57now had
32:58compelling evidence
32:59that linked Naylor
33:00not just to the area
33:02but directly
33:03to Maureen's murder.
33:05We sort of
33:06forced him
33:07into a corner
33:07where he had
33:08to admit
33:09actual contact
33:10with Maureen.
33:12George's account
33:13changed dramatically
33:14and then
33:15what he said
33:16was,
33:16I did meet
33:17somebody
33:18that fits
33:19the description
33:19of Maureen Stepan
33:20on the knee
33:21in question.
33:22She did get
33:25into my car
33:26and we did
33:27have sex
33:27but I did
33:29not kill her
33:29and I did
33:30not go back
33:31to her house.
33:32Typically for Naylor
33:33even when he's
33:34confronted by
33:35really clear evidence
33:37DNA,
33:38the phone calls
33:38all the rest
33:39he's still trying
33:40to wriggle out of it
33:41he's still trying
33:42to say no,
33:42no,
33:42it's a misunderstanding
33:43it wasn't me
33:44as you would expect
33:46from a man
33:47whose vanity
33:47knew few bounds.
33:52Detectives were certain
33:53they had their man
33:55and on the 17th of June
33:57George Naylor
33:58was charged
33:58with the murder
33:59of Maureen Stepan.
34:01The police had evidence
34:02to show a man
34:03with a history
34:04of violence
34:05angry at his wife
34:07and a young woman
34:08who simply
34:09crossed his path.
34:11Maureen was obviously
34:13desperate that night.
34:15She was still
34:15on the streets
34:16at 2.30 in the morning.
34:19It was then
34:20that Naylor
34:21approached her
34:22and asked her
34:23for sex.
34:25He had spent
34:25the evening
34:26in a local pub.
34:27He was getting
34:28more and more angry.
34:30He tried to contact
34:31his wife
34:32to persuade her
34:32to take him back
34:34and by the time
34:36his car
34:37pulled up
34:38where Maureen stood
34:39in a usual spot
34:40in Bradford
34:42he was fuming.
34:46What he's suffering
34:47in his mind
34:48is massive injustice
34:51meted out
34:52on him
34:53by a woman.
34:55We have this
34:56massive entitlement
34:57and status issue.
35:00He's going to take it out
35:02on another woman.
35:04He was very jealous
35:05and therefore
35:07by picking up
35:08a person working
35:09in the sex trade
35:10he was going to
35:11get his own back.
35:12He saw Maureen,
35:14George picked her up
35:15and then
35:16they ended up
35:17going back
35:17to the house.
35:18She will have had
35:19seconds to make
35:20a decision
35:21as to whether
35:22it was safe enough.
35:25And with certain
35:25individuals
35:26like Naylor
35:27I think that
35:28if she hadn't
35:29got in willingly
35:30he probably would have
35:31forced her in anyway.
35:38Police were confident
35:40that they had
35:41a watertight case
35:42against Naylor.
35:44But he'd managed
35:46to evade justice
35:47once before.
35:49Investigators
35:49were desperate
35:50to make sure
35:51that history
35:52wouldn't repeat itself.
35:54But George Naylor
35:55was going to do
35:56whatever it took
35:57to try and get away
35:58with murder
35:59again.
36:01In 1997
36:11George Naylor
36:12was already
36:13a convicted
36:14killer and rapist
36:15and now
36:16he once again
36:17faced prison
36:18for the murder
36:19of 18-year-old
36:20Maureen Stepan.
36:22The trial began
36:23at Sheffield Crown Court
36:24with Maureen's family
36:26in attendance.
36:31Now I did
36:33meet Maureen's family
36:34at court.
36:36We did everything
36:37we could
36:37to comfort them
36:38to give them support
36:40to assist them
36:41in whatever way
36:42we could.
36:44Families
36:44want to know
36:46the facts
36:47even if those facts
36:48are incredibly painful
36:50and to add to that
36:52you've got somebody
36:53who you know
36:55has done it
36:56all the evidence
36:56is pointing that way
36:58who's going to
36:59start throwing
37:00out every kind
37:01of defence.
37:03Blame the victim
37:04make himself
37:05seem like a wonderful
37:07lovely person
37:07and all the time
37:09they've just got to
37:09sit there in silence
37:10and try and maintain
37:12dignity
37:13so hard.
37:16By 1997
37:17the law had changed
37:19and unlike his trial
37:20over a decade earlier
37:22the jury were now
37:23allowed to hear
37:24a lot more
37:25about Naylor's
37:26violent past.
37:27With Naylor
37:28his two offences
37:30were so incredibly
37:31similar
37:32in so many ways
37:34the MO
37:35the way
37:37that the women
37:38died
37:38we can say
37:40jury
37:41you need to know
37:42about this.
37:46The prosecution
37:48laid bare
37:49Naylor's history
37:50of raping
37:51and killing
37:52and Maureen's
37:53DNA
37:53on his
37:54trousers
37:54left him
37:55nowhere
37:56to hide
37:57finally
37:58George Naylor
37:59was found
38:00guilty of murder
38:01justice
38:02had seemingly
38:03been served
38:04on the 6th of
38:06February
38:061997
38:07he was given
38:09a life sentence
38:10however
38:11Naylor
38:13was an
38:13arch manipulator
38:14not just
38:15of women
38:16but of
38:17the system
38:17and he
38:19appealed
38:20that
38:21murder
38:21conviction
38:22he'd been
38:23successful
38:24before
38:24he was a
38:26man
38:27willing
38:27to just
38:28keep
38:29trying
38:30and trying
38:30and trying
38:31work for him
38:32in the past
38:32worth a punt
38:34I think
38:35is probably
38:35how he would
38:36have seen it
38:36in 1999
38:39Naylor
38:40was granted
38:40a retrial
38:41on the grounds
38:42that the jury
38:43should not
38:43have been told
38:44about his
38:45previous
38:46manslaughter
38:46conviction
38:47on this trial
38:49we weren't
38:49allowed to mention
38:50anything about
38:51the previous
38:52offence
38:52where Deborah
38:53Kirchner
38:53had been
38:54killed
38:54it went
38:55simply
38:55and solely
38:56on the evidence
38:57relating to
38:58Maureen Stepan
38:59the prosecution
39:00needed to try
39:01a new tactic
39:02to convince
39:03the jury
39:03of Naylor's
39:04bad character
39:05both his
39:06estranged wife
39:07and the mother
39:07of his children
39:08were brave enough
39:09to speak
39:10against him
39:11Naylor's
39:12previous partners
39:13testify
39:14that he is
39:15a violent man
39:16towards women
39:17that he is
39:18not of good
39:19character
39:19that he is
39:20in a sense
39:21hiding in plain sight
39:23he looks
39:24charming
39:25and
39:26nonchalant
39:27and
39:27ordinary
39:28and yet
39:30he truly isn't
39:31both women
39:33were certain
39:33of one thing
39:34if Naylor
39:36was released
39:37then he would
39:38kill again
39:39after yet
39:44another trial
39:45the jury
39:46found Naylor
39:47guilty
39:47for the second
39:48time
39:48he tried
39:49to escape
39:50justice
39:51but he was
39:51ordered to
39:52serve at least
39:5320 years
39:54behind bars
39:55for Maureen's
39:57family
39:57the seemingly
39:58endless trials
39:59were finally
40:00over
40:01I do believe
40:03there was a big
40:03sense of relief
40:04at the end
40:05that this was
40:05finally the end
40:06of this saga
40:07you can never
40:09forget your family
40:09members that have
40:10been killed
40:10like this
40:11but people
40:11have to move
40:12on
40:13have to try
40:13and build
40:14a life again
40:15but knowing
40:16that the killer's
40:16being caught
40:17and properly
40:17punished
40:18is a big
40:19factor in
40:20moving on
40:20and getting over
40:22and grieving
40:22properly
40:22Naylor had
40:25a significantly
40:26negative impact
40:28on so many
40:30different lives
40:30and those
40:32are just
40:32the ones
40:33we know
40:34about
40:34so this is
40:35a man
40:36who was
40:37trashing
40:38his way
40:38through life
40:39hurting
40:39everybody
40:41who came
40:42into his
40:42path
40:43Naylor
40:44didn't appear
40:45to see his
40:46victims as
40:46people
40:47it was
40:48as if
40:48Maureen's
40:49and Deborah's
40:49lives
40:50meant nothing
40:51to him
40:52it's vital
40:53that we give
40:54a voice
40:54for Maureen
40:55and Deborah
40:56they need
40:58to be heard
40:59they are
41:00someone's
41:01best friend
41:01someone's
41:02mum
41:02they are
41:04good people
41:05and do not
41:06deserve to be
41:07thrown away
41:08in the way
41:09that society
41:09treats them
41:10often these
41:14men
41:14these killers
41:15these vicious
41:16violent
41:17sadistic
41:18men
41:18excuse
41:20their behaviour
41:21by saying
41:22oh well
41:23she was only
41:24working the
41:24streets
41:25I always
41:27like to
41:28switch it
41:28around
41:29to say
41:31Naylor
41:32was the
41:33weak
41:33pathetic
41:34individual
41:36here
41:36the girls
41:38were sad
41:38victims of
41:39the circumstances
41:40that they had
41:41found themselves
41:41in
41:42drugs
41:44drive young
41:45women
41:45then
41:46as now
41:47to sell
41:48sex
41:49and we have
41:50to accept
41:50that is a fact
41:52and as such
41:53they are
41:54too easily
41:55prey for violent
41:57vicious killers
41:59like Naylor
42:00Naylor was finally
42:08back behind bars
42:09but many people
42:11involved in the case
42:12feel that he should
42:13never have been
42:14freed to kill
42:15for a second time
42:16I don't think
42:18justice was served
42:18in the end
42:19because he should
42:20never have got out
42:21from a killing
42:22having done
42:22seven and a half years
42:23and Maureen
42:25should still be alive
42:26to this date
42:27because he should
42:28have been in prison
42:28the tragedy of this case
42:32is the warning signs
42:33were always there
42:34I think Naylor
42:37should have been
42:38stopped
42:38much earlier
42:39there is no question
42:40in my mind
42:41that justice
42:42was not served
42:43particularly in the case
42:44of Deborah
42:44he was a man
42:46with I believe
42:47an evil gene
42:48and a man
42:49who would not
42:50be satisfied
42:51unless he satisfied
42:52himself
42:53and his objectives
42:54were always women
42:55and therefore
42:55any woman
42:57who came across
42:57his bowels
42:58was in danger
42:59from him
43:00on the 17th
43:09of December
43:102021
43:11George Naylor
43:13died of a brain
43:14aneurysm
43:15in HMP Franklin
43:17in Durham
43:18he was 77 years old
43:21I suppose really
43:23only at that point
43:24did I really
43:24truly believe
43:25that he was no longer
43:27a danger to the public
43:28and if George
43:30would have been released
43:31even as an elderly man
43:33I still think
43:33he would have had
43:34the potential
43:34to do harm
43:36to women
43:36so in that context
43:39the public
43:40no longer need
43:41to be
43:41in fear
43:42of George Naylor
43:43he's an insignificant
43:47predatory killer
43:49who died
43:50where he should have been
43:51a lot sooner
43:52in prison
43:53I just want people
43:56to remember
43:57behind the headlines
43:58are two young women
44:00who fell in
44:02with the wrong crowd
44:03as teenagers
44:05and met a man
44:07who was prepared
44:07to end their lives
44:09without a thought
44:11Naylor was a callous killer
44:21who bottled
44:22all the hatred
44:23he had for women
44:24and distilled it
44:25into the most
44:26shocking violence
44:27after managing
44:29to avoid
44:30a murder conviction
44:31for killing
44:31Deborah Kershaw
44:32his lust for brutality
44:34wasn't curbed
44:36in prison
44:36and when Naylor
44:38was released early
44:40he couldn't help
44:41but kill again
44:42squeezing the life
44:43out of 18-year-old
44:45Maureen Stepan
44:46leaving no doubt
44:48that George Naylor
44:49will forever be remembered
44:51as one of Britain's
44:52most evil killers
45:11shall be heard
45:12as one of the most
45:25more .
45:26Maybe but...
45:26how many doctors
45:27have lost
45:28this film
45:28or
45:29have been
45:30in here
45:31including
45:32Missy
45:32who
45:33will
45:34watch
45:34maybe
45:35stay
45:35ripped
45:36without
Được khuyến cáo
45:55
|
Sắp Tới
45:55
45:14
44:30
26:15
0:30
1:00
41:00
1:00
0:30
0:30
41:31
41:54
41:31
49:25
Hãy là người đầu tiên nhận xét