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THE DEAL

Kerry MacGill
Kerry Macgill is a Bradford based solicitor who legally represented
Peter Sutcliffe after his arrest. He brokered a deal with
detective Chief Superintendant Dick Holland which was designed
to get the best possible treatment for his client. In this
he was hugely successful. MacGill is a Crown Court judge sitting in Leeds and Bradford presently and has been for several years already. Such are the rewards for serious crime.
Peter Sutcliffe had murdered Jacqueline Hill in Headingly
Leeds only six weeks before his arrest in Sheffield and this murder was still fresh in peoples minds. Sutcliffe
was well described as a suspect and his car was equally well
described.
He had driven the wrong way up a one-way street and made
no attempt to hide when he attacked Jacqueline ,allowing another
student Andree Proctor to get a good look at him. The student
reported the assault and the police came but didnt make a
thorough search.

Andree Proctor
Jacqueline died of exposure on a frosty November night and
had she been found when the police searched the area shortly
after the attack she would have survived ,as did two of his
earlier victims only weeks before, one of whom, Miss Lee was
also a student in Leeds university. The details of this attack
were never revealed to the press by the police for "operational"
reasons.
Sutcliffe, the seriously disturbed madman who had told his
friend Trevor Birdsall that he was
the Ripper,who had told a private detective Jim Lyness that
he was the Ripper, who phoned Olive Smelt in the vain hope that the police would
trace the call to him, whose workmates openly called him "the Ripper" because the police had been checking
so much on him, who had been in touch with clairvoyants telling
them he was the Ripper ,who had brought Leeds to a standstill
when he phoned the police to say the Ripper would strike in
Leeds on a certain night, who had attracted so much police
attention that they were certain he did not fit the Ripper
frame was finally being taken seriously. Forensic science
and solid evidence were being discarded in favour of confessions
with the backing of four eminent psychiatrists who would certify
his insanity .

Dr Hugo Milne
The police needed to bury the Ripper to cover up all the
glaring blunders they had been exposed to by him. They had
much to hide ,not the least of which was their failure to
hold Sutcliffe since January 1980 when they knew he was the
copy-cat killer. This resulted in three more murders and at
least three more assaults by him which could have been avoided.
They were much more interested in getting their hands on Billy
Tracey and couldn’t risk alerting him to the arrest of his
copy-cat. The public paid the price.
Kerry Macgill brokered a deal which included no trial, a
place reserved in a mental hospital with room service and
choice of meals and a good likelyhood of parole within seven
years, for his client who was willing to confess to anything,
to a receptive policeman, Dick Holland.
Holland was able to relay to Sutcliffe his story about the
arrest ,the subsequent trial and conviction of Mark Rowntree, another disturbed maniac who
had stabbed two people in Leeds in 1975 and was at large and
knew the police were looking for him . Rowntree phoned Holland
who was then based in Bradford, to arrange to give himself
up and Holland subsequently arrested him. Coincidentally two
brutal murders were committed in Leeds the day before his
arrest and by the time Holland was finished with Rowntree
he had admitted to these also, a coup for Dick Holland who
was clearing up unsolved crimes in record time. The Leeds
police hadn’t had time to get their forensic results back
from the laboratory before the crimes were solved with Rowntree's
confessions. He was ordered to be held without limit of time
but was freed on parole seven years later. Sutcliffe was given
all these details and went along with the deal.


Holland also secured the confession and subsequent conviction
in Court of Stefan Kiszko for the murder of eleven year
old Leslie Moleseed. Forensic evidence which could clear Kiszko
was never revealed at the trial and Holland basked in the
glory of a successful conviction stemming largely from the
confession he had extracted out of the terrified Kiszko who
admitted the crime under the duress of many hours of repeated
threatening behaviour by the bulky Holland. All these successful
cases led to his promotion to Detective Chief Superintendant
of police and this was the policeman who headed up the Yorkshire
Ripper investigation and brokered the deal with Sutcliffes
legal team. Holland’s record of fitting up fall guys for murder
was something that Billy Tracey was all too well aware of.
This murder of Leslie Moleseed is now an unsolved case once
more. Ironically it bears many resemblances to the admitted
and fully corroborated attacks on Peter Sutcliffe’s other
victims ,namely Mrs Smelt, Mrs Rogulsky, Tracy Browne and Marcella Claxton. Semen was found on Miss Brown’
clothing indicating her assailant had masturbated on her.
Miss Moleseed received the same treatment four months later
in the same general vicinity. Because the semen was not B
secretor blood group Miss Brown’s assault was never in the
Ripper frame. Even when her photo fit description of her assailant
closely matched those of Sutcliffe’s later victims in the
investigation, her attack was never in the frame. Marcella Claxton saw and accurately described
Sutcliffe who masturbated over her after battering her over
the head. He wiped himself with tissues and threw a fiver
on the ground beside her, telling her not to go to the police.
She also described his white car with red upholstry . A similarly
described car was sought after the Moleseed murder. It would
be conclusive now, to compare Sutcliffe’s semen with the evidence
which cleared Stefan Kiszko in 1992 but was witheld at his
trial. The Claxton assault was never in the Ripper frame until
after Sutcliffe’s arrest when they wanted to clear everything
associated with him including the Ripper murders. Needless
to say when he was confessing to all his crimes the Moleseed
murder would not be of interest to Dick Holland because Kiszko
was convicted for that.
Sutcliffe, after his arrest was very anxious to conceal his
perverse sexual motive in his crimes preferring to portray
that he was on a mission from God. The sexual evidence in
these early assaults is clear. Perhaps when he realised that
the Ripper was manipulating him later in the game, he committed
attacks in his efforts to be arrested and this was his mission.
After Sutcliffe’s trial I put most of these facts to Kerry
Macgill in a letter. He never replied.
Nine years later he was assisting Sonia Sutcliffe to pursue
a magazine, Private Eye, in a libel action in the High Court
in London for alleged damages to her. I travelled there and
when I approached him he rebuffed me and refused to talk.
She was awarded massive damages by a sympathetic jury even
though she perjured herself. Kerry Macgill succeeded again.
When Dick Holland faced criminal
charges for the wrongful conviction of Stefan Kiszko, who better to turn to for legal
advice than Kerry Macgill, the Bradford solicitor who had
negotiated the sweet deal for Sutcliffe years earlier.
Macgill’s handling of this case got Holland off the charges
on the technicalities of time and memory lapse..
All in all Kerry Macgill has played a major role in this
debacle by his blinkered vision of wanting to win the best
possible deal for his client without consideration for the
victims who were treated like pawns in his legal dealings.

Evidence has been ignored, justice has been perverted, the
real Yorkshire Ripper, Billy Tracey has been facilitated to
remain free to commit crimes against other innocent victims
unaware of the implications of Macgill's deals.
THE MURDERS
HAVE NOT STOPPED
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