GLYN DIX … GLOUCESTER’S SCHIZOPSYCHOTIC MURDERER, SATANIC WIFE KILLER AND PATHOLOGICAL LIAR

TRUE CRIME, MURDERABILIA , MAIMERABILIA AND MUCH MORE  HERE ON DISPLAY AT THE CRIME THROUGH TIME COLLECTION , LITTLEDEAN JAIL 

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GLYN DIX RESIDED IN HIGH ORCHARD STREET , GLOUCESTER  IN THE LATE 1970’S   ( NOW GLOUCESTER QUAYS ) IN  GLOUCESTER DOCKS , IN A RENTED PROPERTY THEN OWNED BY PIA OVERBURY , WHOM HE MURDERED .

COINCIDENTALLY VERY CLOSE BY TO FRED AND ROSE WEST’S CAFE CALLED “THE GREEN LANTERN” AT 214 SOUTHGATE STREET , GLOUCESTER .

WERE GLYN DIX , FRED AND ROSE WEST FRIENDS  ??? …. PARTICULARLY WITH THEIR SATANIC  AND PERVERTED INTERESTS ???

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DID GLYN DIX FREQUENT 25 CROMWELL STREET AS WELL???

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FROM THE HANDS OF ONE OF BRITAIN’S MOST EVIL MURDERERS ….AND NOW FEATURED HERE AT LITTLEDEAN JAIL .

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Here below are two handwritten and signed letters written by Gloucester wife killer … Glyn Dix  from his prison cell whilst at HMP Wormwood Scrubs , London .

The first letter is dated in 1980 , shortly after being imprisoned for the rape and murder of 33 year old mother of two  Pia Overbury whose body was found in woodland , near Hartpury near Gloucester in  1979.

 

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Extract from Gloucester Citizen Newspaper in 1979

 

The letter below dated 1981 written by Dix whilst still imprisoned at HMP Wormwood Scrubs .

WHEN LIFE MEANS LIFE ….. AN EVIL SATANIC MURDERER WHO WILL NOW NEVER BE RELEASED FROM PRISON .

BELOW  DOCUMENTARY FOOTAGE ON EVIL GLOUCESTER MURDERER GLYN DIX  FEATURING PIA OVERBURY’S DAUGHTER MAXINE .

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GLYN DIX AT HIS WEDDING TO HAZEL DENVER IN 1999. HE MURDERED HER IN 2004

Saturday 19th June 2004, killer: Glyn Dix at his wedding to Hazel Denver in 1999. He murdered her in 2004.

Hazel Dix aged 54, was found at the house in Seymour Drive in the Abbeydale area of Redditch, Worcestershire, at about 4pm.
Hazel’s son Adam Langford found Dix with the body. Dix told him: “We’ve had a little argument”. Dix and Hazel made love before rowing over what TV channel to watch. He stabbed her three times. Dix used a knife, hacksaw and scissors to cut second wife Hazel’s body into 16 pieces at their home.
A post-mortem examination revealed she had suffered multiple stab wounds.
He was found guilty of murdering his wife Hazel in 2005, having stabbed her to death and chopped her body into 16 pieces at their home in Redditch, Worcestershire in the previous year.
Dix was sentenced to life imprisonment and it was then revealed that he had already been out of prison on life licence following a previous conviction for murdering Pia Overbury in the 1970s.
Dix was ordered to remain at the high security Ashworth Hospital in Merseyside until his death. Dix met Hazel six years previous while he was serving time for murdering mum-of-two Pia Overbury, 32, in the 1970’s

She had driven her son Adam to see Dix in jail after the pair became friends while her son was in prison.

Dix, who suffers from schizopsychotic affective disorder, will stay in Merseyside’s high-security Ashworth Hospital until he dies for killing Hazel last June
23rd February 2008, The Times newspaper, revealed that Dix was one of around 37 prisoners who had been issued with whole life tariffs and were unlikely ever to be released, as his trial judge had said that he was “too dangerous” ever to be paroled.

EVIL Glyn Dix was jailed for the rest of his life for butchering his wife under a full moon in a satanic-style slaying.

The monster cut the body of tragic Hazel into 16 pieces just three years after being freed from jail where he served 20 years for a gruesome slaying of another woman.

Dix, 51, struck after being introduced to Hazel by her son Adam who did not know details of the previous killing.

Mum-of-six Hazel, 54, was slaughtered in the kitchen of their home in Redditch, Worcs, and Dix crouched naked over her body hacking it to bits as Adam walked in.

The crime — committed during a full moon — had echoes of Dix’s first murder when he tied up, raped and shot Gloucester mum-of-two Pia Overbury in 1980 before blaming a “change in the seasons”. He was freed in 2001.

Yesterday he admitted the 2004 slaying of Hazel and Birmingham Crown Court caged him “for the rest of his natural life”.

20 Seymour Drive, Redditch

SNF10DIX-682_1102136aCrime scene … house in which Glyn Dix stabbed and chopped up his wife

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Hugh Worsnip, above, who worked as a reporter on The Citizen in Gloucester for 41 years, covered the murder of 33-year-old Pia Overbury, whose body was found in woodland near Hartpury, Gloucestershire.

Glyn Dix was convicted of murdering the mother-of-two and was jailed for 22 years in 1979. It also transpired that Miss Overbury was raped by Dix just 24 hours previously.

An interview with Hugh will feature in the last episode of “When Life Means Life”, which is being shown on the Crime & Investigation Network.

Said Hugh: “I remember it well and I remember going around to his house. It was absolutely terrible, one of the worst murder cases I have ever covered, for sure.”

Hugh also covered the Fred and Rosemary West Cromwell Street murders in 1994 and described it as one of the “nastiest” moments of his life.

The show comes about in the wake of murderer Arthur Hutchinson’s European Court of Human Rights bid to attempt to get out of his life sentence early.

If he’s successful, it could pave the way for others – including Glyn Dix – to do the same.

Dix, who was 26 at the time of the conviction, served the majority of his sentence and then married a woman called Hazel who he had befriended in jail.

They lived together in Redditch, Worcestershire. In 2004, he killed her too. Her son found Dix straddled over her with a knife in his hand.

Dix was sent to Ashworth in Liverpool for the rest of his life the following year.

R.I.P … WINNIE JOHNSON – MOTHER OF MOORS MURDER VICTIM KEITH BENNETT………. WHOSE BODY HAS NEVER BEEN FOUND

Winnie Johnson, born September 14 1933, died August 18 2012

HAVING HAD THE PRIVILEGE OF MEETING WITH WINNIE JOHNSON AND HAVING ATTENDED A FUND RAISING EVENT WITH HER TO HELP RAISE FUNDS TOWARDS FINDING HER SON KEITH BENNETT SOME 15 YEARS AGO OR SO, I WAS PERSONALLY SADDENED TO HEAR  OF HER RECENT DEATH . SHE WAS A TRULY LOVELY LADY WHOSE LIFE HAD BEEN DESTROYED BY THE EVIL CHILD KILLING MONSTERS …. IAN BRADY AND MYRA HINDLEY

Winnie Johnson

Winnie Johnson, who has died aged 78, endured a personal and public agony for nearly half a century as the mother of Keith Bennett, the only victim of the Moors murderers whose body has never been discovered.

Winnie Johnson on Saddleworth Moor clutching a picture of her son Keith, who was murdered by Ian Brady and Myra Hindley - Winnie Johnson never gave up hope of finding Keith
Winnie Johnson on Saddleworth Moor clutching a picture of her son Keith, who was murdered by Ian Brady and Myra Hindley Photo: NB PRESS

5:56PM BST 19 Aug 2012

Throughout the baleful Moors saga, Winnie Johnson was the tormented figure that the media turned to for toxic comment on the subject of Ian Brady and his lover Myra Hindley, who had murdered four other youngsters, three of whom had been buried in shallow graves on the bleak Pennine moors above Manchester.

When Brady and Hindley failed to pinpoint her son’s grave — both perpetrators had revisited the moors with detectives when the case was reopened in 1987 — Winnie Johnson made the first of dozens of weekend visits to the area, accompanied by her family armed with shovels. But although guided by the available evidence, including information gleaned from Brady and Hindley in unpublished letters, their efforts proved physically and emotionally draining and, in the end, hopeless.

The circumstances of 12-year-old Keith Bennett’s disappearance could not have been more humdrum. At 7.45pm on Tuesday June 16 1964, a fine summer’s evening, Winnie Johnson set out with her son from their home in Eston Street in the Longsight district of Manchester. They were on their way to Morton Street, where Keith was to spend the night with his maternal grandmother, as he did every other Tuesday when his mother played bingo.

Although it was only a half-mile walk, Winnie Johnson judged it prudent to accompany him to the corner of the busy Stockport Road, from where he had only a few hundred yards to go. At the zebra crossing there she waved him off, telling him to give “love to Gran”. She carried on to bingo. Keith Bennett was never seen or heard of again.

One of the streets along which the boy would have made his solitary way was Westmoreland Street, where Ian Brady had lived with his mother. He and Hindley still called regularly at the corner off-licence nearby to buy wine for their frequent trips to the moors. Their routine was to arrive home from work, have a meal, and set out at about 8pm.

When her mother appeared next morning to ask why Keith had failed to turn up, Winnie Johnson checked at his school, panicked and called the police.

Her first concern was that her studious, short-sighted son had not been wearing his wire-framed NHS spectacles, having cracked one of the lenses at the local swimming baths. For many years afterwards she kept the broken glasses in his drawer in the back bedroom. “If I had known,” she said, “I would never have let him out of my sight.”

On four occasions over the next two years, police questioned her husband Jimmy Johnson, Keith’s stepfather, ripping out floorboards in the family house and digging up the concrete back yard.

When a wider search for bodies began following the arrest of Brady and Hindley in October 1965, Winnie Johnson realised that Keith and another missing youngster, 16-year-old Pauline Reade, might also have been among their victims and buried somewhere in the vast wilderness of Saddleworth Moor.

Police showed Winnie Johnson clothing belonging to a second 12-year-old, John Kilbride, one of Brady and Hindley’s known victims, because they thought at first that his body might be Keith’s. But confirmation that Keith had indeed been murdered came only in 1985 — 21 years after his disappearance — when Ian Brady confessed to a journalist.

Winnie Johnson spent five weeks laboriously writing an impassioned letter to his co-accused. “Dear Miss Hindley,” it began. “I am sure I am one of the last people you would have expected to receive a letter from…” It was, as Mrs Johnson was at pains to stress, no rant but a plea for help. “Please, I beg you, tell me what happened to Keith. My heart tells me you know and I am on bended knees begging you to end this torture and finally put my mind at rest…”

Winnie Johnson had not expected a positive response, or indeed any response at all. Hindley, however, not only admitted her complicity in Keith’s murder but also, in the words of Det Ch Supt Peter Topping, the officer heading the reinvestigation, “appealed to God that the bodies of the two missing youngsters should be found… ”

Hindley further agreed to help police locate the graves of Keith Bennett and Pauline Reade, and in December 1986 was taken by detectives on the first of two highly-publicised searches of Saddleworth Moor. But when finally, in July 1987, police found a body, Topping telephoned Winnie Johnson to tell her that it was that of Pauline Reade, not of her son. Winnie Johnson’s steadfast pugnacity deserted her and she broke down and wept.

Brady, too, confidently accompanied detectives to the moor, but apparently lost his bearings and was unable to find Keith’s grave; six weeks later, when Topping called off the search, a sobbing Winnie Johnson repeated over and over again that, while she did not blame the police, she felt life had “given her a raw deal”. As if to prolong the agony, six years of renewed police searches from 2003-09 were also to prove fruitless.

One of four children, Winifred Bennett was born on September 14 1933 in the Ardwick district of Manchester. Her father was a wholesale fruit dealer, her mother a domestic servant. When she was 10 she witnessed the death of her seven-year-old sister Margaret after her dress burst into flames on an electric fire. Leaving Mansfield Street school when she was 15 Winnie took a series of jobs, including working as a cinema usherette and at a rubber factory. She was 18 and unmarried when she gave birth to her first son, Keith, in June 1952. She subsequently had seven more children, including three with Jimmy Johnson, a joiner, to whom she was married from 1961 until his death 30 years later.

The family moved from Clayton to Eston Street, Longsight, in 1963, with Winnie Johnson working during the school holidays as a cleaner at the Electricity Board offices on Bax Road, five minutes’ walk from her house. Meanwhile, Keith and his siblings would spend hours at the Victoria Baths on High Street (now Hathersage Road).

Keith made strenuous attempts to teach his younger brother, Alan, to swim, but as Alan later explained “I spent most of the time gingerly sat on the edge of the pool with my feet in the water, squinting up at the sun coming through the glass roof. After Keith disappeared I rarely went there again.”

It was at the Victoria Baths that on June 15, three days after his 12th birthday, Keith broke a lens in his glasses during a swimming gala. He vanished the following day.

By the time she wrote to Myra Hindley in 1986 Winnie Johnson was working in the kitchens at the Christie Hospital, south Manchester.

When Hindley died in prison in 2002, Winnie Johnson turned her attention to Ian Brady, engaging with him in what some characterised as a series of mind games as he stalled on the question of the whereabouts of Keith Bennett’s body. Few doubted that Brady knew where to look; his persistent refusal to say was viewed as a particularly vindictive act of cruelty.

Winnie Johnson, who had long suffered from cancer, remained ignorant of the turn of events last week, when it was reported that Brady had written her a letter, to be opened only after his own death, perhaps identifying the location of Keith’s body, or perhaps merely taunting her further.

“I’ll do anything, go anywhere for him,” she said of her dead son earlier this year. “As long as I know one day, I’ll be grateful. I hope he’s found before I am dead. All I want out of life is to find him and bury him. I just wish he is found before I go.”

Despite the confessions of Hindley and Brady, no one was ever charged over her son’s disappearance, and officially the case remains unsolved. Keith Bennett would have been 60 this year.

Winnie Johnson, born September 14 1933, died August 18 2012