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Home ยป Missing Brady memoir ‘could hold clues to victim burial site’ | UK News
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Missing Brady memoir ‘could hold clues to victim burial site’ | UK News

By uk-times.com30 July 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
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PA Media A black and white photograph showing the Moors murderer Ian Brady, seated in the back seat of a car. He has dark hair and is wearing a suit jacket. The car window is partially visible, with another individual standing outside the vehicle, looking in.PA Media

Ian Brady pictured in a police car on his way to court in 1966

Missing pages from an autobiography written by Moors murderer Ian Brady could throw new light on where his final missing victim is buried, according to a new documentary.

The last 200 pages of Brady’s manuscript may contain his account of 12-year-old Keith Bennett’s murder and burial in 1964, it is claimed. They are believed to have been deposited with Brady’s solicitor, but he has not commented.

Bennett’s brother, Alan, has called for any missing material to be made available to police, because it could contain “vital information in regard to the search for Keith”. He was kept informed of the discovery by the makers of The Moors Murders – A Search For Justice.

In a separate development, defence files from the trial of Brady and his accomplice, Myra Hindley, have recently been rediscovered by the journalist and author presenting the documentary, Duncan Staff. Photos contained within these files have raised fresh questions about the search for the victims.

Brady and Hindley achieved infamy in the 1960s as the Moors murderers – so-called because they buried four of their five young victims on Saddleworth Moor, north-east of Manchester.

The gruesome details of their crimes have retained a dark grip on the public imagination ever since.

Getty Images Black and white photograph of Keith Bennett with short, light-colored hair. They are dressed in a light-colored collared shirt layered under a sweater or jacket. Getty Images

Keith Bennett was murdered in 1964 but his body has never been found

Brady and Hindley were jailed in 1966 for torturing and killing three children – Lesley Ann Downey, 10, John Kilbride, 12, and Edward Evans, 17. Twenty-one years later, they also confessed to murdering Pauline Reade, 16, and Keith Bennett – crimes of which they had long been suspected.

Reade’s body was found on Saddleworth Moor in 1987, but Bennett has never been found.

Brady died in 2017, aged 79. Shortly afterwards, theologian Alan Keightley, published a book about the killer, based on hours of interviews with him at Ashworth Special Hospital.

Keightley himself died in 2023, but his widow, Joan, has given the documentary-makers access to her late husband’s extensive archive. This includes an incomplete copy of a typed manuscript titled “Black Light”, which Brady appears to have written.

Keightley writes in his own book that Brady told him “Black Light” was at least 600 pages long. The copy in his own archive stops abruptly at page 394, shortly before the murder of John Kilbride, Brady and Hindley’s second victim.

The autobiography contains a detailed description of where the murderers buried their first victim, Pauline Reade: “We counted the paces back to a rock on the knoll in order to be able to find the site and photograph it at a future date.”

If similar detail has been included for Keith Bennett, it would provide vital information about where his body is buried, says the new documentary.

The image shows the opening lines of Ian Brady's autobiography. At the top, a typewritten excerpt is highlighted in red with handwritten annotations. The text begins: "The real answer as to why I am now writing is quite simple: to reveal the full facts of the case for the first time ever..." and continues with a critique of Myra Hindley's confession and the police response. Below this is a clearer retyped version of part of the same text. The bottom left corner credits "Source: Longtail Films" and the  logo appears in the bottom right corner.

Keightley wrote in his book that Brady once asked him to deliver a “double sealed parcel”, which he assumed to contain the autobiography, to a solicitor in London.

This solicitor, Benedict Birnberg, died in 2023. His firm told the that any material left with them had now been sent to Brady’s other solicitor, Robin Makin, in Liverpool.

The approached Makin to comment about whether he was in possession of the autobiography, but he has not responded.

The Bennett family’s lawyer asked the documentary-makers to let the police know about “Black Light”.

Greater Manchester Police initially said it wanted to see a large amount of material gathered for the programme, but then abruptly changed its mind.

In a statement, it told the : “We will carefully consider and respond, in a timely and professional manner, to any credible evidence shared with us that may lead us towards finding Keith.”

Photographic clues?

Many of the original defence case papers from Brady and Hindley’s trial, now held by documentary-maker Duncan Staff and his team, have not been made public before.

The files, kept for decades by one of the defence lawyers, include interview logs, notes written by Hindley during police interviews, and photographs taken by Brady on Saddleworth Moor.

During the initial police investigation, it was believed the photos contained clues – and Hindley confirmed in interviews with Staff in the 1990s that Brady had taken them to remember where the bodies were buried.

In one shot, Hindley is seen crouching on a rock, cradling her dog, in an area known as Hollin Brown Knoll. This was later discovered to be the exact spot where John Kilbride was buried. The bodies of Lesley Ann Downey and, much later, Pauline Reade, were also found nearby.

Longtail Films A black and white photograph shows Myra Hindley crouching on a rocky, grassy terrain. She is wearing a coat and boots, and is holding a small dog close to her chest. Snow patches are visible in the background.Longtail Films

In this photograph taken by Ian Brady, Myra Hindley crouches above the spot where their second victim, John Kilbride, was buried

In the case of Keith Bennett, Hindley and Brady later claimed he had been murdered and buried a mile or so further east in Shiny Brook, an area where Brady also took photographs. But a police search there found nothing.

Map of Saddleworth Moor showing key sites in the Moors Murders case. Marked locations include where Lesley Ann Downey (1965), Pauline Reade (1987), and John Kilbride (1965) were found. Shiny Brook and Hollin Brown Knoll are also labeled. The A635 road runs through the area. An inset map shows Oldham near Manchester in the UK.

The significance of some of the other photos from Hollin Brown Knoll remains “troubling”, according to forensic archaeologist Prof John Hunter.

In one, Hindley is standing on rocks, once more holding her dog. Her pose completely, and maybe deliberately, obscures a gas pipeline marker behind her.

The marker’s presence is revealed in a police photo, newly found in the defence files, that was taken at the same spot.

These images may be important, according to Prof Hunter, because there is no obvious connection to any of the known burial sites.

Geoff Knupfer, a former police officer who worked on the case in the 1980s, says he was told that, during the original investigation, it was “thought [Bennett] could have been disposed of within the trench of the pipeline”.

He adds this possibility had not been explored because digging up the pipeline was thought to be “far too expensive”.

Side-by-side black and white photos of rocky terrain. Left: 'Brady photo' shows Myra Hindley standing on rocks, holding her dog close to her chest. Right: 'Police photo' shows the same terrain with a visible gas marker signpost highlighted in the distance. Text at bottom reads 'Images: Longtail Films' with a  logo in the corner.

Brady’s photo of Hindley (left) is posed to hide the gas marker behind her; a recently found police photo taken at the same spot reveals its presence

Knupfer says there was a decision “taken at some level within the [police] service or the Home Office” to stop searching for the missing bodies once Hindley and Brady were convicted of three of the five murders.

“I don’t want to criticise former colleagues too much,” he says, “but it’s all very well and good if it’s not your children who are missing.”

For the families, says Staff, the lack of action has left them with a “constant enduring pain”.

“They could have raised money, they could have done something,” Pauline Reade’s niece, Jackie, tells the documentary. “There was no need for them to stop searching.”

One officer is said to have been so upset by the decision to call off the hunt for bodies that he returned with sniffer dogs to make an unauthorised search of the area.

“I can see why [the police] thought, ‘This is really tough, we’re going to let it go’,” explains Staff in the documentary. “But do I think that was the right decision? Well, deep down, no, I don’t.”

Greater Manchester Police says it remains committed to finding answers for the Bennetts: “Keith’s family is central to any action we take in relation to this case and our thoughts remain with them.”

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