Everyday thousands of children are being sexually abused. You can stop the abuse of at least one child by simply praying. You can possibly stop the abuse of thousands of children by forwarding the link in First Time Visitor? by email, Twitter or Facebook to every Christian you know. Save a child or lots of children!!!! Do Something, please!

3:15 PM prayer in brief:
Pray for God to stop 1 child from being molested today.
Pray for God to stop 1 child molestation happening now.
Pray for God to rescue 1 child from sexual slavery.
Pray for God to save 1 girl from genital circumcision.
Pray for God to stop 1 girl from becoming a child-bride.
If you have the faith pray for 100 children rather than one.
Give Thanks. There is more to this prayer here

Please note: All my writings and comments appear in bold italics in this colour

Friday 13 November 2020

The Yorkshire Ripper Died This Morning of Covid19 - He Murdered 13 Women and Attempted 7 More in Major Police Fail

..
THE Yorkshire Ripper died this morning in hospital aged 74 after refusing any treatment for coronavirus

The frail serial killer today became the pandemic's latest victim
at precisely 1.10am after his lungs finally collapsed


Peter Sutcliffe has died from coronavirus  Credit: Ian Whittaker - The Sun

Strict coronavirus protocols mean he is thought to have spent his last moments alone - with visitors barred from his bedside.

Sutcliffe had spent almost 40 years locked up in Broadmoor and prison for murdering 13 women and attempting to kill seven others between 1975 and 1980.

His five-year reign of terror in the north of England led to one of the biggest police manhunts of the 20th century.

Confessing to cops after his eventual arrest, Sutcliffe notoriously claimed he was "a beast" driven on "by a devil" inside him.


Ripper dead at 74:

Peter Sutcliffe has died from coronavirus in hospital
The son of one victim said ‘who’d have thought coronavirus had a happy ending’
How cops missed NINE chances to stop the serial killer
The Ripper never apologised for his gruesome crimes
The monster was last seen in 2015 getting an eye op
How Sutcliffe turned from mummy's boy to evil serial killer
Yorkshire locals already celebrating the Ripper's death
The bizarre moans Sutcliffe made while in jail from wearing a nightie to not enough kippers
Women who were attacked by the Ripper relive their horror ordeals
Sutcliffe's ex-wife was told about his death first as she's still his next of kin
The 13 young women and teen girls slaughtered by vile Sutcliffe
How a hoaxer helped the Ripper kill three more women as he tricked cops
Ex-Corrie star Bruce Jones became a suspect after discovering one of the Ripper's victims


But a source said of his final moments: "No tears were shed.

"His death was as pitiful as the vile life he had lived."

His death was welcomed by the son of one his victims, who praised the disease for snatching the life of the monster.

He told The Sun: "Good riddance. Who’d have thought that coronavirus could produce at least one happy ending?”

Others also celebrated the news the monster had died as they will finally have closure.

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How cops missed NINE chances to stop Peter Sutcliffe
during biggest manhunt UK had ever seen
Holly Christodoulou, The Sun
13 Nov 2020, 14:57

BUNGLING cops missed NINE fatal chances to stop the Ripper during the biggest manhunt the UK has ever seen.

Between 1975 and 1980, a bloody rampage left Brits terrified to leave their homes after 13 women were murdered across the North of England.

Cops missed nine chances to stop the Ripper  Credit: Enterprise News and Pictures

Desperate to stop the slaughter, police spent a staggering 2.5million hours combing every possible clue in a bid to catch their killer.

Shockingly, cops actually arrested Sutcliffe nine times and interviewed him - only to let him back out to continue his gruesome reign of terror.

Sutcliffe was only caught in 1981 when he was picked up by chance with a prostitute in his car.

The brazen killer was even stunned he hadn't been stopped earlier during to the catalogue of spectacular police blunders.

At his Old Bailey trial, Sutcliffe said: "It was just a miracle they did not apprehend me earlier - they had all the facts."

The blunder was down to a simple card index system, which was overwhelmed with information.

This meant vital evidence was lost in the system and information not properly cross referenced.

Police digging outside the Ripper's home after finally catching the killer  Credit: Rex Features

Crucial similarities between the Ripper and the suspect - such as the obvious gap in his teeth and his size seven feet - were missed.

Even in 1976 - a year after the rampage started - key evidence was overlooked when Marcella Claxton was hit over the head with a hammer.

The victim survived the attack near her home in Leeds and provided police with a photofit - but she was dismissed as a Ripper victim because she was not a prostitute.

On one of the nine occasions Sutcliffe was interviewed by officers who showed him a picture of the Ripper's bootprint near a body - they failed to notice that Sutcliffe was wearing the exact same pair of boots.

13 women were killed as the Ripper went on a five-year spree  Credit: PA Media

And when a £5 note was found in the pocket of 28-year-old Jean Jordan, in Manchester in 1977, police again failed to connect Sutcliffe. The note was traced to one of six companies, including Clark Transport, which employed Sutcliffe as a lorry driver.

He was interviewed but was given an alibi by his wife and mother, which was accepted.

In another fatal mistake, cops overlooked Sutcliffe's arrest in 1969 for carrying a hammer in a red light district, and attempts by his friend Trevor Birdsall to point the finger at him in a anonymous letter.

But the worst blunder came in 1979 when Assistant Chief Constable George Oldfield was tricked by a hoax tape and two letters sent from Sunderland, which claimed to be from the Ripper.

The tape said: "Lord, you are no nearer catching me now than four years ago when I started. I reckon your boys are letting you down George. You can't be much good can ya?"

Colleagues and experts warned the top cop, who was in charge of the manhunt, that the voice didn't belong to the serial killer.

But Oldfield pressed on regardless convinced he could catch his man and the terror would finally end.

This was despite voice on the tape having a North East accent, while Sutcliffe was from Bradford - pushing him out of the frame.

The under-pressure cop, who promised the daughter of one victim he would get the killer, developed an obsession with the Ripper.

His team carried out more than 130,000 interviews, visited more than 23,000 homes and checked 150,000 cars.

While working 18-hour days Oldfield had a heart attack at the age of 57, and was subsequently moved off the case.

Pals later described him as the "Ripper's sixth victim".

Sutcliffe was himself stunned it took so long to catch him  Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd

The deadly error meant police were focused on suspects from the North East - leaving Sutcliffe to continue his killing spree and claim his 13th victim.

A table of suspects created by the police saw officers tail an innocent taxi driver in their "Division one" league.

Sutcliffe meanwhile was one of 1,000 potentials forgotten about in Division Three.

But the breakthrough finally came in January 1981 when Sutcliffe was arrested by officers in Sheffield, who stopped him with a prostitute in his brown Rover car.

The car had false number plates and Sutcliffe's name was passed on to the Ripper squad, where it came up on their index cards.

He had always denied any involvement with prostitutes in his previous interviews, and they decided to talk to him again.

Timeline of terror
June 1946: Peter Sutcliffe is born in Bingley, West Yorks
August 1974: Sutcliffe marries Sonia Szurma
October 1975: Sutcliffe kills Wilma McCann in Leeds – his first murder.
January 1981: Sutcliffe is arrested by police in Sheffield. He confesses to being The Ripper.
May 1981: He is given 20 life sentences at The Old Bailey over 13 murders and seven attempted murders. He starts sentence at HMP Parkhurst, Isle of Wight.
March 1984: Sent to Broadmoor High-security Hospital after being declared paranoid schizophrenic
August 2016: Sutcliffe moved from Broadmoor to Category A Frankland Prison, County Durham
November 13, 2020 – Sutcliffe dies.


A search of the car turned out screwdrivers in the glove box and a hammer and knife were found nearby.

Police also visited Sutcliffe's wife Sonia, who admitted he had not got home until 10pm on Bonfire Night, when a 16-year-old girl was attacked.

As the night finally closed in after a long five-year hunt, Sutcliffe dramatically confessed.

He calmly told Detective Inspector John Boyle, who was interviewing him: "It's all right, I know what you're leading up to.

"The Yorkshire Ripper. It's me. I killed all those women."

The Ripper was finally put behind bars in 1981 - ending the biggest manhunt in British history,

But the case remains one of the most notorious of the last 100 years with the wrongs in the original investigation still impacting police to this day.

He died this morning from Covid.



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