1 00:00:00,120 --> 00:00:05,560 Speaker 1: This episode contains disturbing images of murder. Parental discretion is advised. 2 00:00:16,680 --> 00:00:20,560 Speaker 1: It's early in the evening of Thursday, February twenty second, 3 00:00:21,120 --> 00:00:24,920 Speaker 1: nineteen sixty eight. A few floors up a tenement flat 4 00:00:25,200 --> 00:00:28,400 Speaker 1: in the south of Glasgow, twenty five year old Patricia 5 00:00:28,440 --> 00:00:32,720 Speaker 1: Docker sat in front of her bedroom mirror. She applied 6 00:00:32,760 --> 00:00:36,840 Speaker 1: the finishing touches to her look for the evening after 7 00:00:36,880 --> 00:00:41,360 Speaker 1: a light dab of lipstick. She regarded her reflection, pleased 8 00:00:41,440 --> 00:00:45,920 Speaker 1: with the favorite orange crocheted dress and her nicely curled hair. 9 00:00:47,080 --> 00:00:50,040 Speaker 1: She couldn't help thinking she looked a little tired, though, 10 00:00:50,560 --> 00:00:54,960 Speaker 1: but when wasn't she Between the long shifts working as 11 00:00:55,000 --> 00:00:59,240 Speaker 1: a nurse at Glasgow's Victoria Infirmary and being a single 12 00:00:59,320 --> 00:01:02,720 Speaker 1: mother to her four year old son, Sandy, it was 13 00:01:02,800 --> 00:01:05,640 Speaker 1: hard for her to imagine a time when she wouldn't 14 00:01:05,680 --> 00:01:11,040 Speaker 1: be tired. Only the year before, Patricia's marriage to her husband, 15 00:01:11,360 --> 00:01:16,040 Speaker 1: a Royal Air Force technician, had broken down. The couple 16 00:01:16,080 --> 00:01:19,800 Speaker 1: were living together with their son in Cyprus, where Patricia's 17 00:01:19,840 --> 00:01:24,600 Speaker 1: husband was stationed. Now she was in Glasgow, back living 18 00:01:24,600 --> 00:01:28,920 Speaker 1: with her parents, the sole career to her son. It 19 00:01:28,959 --> 00:01:33,600 Speaker 1: had been a difficult transition but slowly, Patricia had got 20 00:01:33,600 --> 00:01:38,120 Speaker 1: herself back on her feet. Things were starting to look up, 21 00:01:38,480 --> 00:01:41,600 Speaker 1: and that night, as she sang her son to sleep, 22 00:01:42,200 --> 00:01:45,800 Speaker 1: staring down at his sweet face, she felt a swell 23 00:01:45,880 --> 00:01:50,360 Speaker 1: of love and hope for the future. Around eight pm, 24 00:01:50,600 --> 00:01:53,680 Speaker 1: she said good night to her parents and headed out 25 00:01:53,920 --> 00:01:58,240 Speaker 1: into the cold. Spotting a cab on the street, she 26 00:01:58,320 --> 00:02:01,680 Speaker 1: asked the driver to take her to the Majestic Ballroom, 27 00:02:01,800 --> 00:02:05,040 Speaker 1: where she'd arranged to meet some friends to attend an 28 00:02:05,040 --> 00:02:08,680 Speaker 1: over twenty five's dance. One of them had met her 29 00:02:08,760 --> 00:02:12,960 Speaker 1: husband at a similar event. Though meeting a future husband 30 00:02:13,200 --> 00:02:16,080 Speaker 1: was far from the first thing on her mind, at 31 00:02:16,120 --> 00:02:19,000 Speaker 1: the very least, she was looking forward to letting her 32 00:02:19,000 --> 00:02:24,840 Speaker 1: hair down for the night. Inside the ballroom was packed 33 00:02:25,320 --> 00:02:29,480 Speaker 1: a hot cauldron of noise and smoke. Men and women 34 00:02:29,639 --> 00:02:33,560 Speaker 1: in sharp suits and colorful dresses threw each other about 35 00:02:33,639 --> 00:02:38,680 Speaker 1: on the dance floor, sweat beating on their foreheads. Patricia 36 00:02:38,840 --> 00:02:42,600 Speaker 1: spotted her friends quickly and headed over to join them, 37 00:02:42,800 --> 00:02:46,040 Speaker 1: and for the next few hours they drank and danced, 38 00:02:46,200 --> 00:02:49,400 Speaker 1: finding no end of suitors to accompany them on the 39 00:02:49,480 --> 00:02:54,919 Speaker 1: dance floor. At some point, Patricia's friends noticed that Patricia 40 00:02:55,080 --> 00:02:58,840 Speaker 1: was no longer with them. One remembered her saying something 41 00:02:59,000 --> 00:03:02,560 Speaker 1: about moving on to the barrel Land Ballroom, a couple 42 00:03:02,560 --> 00:03:07,720 Speaker 1: of miles east. They assumed she'd met someone good for her. 43 00:03:07,840 --> 00:03:11,320 Speaker 1: They thought she deserved to have some fun after the 44 00:03:11,480 --> 00:03:22,080 Speaker 1: terrible year she'd had. Early on the morning of February 45 00:03:22,200 --> 00:03:26,480 Speaker 1: twenty third, nineteen sixty eight, a man left his house 46 00:03:26,560 --> 00:03:29,440 Speaker 1: in the south side of Glasgow to walk to work. 47 00:03:30,240 --> 00:03:33,920 Speaker 1: As he passed at garage only yards away from Patricia 48 00:03:34,000 --> 00:03:37,840 Speaker 1: Docker's flat, he saw something strange out at the corner 49 00:03:37,880 --> 00:03:41,960 Speaker 1: of his eye. At first, it looked like a discarded 50 00:03:41,960 --> 00:03:46,520 Speaker 1: mannikin from a clothing shop. Then, with horror, he realized 51 00:03:46,680 --> 00:03:51,320 Speaker 1: it was the naked body of a young woman. In shock, 52 00:03:51,880 --> 00:03:56,200 Speaker 1: the man stumbled back to his house and phoned the police. 53 00:03:56,640 --> 00:04:01,160 Speaker 1: Later that day, the body would be identified Patricia Docker. 54 00:04:02,640 --> 00:04:06,040 Speaker 1: The police assumed she'd been raped, although there was no 55 00:04:06,200 --> 00:04:09,920 Speaker 1: clear evidence to suggest this was the case. What was 56 00:04:09,960 --> 00:04:13,880 Speaker 1: beyond doubt was that she'd been strangled to death barely 57 00:04:13,920 --> 00:04:17,440 Speaker 1: a stone's throw from her home, while her parents and 58 00:04:17,520 --> 00:04:23,159 Speaker 1: her four year old son slept soundly. Soon after officers 59 00:04:23,240 --> 00:04:26,240 Speaker 1: arrived at the grisly scene, they began to search the 60 00:04:26,279 --> 00:04:30,320 Speaker 1: surrounding area Hoping to find some clues as to who 61 00:04:30,400 --> 00:04:35,640 Speaker 1: had murdered Patricia, They interviewed dozens of people who'd attended 62 00:04:35,640 --> 00:04:39,800 Speaker 1: the dance at the Majestic Ballroom, including several young men 63 00:04:39,960 --> 00:04:44,520 Speaker 1: who remembered dancing with Patricia that evening, but the encounters 64 00:04:44,560 --> 00:04:47,880 Speaker 1: had all been brief and the men had alibis for 65 00:04:47,960 --> 00:04:53,120 Speaker 1: the night. Nobody seemed exactly sure when Patricia had left, 66 00:04:53,720 --> 00:04:57,080 Speaker 1: or whether she'd been alone at the time. The male 67 00:04:57,120 --> 00:05:01,960 Speaker 1: officer writing the report on her death described Patricia dismissively 68 00:05:02,440 --> 00:05:06,000 Speaker 1: as a rather spoiled woman who appeared to enjoy the 69 00:05:06,080 --> 00:05:10,440 Speaker 1: company of men. Divorce had only been legal in the 70 00:05:10,520 --> 00:05:14,320 Speaker 1: UK for a decade and still carried a heavy stigma. 71 00:05:15,200 --> 00:05:20,680 Speaker 1: Divorced women in particular were shunned, and divorced single mothers 72 00:05:21,279 --> 00:05:25,880 Speaker 1: all the more so, And despite it all, Patricia also 73 00:05:25,960 --> 00:05:29,320 Speaker 1: had the gall to go out and enjoy herself at 74 00:05:29,360 --> 00:05:34,000 Speaker 1: the end of a long week. The trail went cold 75 00:05:34,160 --> 00:05:39,920 Speaker 1: soon after, and no arrests were made. The brutal murder 76 00:05:40,360 --> 00:05:46,320 Speaker 1: made headlines and terrified Glasgow's residents. Just as scary as 77 00:05:46,360 --> 00:05:50,240 Speaker 1: the crime itself was the reality that the killer was 78 00:05:50,320 --> 00:05:53,719 Speaker 1: still on the loose. But as the months went by 79 00:05:54,240 --> 00:05:57,760 Speaker 1: people began to move on. They chalked up what had 80 00:05:57,800 --> 00:06:02,359 Speaker 1: happened to Patricia as a bizarre, tragic, one off, something 81 00:06:02,440 --> 00:06:07,039 Speaker 1: that happens to people who don't know any better. Instead, 82 00:06:07,560 --> 00:06:10,560 Speaker 1: it was the beginning of a nightmare that would haunt 83 00:06:10,560 --> 00:06:15,920 Speaker 1: the city for decades to come. You're listening to Unexplained 84 00:06:16,360 --> 00:06:27,600 Speaker 1: and I'm Richard McLain Smith. On the evening of Saturday, 85 00:06:28,000 --> 00:06:34,000 Speaker 1: August sixteenth, nineteen sixty nine, Jemimah MacDonald left the house 86 00:06:34,240 --> 00:06:37,600 Speaker 1: she shared with her sister on the East side of Glasgow. 87 00:06:38,800 --> 00:06:43,039 Speaker 1: Jemima or Mima to her friends and family, was thirty 88 00:06:43,040 --> 00:06:47,520 Speaker 1: two and a single mother to three children. She loved 89 00:06:47,520 --> 00:06:50,800 Speaker 1: to dance, and that night she was going to the 90 00:06:50,800 --> 00:06:55,640 Speaker 1: Barreland Ballroom, one of her favorite venues. She still had 91 00:06:55,640 --> 00:06:58,400 Speaker 1: her curlers in when she left the house, and not 92 00:06:58,480 --> 00:07:02,240 Speaker 1: by mistake. This was her trick. She'd keep them in 93 00:07:02,360 --> 00:07:06,520 Speaker 1: until the last possible moment, concealing them under a headscarf 94 00:07:06,720 --> 00:07:11,040 Speaker 1: until she arrived at her destination. Once there, she goes 95 00:07:11,040 --> 00:07:14,160 Speaker 1: straight to the rest rooms and take them out, ensuring 96 00:07:14,200 --> 00:07:19,360 Speaker 1: that her hair stayed bouncy or night. Saturday evenings were 97 00:07:19,440 --> 00:07:23,120 Speaker 1: always lively at the ballroom, where a live band played 98 00:07:23,160 --> 00:07:28,800 Speaker 1: the pop hits of the day. The following morning, Mima's sister, Margaret, 99 00:07:29,080 --> 00:07:33,640 Speaker 1: found that Mima's bed was empty. After searching the rest 100 00:07:33,680 --> 00:07:37,520 Speaker 1: of the house, she soon realized that Mima had never 101 00:07:37,640 --> 00:07:43,520 Speaker 1: come home. Margaret tried not to panic. Maybe Jemimah had 102 00:07:43,560 --> 00:07:45,880 Speaker 1: just spent the night at a friend's house, she thought. 103 00:07:46,520 --> 00:07:50,600 Speaker 1: But deep down, Margaret knew this didn't make any sense. 104 00:07:51,560 --> 00:07:55,280 Speaker 1: For one thing, the Barreland Ballroom could hardly be closer 105 00:07:55,320 --> 00:07:58,000 Speaker 1: to their house. It was less than a mile away, 106 00:07:58,760 --> 00:08:03,520 Speaker 1: and Mima had three children at home. Mima would never 107 00:08:03,720 --> 00:08:07,080 Speaker 1: just go a war. At the very least, she would 108 00:08:07,080 --> 00:08:10,880 Speaker 1: have called pulling on the first clothes she could find. 109 00:08:11,440 --> 00:08:15,440 Speaker 1: Margaret hurried outside onto the street and began to walk. 110 00:08:16,600 --> 00:08:21,120 Speaker 1: The morning sunlight was painfully bright in her eyes. She 111 00:08:21,200 --> 00:08:23,960 Speaker 1: wandered toward the end of her street and took a 112 00:08:24,040 --> 00:08:28,560 Speaker 1: right turn, heading north. She had a vague, half formed 113 00:08:28,600 --> 00:08:31,840 Speaker 1: plan to walk to the ballroom, though it would surely 114 00:08:31,880 --> 00:08:35,080 Speaker 1: be closed at this time, but she didn't know what 115 00:08:35,200 --> 00:08:48,320 Speaker 1: else to do. As Margaret made her way to the 116 00:08:48,360 --> 00:08:52,679 Speaker 1: Baryland Ballroom, she passed a derelict house in her neighborhood 117 00:08:53,160 --> 00:08:57,079 Speaker 1: where she was startled by a sudden shriek. A group 118 00:08:57,120 --> 00:09:00,520 Speaker 1: of children burst out of the house and hurled passed her, 119 00:09:00,880 --> 00:09:05,920 Speaker 1: almost knocking her over in their haste to get away. Annoyed, 120 00:09:06,440 --> 00:09:09,600 Speaker 1: Margaret was about to shout after them when she caught 121 00:09:09,600 --> 00:09:13,800 Speaker 1: a snatch of the children's frantic conversation, did one of 122 00:09:13,880 --> 00:09:20,080 Speaker 1: them just say a body? Margaret walked towards the abandoned house, 123 00:09:20,600 --> 00:09:25,600 Speaker 1: her stomach coiling with dread. The front windows had all 124 00:09:25,640 --> 00:09:29,840 Speaker 1: been smashed, and the front door, hanging off its hinges, 125 00:09:30,520 --> 00:09:36,600 Speaker 1: rattled in the breeze. Margaret stepped inside the property, ignoring 126 00:09:36,720 --> 00:09:40,600 Speaker 1: every instinct in her body telling her to turn back. 127 00:09:41,840 --> 00:09:44,880 Speaker 1: It was cold and damp, and as she turned a 128 00:09:44,960 --> 00:09:48,120 Speaker 1: corner into what would once have been a living room, 129 00:09:48,960 --> 00:09:51,720 Speaker 1: she came upon a sight that would haunt her for 130 00:09:51,800 --> 00:09:56,079 Speaker 1: the rest of her life. Her dear sister Mima was 131 00:09:56,160 --> 00:09:59,720 Speaker 1: crumpled in the corner of the room, her open eyes 132 00:10:00,320 --> 00:10:05,319 Speaker 1: staring blankly up at the dusty ceiling. Bruises covered her 133 00:10:05,360 --> 00:10:09,320 Speaker 1: face and neck, and she was fully clothed except for 134 00:10:09,400 --> 00:10:14,000 Speaker 1: her stockings, which were wrapped tightly around her pale throat. 135 00:10:15,520 --> 00:10:20,360 Speaker 1: Eighteen months on from Patricia Docker's unsold murder, another young 136 00:10:20,400 --> 00:10:25,439 Speaker 1: woman had died of violent death in Glasgow. Unlike Patricia, 137 00:10:25,880 --> 00:10:30,160 Speaker 1: Jemima mac donald was confirmed to have been raped, but 138 00:10:30,360 --> 00:10:33,880 Speaker 1: both had been beaten and strangled to death at the 139 00:10:34,000 --> 00:10:37,559 Speaker 1: end of a night out. Their bodies found less than 140 00:10:37,600 --> 00:10:42,800 Speaker 1: two miles apart. The only significant difference between the crimes 141 00:10:43,160 --> 00:10:47,240 Speaker 1: was that Jemima's body was fully clothed, while her handbag 142 00:10:47,559 --> 00:10:52,280 Speaker 1: and other possessions were missing. The male officer writing the 143 00:10:52,320 --> 00:10:57,480 Speaker 1: report felt it pertinent note that Mima received benefits as 144 00:10:57,520 --> 00:11:01,480 Speaker 1: a single mother, that she often frequented the dance halls 145 00:11:01,520 --> 00:11:06,240 Speaker 1: of Glasgow, and that she quote appeared to be extremely 146 00:11:06,320 --> 00:11:17,200 Speaker 1: fond of male company. Whatever judgments may have been made 147 00:11:17,240 --> 00:11:21,320 Speaker 1: about Jemima's personal life, her murder could not just be 148 00:11:21,520 --> 00:11:26,640 Speaker 1: swept under the carpet. The nightmarish story of Margaret discovering 149 00:11:26,679 --> 00:11:31,520 Speaker 1: her own sister's body drew sympathetic press coverage across the country. 150 00:11:32,600 --> 00:11:37,360 Speaker 1: The pressure to identify a suspect was intense. As the 151 00:11:37,400 --> 00:11:41,080 Speaker 1: police began to piece together a picture of Mima's evening, 152 00:11:41,559 --> 00:11:44,920 Speaker 1: They soon discovered that she'd last been seen at the 153 00:11:44,920 --> 00:11:50,720 Speaker 1: Barreland Ballroom on Tuesday evening, three days after her disappearance. 154 00:11:51,320 --> 00:11:54,720 Speaker 1: Punters at the ballroom were greeted by a startling sight. 155 00:11:55,640 --> 00:11:59,800 Speaker 1: A crowd of some twenty uniformed police officers gathered at 156 00:11:59,800 --> 00:12:03,760 Speaker 1: the entrance, each of them holding up a large photograph 157 00:12:03,840 --> 00:12:09,280 Speaker 1: of Jemima's face. Some knew immediately who this young woman was. 158 00:12:10,000 --> 00:12:14,199 Speaker 1: Others were confused, having missed the news, But soon enough 159 00:12:14,600 --> 00:12:19,640 Speaker 1: everybody there was brought up to speed. Early in the evening, 160 00:12:20,080 --> 00:12:24,000 Speaker 1: the music came to an abrupt halt. Then a detective 161 00:12:24,400 --> 00:12:27,360 Speaker 1: stepped onto the stage at the front of the dance hall. 162 00:12:28,280 --> 00:12:32,400 Speaker 1: He briefly recapped the known facts about Mima's death and 163 00:12:32,520 --> 00:12:37,360 Speaker 1: urged anybody with information to come forward. In particular, he 164 00:12:37,480 --> 00:12:40,480 Speaker 1: said they were eager to talk to any barrel and 165 00:12:40,679 --> 00:12:44,480 Speaker 1: regulars in the crowd that had been roughly two thousand 166 00:12:44,520 --> 00:12:49,400 Speaker 1: people at the ballroom on the night Jemima disappeared. Somebody 167 00:12:49,760 --> 00:12:53,680 Speaker 1: had to have seen something. Over the next few days, 168 00:12:54,120 --> 00:12:57,600 Speaker 1: numerous people came forward to tell the police that they 169 00:12:57,679 --> 00:13:02,280 Speaker 1: remembered seeing Mima on that set Satday evening. Several of 170 00:13:02,320 --> 00:13:06,880 Speaker 1: them had seen her leaving the ballroom around midnight accompanied 171 00:13:06,920 --> 00:13:11,920 Speaker 1: by a man. Based on several of these eyewitness statements, 172 00:13:12,280 --> 00:13:16,080 Speaker 1: the police put together a description of the man Mima 173 00:13:16,200 --> 00:13:21,280 Speaker 1: had left with He was tall and slim, between twenty 174 00:13:21,320 --> 00:13:26,160 Speaker 1: five and thirty five years old, with reddish hair. He'd 175 00:13:26,200 --> 00:13:29,520 Speaker 1: been dressed in a smart blue suit, looking like a 176 00:13:29,559 --> 00:13:34,800 Speaker 1: perfectly respectable young man. Nothing about him had rung alarm 177 00:13:34,880 --> 00:13:40,360 Speaker 1: bells to anyone, including Jemima, who, by all accounts, had 178 00:13:40,440 --> 00:13:45,120 Speaker 1: left with him willingly. The police also figured out roughly 179 00:13:45,160 --> 00:13:48,640 Speaker 1: what route the couple had taken after leaving the ballroom, 180 00:13:49,160 --> 00:13:53,520 Speaker 1: thanks to various bystanders who'd seen them together on the streets. 181 00:13:54,040 --> 00:13:58,200 Speaker 1: They'd taken a short cut towards Mima's house, walking for 182 00:13:58,280 --> 00:14:03,839 Speaker 1: about fifteen minutes until they reached a secluded lane. They 183 00:14:03,880 --> 00:14:07,280 Speaker 1: believed the couple had spent some time in that lane 184 00:14:07,520 --> 00:14:14,120 Speaker 1: winching Scottish slang for kissing before Mima was killed. But 185 00:14:14,240 --> 00:14:18,800 Speaker 1: despite all of these details about Jemima's final moments and 186 00:14:18,880 --> 00:14:22,360 Speaker 1: a solid description of the man who had almost certainly 187 00:14:22,480 --> 00:14:26,520 Speaker 1: murdered her, the police was still no closer to finding 188 00:14:26,560 --> 00:14:40,280 Speaker 1: their suspect. Soon they turned to more unorthodox methods. On Saturday, 189 00:14:40,600 --> 00:14:45,840 Speaker 1: August twenty third, exactly a week after Jemimah MacDonald's murder, 190 00:14:46,480 --> 00:14:49,960 Speaker 1: a woman was seen walking down the street wearing a 191 00:14:50,000 --> 00:14:54,680 Speaker 1: black pinafore dress, high heels and a brown woolen coat, 192 00:14:55,480 --> 00:14:59,280 Speaker 1: exactly what Jemima had worn on the night of her murder. 193 00:15:00,440 --> 00:15:04,240 Speaker 1: The woman walked steadily from the Baryland Ballroom to the 194 00:15:04,320 --> 00:15:09,360 Speaker 1: derelict house located on mc keith Street where Jemima was killed. 195 00:15:10,640 --> 00:15:13,600 Speaker 1: To anyone who had seen Jemima on the final night 196 00:15:13,680 --> 00:15:17,000 Speaker 1: of her life, it would have felt like seeing a ghost, 197 00:15:17,800 --> 00:15:21,280 Speaker 1: and that was the point. The woman was, in fact 198 00:15:21,320 --> 00:15:26,080 Speaker 1: a police officer orchestrating an elaborate re enactment in the 199 00:15:26,160 --> 00:15:30,840 Speaker 1: hope of jogging anybody's memory about the time leading up 200 00:15:30,880 --> 00:15:36,080 Speaker 1: to Jemima's death. Some witnesses did come forward with new information, 201 00:15:36,640 --> 00:15:41,040 Speaker 1: but there was still nothing concrete, nothing they could use 202 00:15:41,200 --> 00:15:45,960 Speaker 1: to identify a suspect, and the pressure was mounting because 203 00:15:46,080 --> 00:15:52,720 Speaker 1: now investigators were confident that Patricia Docker and Jemima MacDonald 204 00:15:53,200 --> 00:15:57,240 Speaker 1: had been killed by the same person. At the time, 205 00:15:57,840 --> 00:16:02,280 Speaker 1: very few people used the phrase serial killer. It would 206 00:16:02,320 --> 00:16:05,800 Speaker 1: be another five years before that term became widely known, 207 00:16:06,080 --> 00:16:11,280 Speaker 1: when the FBI established its Behavioral Science Unit and pioneered 208 00:16:11,320 --> 00:16:16,240 Speaker 1: the practice of criminal profiling. But though the terminology was new, 209 00:16:16,680 --> 00:16:21,240 Speaker 1: the terrifying notion of a lone nightmarish monster stalking the 210 00:16:21,320 --> 00:16:26,120 Speaker 1: streets was not. It was just over a decade since 211 00:16:26,160 --> 00:16:30,800 Speaker 1: Glasgow was terrorized by the specter of Peter Manuel, a 212 00:16:30,880 --> 00:16:35,000 Speaker 1: vicious murderer who'd killed at least seven people and is 213 00:16:35,080 --> 00:16:40,560 Speaker 1: still known as Scotland's worst ever serial killer. Though Manuel 214 00:16:40,680 --> 00:16:44,400 Speaker 1: was hanged in nineteen fifty eight, its crimes cast a 215 00:16:44,440 --> 00:16:49,080 Speaker 1: shadow over the city and haunted its police force. They 216 00:16:49,080 --> 00:16:52,320 Speaker 1: were determined to do whatever it took to stop this 217 00:16:52,560 --> 00:16:57,520 Speaker 1: latest killer before he claimed any more victims, and so, 218 00:16:58,120 --> 00:17:02,360 Speaker 1: for the first time in Scottish history, the police commissioned 219 00:17:02,400 --> 00:17:06,399 Speaker 1: a facial composite sketch of their suspect based on the 220 00:17:06,480 --> 00:17:11,800 Speaker 1: eyewitness descriptions. They printed this sketch onto thousands of leaflets 221 00:17:11,840 --> 00:17:16,560 Speaker 1: and posters and distributed them all across the country. Their 222 00:17:16,640 --> 00:17:21,119 Speaker 1: goal was twofold first and foremost. They wanted to cast 223 00:17:21,160 --> 00:17:24,880 Speaker 1: as wide a net as possible, encouraging the wider public 224 00:17:25,000 --> 00:17:29,199 Speaker 1: to come forward with any information about the suspect. But 225 00:17:29,320 --> 00:17:33,520 Speaker 1: they also hoped that seeing his likeness on wanted posters 226 00:17:33,800 --> 00:17:38,200 Speaker 1: would deter the killer from striking again, but it did 227 00:17:38,440 --> 00:17:52,080 Speaker 1: no such thing. On the evening of October thirtieth, nineteen 228 00:17:52,200 --> 00:17:56,320 Speaker 1: sixty nine, twenty nine year old Helen Puttock left her 229 00:17:56,359 --> 00:18:00,440 Speaker 1: house with her older sister Jeanne. All day had been 230 00:18:00,480 --> 00:18:05,000 Speaker 1: debating whether to go through with their night out. Three 231 00:18:05,040 --> 00:18:09,760 Speaker 1: months after Jemima MacDonald's murder and unease had settled over 232 00:18:09,800 --> 00:18:13,760 Speaker 1: the city and many women stopped going out after dark, 233 00:18:14,480 --> 00:18:17,920 Speaker 1: but Helen and jean were determined not to let fear 234 00:18:18,080 --> 00:18:21,920 Speaker 1: rule their lives. As long as they stuck together, they 235 00:18:21,960 --> 00:18:26,800 Speaker 1: thought they'd be all right. Helen had recently split up 236 00:18:26,840 --> 00:18:31,119 Speaker 1: with her husband, George, and although the breakup was her decision, 237 00:18:31,440 --> 00:18:34,720 Speaker 1: it had been a hard few weeks. She was sorely 238 00:18:34,760 --> 00:18:37,240 Speaker 1: in need of a night out, and there were few 239 00:18:37,280 --> 00:18:41,840 Speaker 1: better places for it than the Barreland Ballroom. On that 240 00:18:41,960 --> 00:18:45,959 Speaker 1: Thursday evening, the dance hall was once again packed with 241 00:18:46,200 --> 00:18:50,520 Speaker 1: energy and excitement, and Helen soon began to forget her troubles. 242 00:18:51,480 --> 00:18:54,720 Speaker 1: At some point, she told her sister she was heading 243 00:18:54,720 --> 00:18:58,880 Speaker 1: off to buy some cigarettes. Finding a cigarette machine by 244 00:18:58,920 --> 00:19:02,440 Speaker 1: the bar, she put in some coins and pressed the button, 245 00:19:03,200 --> 00:19:07,520 Speaker 1: but the pack got stuck. Elen shook the machine as 246 00:19:07,560 --> 00:19:11,200 Speaker 1: hard as she could, but the packet refused to drop. 247 00:19:11,800 --> 00:19:14,480 Speaker 1: She was just about to give up when a young 248 00:19:14,560 --> 00:19:19,000 Speaker 1: man asked if she needed help. The man was about 249 00:19:19,040 --> 00:19:23,080 Speaker 1: her age, well dressed in a smart suit with a 250 00:19:23,119 --> 00:19:28,800 Speaker 1: winning smile. After successfully unjamming the cigarette machine for her, 251 00:19:29,320 --> 00:19:33,879 Speaker 1: he introduced himself as John. Ellen and John hit it 252 00:19:33,920 --> 00:19:37,600 Speaker 1: off immediately. He was a good dancer and an even 253 00:19:37,640 --> 00:19:42,400 Speaker 1: better conversationalist. He asked a lot of questions about her 254 00:19:42,440 --> 00:19:47,560 Speaker 1: life and seemed genuinely interested in the answers. It had 255 00:19:47,600 --> 00:19:51,040 Speaker 1: been a while since Helen had met anyone like him. 256 00:19:51,840 --> 00:19:55,919 Speaker 1: After some more time dancing, Ellen and Jean decided to 257 00:19:56,000 --> 00:19:59,040 Speaker 1: call it a night. Why don't they all get a 258 00:19:59,040 --> 00:20:03,359 Speaker 1: cab back together, suggested John, since he was heading in 259 00:20:03,400 --> 00:20:08,160 Speaker 1: the same direction, and so the trio left and piled 260 00:20:08,240 --> 00:20:17,760 Speaker 1: into the back of a cab together. In the back 261 00:20:17,800 --> 00:20:21,480 Speaker 1: of the cab, Ellen and Jean lit cigarettes as they 262 00:20:21,520 --> 00:20:25,280 Speaker 1: moved west through the heart of the city. They listened 263 00:20:25,320 --> 00:20:28,679 Speaker 1: with interest as John began to talk more about his 264 00:20:28,760 --> 00:20:32,760 Speaker 1: own life. He told the sisters that he'd been raised 265 00:20:32,840 --> 00:20:37,679 Speaker 1: by very strict, devoutly religious parents who'd put the fear 266 00:20:37,720 --> 00:20:41,600 Speaker 1: of God in him from a young age. They certainly 267 00:20:41,680 --> 00:20:44,920 Speaker 1: wouldn't have approved of their activities that night, he said, 268 00:20:45,720 --> 00:20:50,720 Speaker 1: declaring that dance halls are dens of iniquity. He asked 269 00:20:50,760 --> 00:20:54,760 Speaker 1: them if they knew what the Bible said about adulterous women. 270 00:20:55,840 --> 00:21:01,760 Speaker 1: Ellen and Jean chuckled nervously. No, they said that they 271 00:21:01,800 --> 00:21:06,879 Speaker 1: should be stoned to death, said John, all emotion suddenly 272 00:21:07,000 --> 00:21:12,200 Speaker 1: gone from his face. Then, unprompted, he began to recite 273 00:21:12,240 --> 00:21:17,760 Speaker 1: a passage from the Bible. The transformation was unnerving. As 274 00:21:17,880 --> 00:21:22,160 Speaker 1: John spoke, his eyes took on a glazed appearance, and 275 00:21:22,240 --> 00:21:27,520 Speaker 1: his voice changed, becoming deeper and more forceful. It was 276 00:21:27,600 --> 00:21:32,639 Speaker 1: as if he'd suddenly been possessed, And then just like that, 277 00:21:33,480 --> 00:21:39,080 Speaker 1: John snapped right back to his usual charming self. Though 278 00:21:39,119 --> 00:21:43,280 Speaker 1: a little unnerved, Ellen and Jean laughed off his strange 279 00:21:43,280 --> 00:21:48,439 Speaker 1: behavior as a joke. John called through to the driver 280 00:21:48,960 --> 00:21:53,000 Speaker 1: and instructed him to drop Gene off first, since he 281 00:21:53,080 --> 00:21:57,159 Speaker 1: and Helen were both going to the same neighborhood. A 282 00:21:57,200 --> 00:22:01,919 Speaker 1: short time later, Jeane climbed out of the cab. She 283 00:22:02,040 --> 00:22:06,240 Speaker 1: watched Helen wave goodbye through the window as the taxi 284 00:22:06,320 --> 00:22:10,240 Speaker 1: pulled back out into the road and disappeared into the night. 285 00:22:11,680 --> 00:22:15,840 Speaker 1: That last mental image of her sister would haunt her 286 00:22:16,359 --> 00:22:26,359 Speaker 1: for the rest of her life. The next morning, a 287 00:22:26,400 --> 00:22:29,879 Speaker 1: woman got up early to take out her rubbish in Scotsten, 288 00:22:30,400 --> 00:22:33,880 Speaker 1: a neighborhood on the bank of the River Clyde. As 289 00:22:33,880 --> 00:22:37,080 Speaker 1: she walked into the back court where the bins were stored, 290 00:22:37,600 --> 00:22:42,640 Speaker 1: she stopped in her tracks. Helen Puttock was lying, fully 291 00:22:42,640 --> 00:22:47,399 Speaker 1: clothed and face down on the ground. She'd been dead 292 00:22:47,520 --> 00:22:53,879 Speaker 1: for hours. The woman's screams soon attracted a crowd of 293 00:22:54,000 --> 00:22:59,000 Speaker 1: horrified passers. By the fact that it was Halloween made 294 00:22:59,080 --> 00:23:04,119 Speaker 1: the night Marrish seen all the morm A cab. Helen 295 00:23:04,240 --> 00:23:09,640 Speaker 1: had been raped, beaten, and then strangled to death. Glasgow's 296 00:23:09,680 --> 00:23:15,120 Speaker 1: serial killer, it seemed, had struck again. When the police 297 00:23:15,200 --> 00:23:18,240 Speaker 1: arrived at the scene, they were able to determine a 298 00:23:18,280 --> 00:23:23,560 Speaker 1: few grim details about Helen's final moments. Grass stains on 299 00:23:23,600 --> 00:23:26,760 Speaker 1: her feet showed that she had tried to escape her 300 00:23:26,800 --> 00:23:30,280 Speaker 1: attacker by fleeing up the side of a railway embankment, 301 00:23:31,040 --> 00:23:36,360 Speaker 1: and her injuries suggested she'd fought for her life. As 302 00:23:36,400 --> 00:23:40,240 Speaker 1: the authorities began to look more closely at the three murders, 303 00:23:40,720 --> 00:23:45,720 Speaker 1: they noticed another unnerving detail. All three women had been 304 00:23:45,800 --> 00:23:49,560 Speaker 1: menstruating at the time they were killed. This might have 305 00:23:49,640 --> 00:23:53,680 Speaker 1: seemed like a coincidence, except that a sanitary pad had 306 00:23:53,720 --> 00:23:57,880 Speaker 1: been left close to each of the bodies, indicating that 307 00:23:57,960 --> 00:24:01,159 Speaker 1: this was a twisted kind of signals for the killer. 308 00:24:02,240 --> 00:24:06,320 Speaker 1: This time around, police were more optimistic about their chances 309 00:24:06,359 --> 00:24:11,320 Speaker 1: of catching the killer. Unlike Patricia and Jemima, Helen hadn't 310 00:24:11,359 --> 00:24:15,400 Speaker 1: gone out alone. Her sister Jean had been with her 311 00:24:15,560 --> 00:24:18,960 Speaker 1: for almost the entire evening and was able to give 312 00:24:18,960 --> 00:24:22,359 Speaker 1: a detailed description of the man. Helen had gone home with. 313 00:24:23,600 --> 00:24:27,920 Speaker 1: Her description matched the profile the police already had from 314 00:24:27,960 --> 00:24:33,359 Speaker 1: the Jemima MacDonald eyewitnesses, and with the additional information she provided, 315 00:24:33,840 --> 00:24:37,320 Speaker 1: they produced a new and more accurate sketch of the 316 00:24:37,400 --> 00:24:43,399 Speaker 1: suspect's face. Unfortunately, John had been evasive about where he 317 00:24:43,560 --> 00:24:47,000 Speaker 1: lived or what kind of work he did, but the 318 00:24:47,040 --> 00:24:50,840 Speaker 1: details he'd shared about his childhood at least gave them 319 00:24:50,960 --> 00:24:56,119 Speaker 1: something to work with. That strange behavior in the taxi, meanwhile, 320 00:24:56,480 --> 00:25:01,840 Speaker 1: would earn him the moniker Bible John. Over the next 321 00:25:01,840 --> 00:25:06,399 Speaker 1: few months, the police arrested and interviewed dozens of potential 322 00:25:06,480 --> 00:25:10,520 Speaker 1: suspects and followed up on hundreds of leads. Determined to 323 00:25:10,640 --> 00:25:15,760 Speaker 1: leave no stone unturned, they also took some more unusual steps, 324 00:25:16,280 --> 00:25:19,520 Speaker 1: like bringing in a psychic who was confident he could 325 00:25:19,640 --> 00:25:24,200 Speaker 1: locate Bible John. This proved to be an empty promise. 326 00:25:25,600 --> 00:25:29,359 Speaker 1: The police also hired a psychiatrist to produce one of 327 00:25:29,400 --> 00:25:34,360 Speaker 1: the first ever criminal profiles, using the information from Gene 328 00:25:34,680 --> 00:25:39,800 Speaker 1: about John's childhood and religious beliefs, along with clues that 329 00:25:39,920 --> 00:25:43,720 Speaker 1: might point toward a preferred process in the way he 330 00:25:43,760 --> 00:25:48,439 Speaker 1: committed his murders. But for all of this work, the 331 00:25:48,520 --> 00:25:54,680 Speaker 1: investigation was ultimately fruitless. Nobody was ever charged for any 332 00:25:54,720 --> 00:25:59,280 Speaker 1: of the three murders, and the case remains unsolved to 333 00:25:59,320 --> 00:26:10,760 Speaker 1: this day. It's been widely speculated that Bible John is 334 00:26:10,800 --> 00:26:15,600 Speaker 1: in fact Peter Tobin, a prolific killer who was convicted 335 00:26:15,640 --> 00:26:19,320 Speaker 1: of killing three women in Glasgow during the nineteen nineties. 336 00:26:20,160 --> 00:26:22,439 Speaker 1: He would have been in his mid twenties during the 337 00:26:22,480 --> 00:26:26,840 Speaker 1: Bible John murders and once boasted to a prison psychiatrist 338 00:26:27,119 --> 00:26:32,480 Speaker 1: that he'd killed more than forty people. However, Tobin denied 339 00:26:32,600 --> 00:26:35,880 Speaker 1: that he was Bible John, and no evidence was ever 340 00:26:36,040 --> 00:26:41,800 Speaker 1: found linking him to Patricia's, Jemima's or Helen's murder. He 341 00:26:41,880 --> 00:26:47,439 Speaker 1: died in prison in twenty twenty two. Another theory was 342 00:26:47,480 --> 00:26:51,440 Speaker 1: that the killer was a man named John Irvin McInnis, 343 00:26:52,040 --> 00:26:56,399 Speaker 1: and that his identity was deliberately covered up because McInnis 344 00:26:56,480 --> 00:27:00,800 Speaker 1: was the cousin of a very senior police officer. In 345 00:27:00,920 --> 00:27:05,960 Speaker 1: nineteen ninety six, Helen Puttock's body was exhumed so forensic 346 00:27:06,000 --> 00:27:10,560 Speaker 1: investigators could take a DNA sample from her tights and 347 00:27:10,720 --> 00:27:16,440 Speaker 1: compare it to McInnis. Given all the advances in DNA technology, 348 00:27:16,920 --> 00:27:22,720 Speaker 1: hopes were high, but the analysis was inconclusive. The sample 349 00:27:22,880 --> 00:27:26,560 Speaker 1: was also compared against the DNA of a number of 350 00:27:26,600 --> 00:27:32,119 Speaker 1: other high profile British killers, including Tobin, the Yorkshire Ripper, 351 00:27:32,320 --> 00:27:37,280 Speaker 1: Peter Sutcliffe and Fred West. None of them were a match. 352 00:27:38,840 --> 00:27:43,119 Speaker 1: Just recently, however, this cold case is warming up again 353 00:27:44,080 --> 00:27:49,040 Speaker 1: in response to allegations of police corruption during the original investigation, 354 00:27:49,680 --> 00:27:53,960 Speaker 1: which were made public in a BBC podcast titled Bible 355 00:27:54,080 --> 00:27:58,840 Speaker 1: John Creation of a Serial Killer. Police Scotland announced in 356 00:27:58,960 --> 00:28:02,359 Speaker 1: twenty twenty two that it was taking a fresh look 357 00:28:02,520 --> 00:28:07,040 Speaker 1: at the case. But for now, more than fifty years 358 00:28:07,080 --> 00:28:11,639 Speaker 1: on from the tragic events, there remains no justice for 359 00:28:11,800 --> 00:28:18,320 Speaker 1: Patricia Docker, Jemima MacDonald and Helen Puttock, and no closure 360 00:28:18,760 --> 00:28:27,480 Speaker 1: for their families. This episode was written by Emma Dibden 361 00:28:27,920 --> 00:28:32,640 Speaker 1: and Richard mclin Smith. Unexplained as an Avy Club Productions 362 00:28:32,680 --> 00:28:37,240 Speaker 1: podcast created by Richard McClain Smith. All other elements of 363 00:28:37,280 --> 00:28:40,680 Speaker 1: the podcast, including the music, are also produced by me 364 00:28:40,960 --> 00:28:46,040 Speaker 1: Richard McClain smith. Unexplained. The book and audiobook, with stories 365 00:28:46,120 --> 00:28:49,040 Speaker 1: never before featured on the show, is now available to 366 00:28:49,080 --> 00:28:53,320 Speaker 1: buy worldwide. You can purchase from Amazon, Barnes and Noble, 367 00:28:53,640 --> 00:28:57,960 Speaker 1: Waterstones and other bookstores. Please subscribe to and rate the 368 00:28:58,000 --> 00:29:01,320 Speaker 1: show wherever you get your podcast, and feel free to 369 00:29:01,320 --> 00:29:04,440 Speaker 1: get in touch with any thoughts or ideas regarding the 370 00:29:04,480 --> 00:29:07,160 Speaker 1: stories you've heard on the show. Perhaps you have an 371 00:29:07,200 --> 00:29:10,200 Speaker 1: explanation of your own you'd like to share. You can 372 00:29:10,240 --> 00:29:13,800 Speaker 1: find out more at Unexplained podcast dot com and reach 373 00:29:13,880 --> 00:29:18,320 Speaker 1: us online through Twitter at Unexplained Pod and Facebook at 374 00:29:18,360 --> 00:30:27,560 Speaker 1: Facebook dot com, Forward Slash Unexplained Podcast