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Superintendent Talbot was to be leaving on a much-needed vacation
on the morning that he received an unexpected call from Detective
Inspector Wills.Wills had been reluctant to make the call, but this
was important.
Sitting in the Inquiry room at Hyde Police Station, were 17-year-old
David Smith, and his young wife. They had called the police
early that morning with an incredible story. Talbot assured his wife
that he would soon return and they would begin their two-week vacation
as planned. What Superintendent Talbot did not know then was that
he was about to become involved in one of Britain's most notorious
criminal cases, The Moors Murders. The date was October 7, 1965.
When Talbot arrived at Hyde Police Station, he was shown into the
Inquiry room where the distressed couple sat drinking tea. David
Smith, with the help of his wife Maureen, proceeded to tell his story.
The previous night his sister-in-law, Myra Hindley,
had visited the home where he lived with Maureen, his bride of little
more than a year, and her mother. Myra had told him that she
was afraid to walk home alone in the dark so he agreed to walk with
her. When they arrived at Myra's home, at 16 Wardle Brook Avenue,
Manchester, she asked him to come inside as her live-in boyfriend,
Ian Brady, had some miniature bottles of wine for him. He agreed
and after entering she left him standing in the kitchen with the wine.
As he read the label on one of the bottles, Smith
heard a long, loud scream. Myra yelled to him from the living
room. When he first entered the room, he saw Ian Brady holding
what David initially thought was a life-size rag doll. As it
fell against the couch, not more than two feet away from him, the
realisation dawned upon him that it was a young man and not a doll
at all. As the young man lay sprawled, face down on the floor,
Ian stood over him, his legs apart, holding an axe in his right hand.
The young man groaned. Ian lifted the axe
into the air, and brought it down upon the man's head. There
was silence for a couple of seconds, and then the man groaned again,
only it was much lower this time. Lifting the axe high above
his head, Ian brought it down a second time. The man stopped
groaning. The only sound he made was a gurgling noise.
Ian then placed a cover over the youth's head
and wrapped a piece of electric wire around his neck. As he
repeatedly pulled on the wire, Ian kept saying "You fucking dirty
bastard," over and over again. When the man finally stopped
making any noise, Ian looked up and said to Myra, "That's it,
it's the messiest yet."
As Myra made them all a cup of tea, she and Brady
joked about the look on the young man's face when Brady had struck
him. They laughed as they told David about another occasion
when a policeman had confronted Myra while they had been burying another
of their victims on Saddleworth Moor. Ian had told David that
he had killed some people before but David thought it was just a sick
fantasy. This was real. He was horrified and scared for
his own safety. He decided that the best thing he could do was
to keep calm and go along with them. He helped them to clean
up the mess, tie up the body and put it in the bedroom upstairs.
It was not until the early hours of the morning that he had been able
to escape, promising to return in the morning to help dispose of the
body. Safely back at home, he was violently sick. He told
Maureen everything and together they went to a public phone box to
call the police.
Immediately upon hearing this bizarre story, Superintendent
Talbot and Detective Sergeant Carr went over to 16 Wardle Brook Avenue.
Two-dozen additional officers were called to the area, just in case.
Any concerns that there may be a confrontation were quickly put to
rest. Myra reluctantly gave him a key to the upstairs bedroom,
the only room in the house that was locked, where the body of a young
man was found wrapped in a grey blanket. The axe described by
Smith as the murder weapon was found in the same room.
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Ian Brady at his arrest, mugshot
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Ian Brady was arrested immediately. At the police station, Brady told police that there had been
an argument between himself, David Smith and the victim, 17-year-old
Edward Evans. A fight
had ensued which soon got out of control. Smith had hit Evans and kicked him several times.
There had been a hatchet on the floor, which Brady said he
had used to hit Evans. According
to Brady, he and Smith alone had tied up the body. Myra had nothing to do with Evans's death.
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