6 March 2001
Fantasy that became
17-year nightmare
Cloud over police as court
quashes conviction of attention seeker jailed for killing two women out
walking dogs
By Nick Hopkins, crime correspondent
Peter Fell was drunk, depressed and alone
when he made a phone call that he would regret for the rest of his life.
A fantasist and inveterate attention seeker, he dialled 999 and "confessed"
to murdering two women who were walking their dogs on Hungry Hill, just
outside Aldershot, Hampshire.
He gave the wrong date for the killings,
burped and was mostly incoherent during a conversation that was hard for
the police operator to take seriously.
Yet despite repeatedly insisting to detectives
that he made up the whole story because he wanted "to be somebody", it
was only yesterday - after 17 years in jail for double murder - that Mr
Fell proved he was innocent.
He was freed by Lord Justice Waller at
the court of appeal, who quashed his conviction, saying it was unsafe.
The decision left Mr Fell, now 40, relieved
that his nightmare was finally over and Hampshire police stung by allegations
that officers had put pressure on him to confess.
It also meant that the mystery of who stabbed
Ann Lee and Margaret "Peggy" Johnson in mid-afternoon on May 10, 1982,
has yet to be solved.
Their deaths horrified the country and
led to a huge police investigation involving 100 officers.
Mrs Lee, 44, left her home in Highfield
Gardens, Aldershot, with her labrador, Monty, to meet Mrs Johnson, 66,
who lived in a nearby bungalow and owned a red setter called Tara.
The two women were about halfway round
their regular walk on the common when they were attacked and stabbed repeatedly
with a double-edged knife.
Blood
Mrs Lee, a mother of two, was discovered
lying on the path at the top of a small hillock. Monty was pining by her
side.
Mrs Johnson, a grandmother who had been
married for 47 years, was 20 yards away slumped by a five-bar gate where
she had run to escape. The lower rungs were covered in blood.
Although the murders had been committed
in daylight and the bodies found close to an army base, there were no witnesses.
Robbery and rape were ruled out as potential motives and no weapon was
found.
There were two suspicious sightings on
the day; a man wearing a camouflage jacket and a lorry driver - crying,
with his head in his hands - seen close to the murder scene. The police
dismissed both.
Mr Fell, however, had already tried to
implicate himself. On the evening of the murder, he staggered out of a
pub in Aldershot and called the police.
He told an officer he had met a man who
had told him he was the killer. Mr Fell said the man lived at 10 York Road
- his own address.
The police did nothing, so Mr Fell rang
again the next day and offered the same information.
It was another two weeks before he was
questioned and then he was ruled out as a suspect. Detectives concluded
he could not have been on the common at the time of the murder, and in
any event, there was no motive.
A year later, the police were no nearer
to catching the killer and Mr Fell, a hospital porter, had moved to Bournemouth.
After another night of heavy drinking,
he called the local police and said: "I know who did Bournemouth ... Aldershot
double, double murderer on May 10, '78."
He gave his own name.
Several days later he was interviewed by
the police for nearly 10 hours in seven sessions without a solicitor. To
begin with, Mr Fell denied involvement.
"I have not murdered anyone," he told them.
"Never have and never will, there's not a lot else I can say ... I know
the phone calls and all that ... that's only because I wanted to be someone.
I'm nobody."
During subsequent interviews, Mr Fell made
a partial confession which he immediately retracted.
He'd said he'd met the two women and had
struck one of them with a stick because she looked like his mother.
In the book Trial and Error, author David
Jessell describes how officers were taped saying to Mr Fell "the sooner
you see clear, my sunshine, the better", and "from the day you started
to walk you lied."
Still protesting his innocence, Mr Fell
was convicted of both murders in August, 1984, at the end of a 19-day trial
at Winchester crown court.
Mr Fell's tendency to make things up was
well-known to the police.
During a spell in the army as a cook, he
twice lied about being attacked by civilians. He also claimed he was an
army boxing champion - another fantasy.
He even tried to incriminate himself in
the Yorkshire Ripper murders by phoning the police and giving them his
name.
His disturbed childhood also made him prone
to attention seeking. His parents split up when he was three, and two sets
of foster parents had given him up, leaving him in the care of a children's
home.
After considering his background and details
of the confession, the criminal cases review commission referred the case
back to the court of appeal in September, 1999.
Vulnerable
During the hearing, Patrick O'Connor, QC,
accused the police of putting Mr Fell under pressure when he was in a particularly
vulnerable state.
He also pointed to psychiatric evidence
that showed Mr Fell was emotionally vulnerable and had a "suggestible"
personality.
A psychologist, Gisli Gudjonsson, testified
that he had had doubts about the reliability of Mr Fell's confession since
1988.
Following the quashing of the conviction,
Mr Fell said he wanted to start afresh.
"If I dwell on it, it will just do me more
harm, so I don't want to dwell on it. I'll just take one day at a time.
I have always believed that one day I would be proved innocent," he said.
Asked why he confessed to the murders,
he replied: "I used to say a lot of silly things but did not realise they
would be used against me at the trial."
Mr Fell will probably be due a substantial
sum in compensation. Hampshire police said yesterday it would review the
murder case.
"We never give up on murders," said Detective
Superintendent Des Thomas. "If any further evidence is forthcoming, we
will take the appropriate action. The families of the victims will be informed
of developments."
Jim Nicholl, Mr Fell's lawyer, said of
his client: "He might be a crackpot, he might be crazy, he might be all
those things, or probably was in 1982. But a murderer he was not and never
has been. He is completely and totally innocent." |