Chris Gregg: Difference between revisions
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* Identification of the Yorkshire Ripper Hoaxer, [[John Humble]], who was tried and sentenced in October 2005 – 25 years after the offence which was one of the most notorious – and damaging – hoaxes in criminal history.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/west_yorkshire/4828828.stm Man still held over Ripper hoax - BBC News October 2005, accessed 18 March 2003]</ref><ref>[http://www.independent.ie/world-news/europe/callous-ripper-hoaxer-sent-to-prison-for-eight-years-108883.html'Callous' Ripper hoaxer sent to prison for eight years - The Independent 22 March 2006, accessed 18 March 2010]</ref><ref>[http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/wearside-jack-i-deserve-to-go-to-jail-for-evil-ripper-hoax-470742.html 'Callous' Ripper hoaxer sent to prison for eight years - The Independent 21 March 2006, accessed 18 March 2010]</ref><ref>[http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/39I-did-it-because-I.1392084.jp 'I did it because I was bored and on the dole' Yorkshire Post - 21 March 2006, accessed 19 March 2010]</ref> Gregg won £50,000 libel damages, plus costs, after being accused by Irish writer Noel O'Gara of "stitching up" John Humble as the writer of the hoax letters and sender of a tape recording purporting to be from the Yorkshire Ripper.<ref>[http://www.sunderlandecho.com/news/Ripper-detective-wins-50000-damages.3864354.jp "Ripper detective wins £50,000 damages" Sunderland Echo, 11 March 2008 - accessed 20 March 2010]</ref> |
* Identification of the Yorkshire Ripper Hoaxer, [[John Humble]], who was tried and sentenced in October 2005 – 25 years after the offence which was one of the most notorious – and damaging – hoaxes in criminal history.<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/west_yorkshire/4828828.stm Man still held over Ripper hoax - BBC News October 2005, accessed 18 March 2003]</ref><ref>[http://www.independent.ie/world-news/europe/callous-ripper-hoaxer-sent-to-prison-for-eight-years-108883.html'Callous' Ripper hoaxer sent to prison for eight years - The Independent 22 March 2006, accessed 18 March 2010]</ref><ref>[http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/wearside-jack-i-deserve-to-go-to-jail-for-evil-ripper-hoax-470742.html 'Callous' Ripper hoaxer sent to prison for eight years - The Independent 21 March 2006, accessed 18 March 2010]</ref><ref>[http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/39I-did-it-because-I.1392084.jp 'I did it because I was bored and on the dole' Yorkshire Post - 21 March 2006, accessed 19 March 2010]</ref> Gregg won £50,000 libel damages, plus costs, after being accused by Irish writer Noel O'Gara of "stitching up" John Humble as the writer of the hoax letters and sender of a tape recording purporting to be from the Yorkshire Ripper.<ref>[http://www.sunderlandecho.com/news/Ripper-detective-wins-50000-damages.3864354.jp "Ripper detective wins £50,000 damages" Sunderland Echo, 11 March 2008 - accessed 20 March 2010]</ref> |
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At the libel hearing judge Timothy King sitting in Liverpool refused Noel O'Gara's request for a jury trial thereby denying him due process. He then refused to listen to most of O'Gara's evidence detailing why the police were certain that the letters and tape posted in Sunderland were sent by the Ripper and he ruled in Gregg's favour. O'Gara mainntains his allegations that the conviction of John Humble was a sticking plaster to cover an open wound on a botched Yorkshire Ripper investigation. |
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In the Angel of death case it has since come to pass that an appeal is now underway when new evidence that the four women believed by Chris Gregg to be murdered died of natural causes and the prosecution and conviction of Colin Norris was all a tragic farce. |
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* Serial killer [[Colin Norris]], dubbed the 'Angel of Death' who murdered four elderly patients in a hospital in Leeds receiving a life sentence in 2008.<ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1580651/Colin-Norris,-'Angel-of-Death'-nurse,-jailed-for-life.html Angel of Death nurse jailed for life - Daily Telegraph, 4 March 2008 - accessed 20 March 2010 ]</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/player/nol/newsid_7270000/newsid_7275500/7275593.stm?bw=bb&mp=wm&asb=1&news=1&ms3=22&ms_javascript=true&bbcws=2 BBC TV News interview with Gregg after the trial, accessed 20 March 2010]</ref><ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1580651/Colin-Norris,-'Angel-of-Death'-nurse,-jailed-for-life.html Colin Norris, 'Angel of Death' nurse, jailed for life, Daily Telegraph 4 March 2004, accessed 23 March 2010]</ref> |
* Serial killer [[Colin Norris]], dubbed the 'Angel of Death' who murdered four elderly patients in a hospital in Leeds receiving a life sentence in 2008.<ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1580651/Colin-Norris,-'Angel-of-Death'-nurse,-jailed-for-life.html Angel of Death nurse jailed for life - Daily Telegraph, 4 March 2008 - accessed 20 March 2010 ]</ref><ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/player/nol/newsid_7270000/newsid_7275500/7275593.stm?bw=bb&mp=wm&asb=1&news=1&ms3=22&ms_javascript=true&bbcws=2 BBC TV News interview with Gregg after the trial, accessed 20 March 2010]</ref><ref>[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1580651/Colin-Norris,-'Angel-of-Death'-nurse,-jailed-for-life.html Colin Norris, 'Angel of Death' nurse, jailed for life, Daily Telegraph 4 March 2004, accessed 23 March 2010]</ref> |
Revision as of 17:50, 23 June 2013
Chris Gregg QPM is a former Detective Chief Superintendent and was head of West Yorkshire Police's Homicide and Major Enquiry Team (HMET).[1] Gregg joined the force in 1974 and as a constable was put on front-line duties in the Yorkshire Ripper inquiry in the Helen Rytka murder incident room.[2] He left the force in 2008 to take up a senior position as an adviser [3] to a forensic service provider company, LGC Forensics.[2] In 2010 Gregg, together with Lord Stevens and Dr Angela Gallop, founded Axiom International Limited.[4]
Awards
Gregg was awarded the Queen's Police Medal (QPM) in the 2008 Queen's Birthday Honours.[5] Chief Constable of West Yorkshire, Sir Norman Bettison, described Gregg as one of the finest detectives the force had ever known.[3][6][7]
Career
Gregg was born in Huddersfield, West Yorkshire and in a 34 year career, headed up some high profile criminal investigations of recent years including:
- The kidnap and murder in November 2000 of 16-year old Leeds schoolgirl Leanne Tiernan by John Taylor described at his trial in 2002 by the judge as a "sexual sadist".[8] In February 2003, he was convicted of two rapes, based on DNA evidence, and given two additional life sentences.[9]
- The American fugitive David Bieber who murdered traffic PC Ian Broadhurst and attempted the murder of two other policemen on 26 December 2003.[10][11][12]
- Identification of the Yorkshire Ripper Hoaxer, John Humble, who was tried and sentenced in October 2005 – 25 years after the offence which was one of the most notorious – and damaging – hoaxes in criminal history.[13][14][15][16] Gregg won £50,000 libel damages, plus costs, after being accused by Irish writer Noel O'Gara of "stitching up" John Humble as the writer of the hoax letters and sender of a tape recording purporting to be from the Yorkshire Ripper.[17]
- Serial killer Colin Norris, dubbed the 'Angel of Death' who murdered four elderly patients in a hospital in Leeds receiving a life sentence in 2008.[18][19][20]
- Gregg led the enquiry into the Harold Shipman deaths in West Yorkshire, when Shipman, a practising medical doctor, was apprehended, later having 218 murders positively ascribed to him.[21]
On leaving the force he spoke against the misuse by suspected murderers of the protective shield of human rights legislation.[22][23][24][25][26]
References
- ^ BBC News 19 May 2008: Gregg talks about his career; Accessed 17 March 2010
- ^ a b Chief is off after 30 years in force - Bradford Telegraph & Argus, 16 May 2008, accessed 20 March 2010
- ^ a b "Human rights law 'shielding rapists'" Daily Telegraph 13 May 2008 - accessed 18 March 2010
- ^ "Axiom International Key People"
- ^ Queen's Birthday Honours 2008
- ^ Daily Express 13 May 2008, accessed 18 March 2010
- ^ Human Rights Act has 'helped rapists and murderers escape justice' for 10 years - Daily Mail 13 May 2008 - accessed 18 March 2010
- ^ BBC News 8 July 2002 Accessed 17 March 2010
- ^ The murder of Leanne Tiernan - Forensic cases, accessed 23 March 2010
- ^ CBS News 16 February 2008 - accessed 18 March 2010
- ^ "Police killer will die in prison for brutal, cold-blooded crime" - The Times 3 December 2004, accessed 18 March 2010
- ^ "Hunt stepped up for police officer's killer" - The Scotsman 29 December 2003, accessed 20 March 2010
- ^ Man still held over Ripper hoax - BBC News October 2005, accessed 18 March 2003
- ^ Ripper hoaxer sent to prison for eight years - The Independent 22 March 2006, accessed 18 March 2010
- ^ 'Callous' Ripper hoaxer sent to prison for eight years - The Independent 21 March 2006, accessed 18 March 2010
- ^ 'I did it because I was bored and on the dole' Yorkshire Post - 21 March 2006, accessed 19 March 2010
- ^ "Ripper detective wins £50,000 damages" Sunderland Echo, 11 March 2008 - accessed 20 March 2010
- ^ Angel of Death nurse jailed for life - Daily Telegraph, 4 March 2008 - accessed 20 March 2010
- ^ BBC TV News interview with Gregg after the trial, accessed 20 March 2010
- ^ Colin Norris, 'Angel of Death' nurse, jailed for life, Daily Telegraph 4 March 2004, accessed 23 March 2010
- ^ How Many More did Shipman Kill? The Independent 9 October 2001, accessed 23 March 2010
- ^ Human Rights Law 'Shielding Rapists', Daily Telegraph, 13 May 2008, accessed 24 March 2010
- ^ "Human Rights 'Loopholes' Condemned". Daily Express, 13 May 2008, accessed 25 March 2010
- ^ "Human Rights Act has 'helped rapists and murderers escape justice' for 10 years, says top detective", Daily Mail, 13 May 2008, accessed 25 March
- ^ Detective Attacks Criminals Pleas for Human Rights, Bradford Telegraph & Argus, 13 May 2008, accessed 26 March 2010
- ^ "Human Rights Act has allowed hardened criminals 'to hide from the law', says top detective", Daily Mail, 13 May 2008, accessed 27 March 2010