Kamis, 04 November 2021

David Fuller: Man admits 1987 murders and abusing corpses - BBC News

Wendy Knell and Caroline Pierce
Kent Police

A hospital worker has admitted murdering two women in 1987, and sexually abusing at least 99 female corpses, including children.

David Fuller, 67, of Heathfield, East Sussex, attacked Wendy Knell and Caroline Pierce in Tunbridge Wells.

On the fourth day of his murder trial at Maidstone Crown Court, Fuller changed his plea to guilty.

He previously admitted sexually abusing bodies in two Kent hospital morgues over 12 years.

Fuller had earlier admitted to killing the women subject to "diminished responsibility", but denied murder.

Mrs Justice Cheema-Grubb directed the jury to find him guilty on both counts of murder, after he was rearraigned.

Warning: this article contains information some people may find distressing.

The charges in relation to the mortuary offences included counts of sexual penetration of a corpse, sexual abuse in relation to corpses, indecent images of children, extreme pornography, and voyeurism.

David Fuller custody image
Kent Police

Investigators said the case came together following recent advances in DNA testing - and a huge police operation costing £2.5m - which linked Fuller to the double killings, dubbed the "the Bedsit Murders".

His saliva and other DNA was found on Ms Knell's bedding, towel and intimate samples.

His semen was also found on Ms Pierce's tights, the only item of clothing she was wearing when her body was found in a water-filled dyke three weeks after her abduction.

Fuller hid hard drive evidence of his offending in a box, stuck to a chest of draws, hidden in a wardrobe
Kent Police

Following his arrest for the murders, a search of Fuller's home revealed he had hoarded millions of indecent images and videos of children and extreme pornography on hard drives, floppy discs, DVDs and memory cards in his loft and spare room.

Two of the drives were hidden in a box, which was screwed to the back of a chest of drawers and placed inside a wardrobe. On these drives officers found footage Fuller had recorded of himself abusing corpses in the morgues.

David Fuller's office
Kent Police

Folders, some labelled with the names of the victims, contained images and videos of him molesting female bodies, including three children, between 2008 and November 2020.

Police have been unable to identify 20 of the victims, and Det Ch Supt Paul Fotheringham said it "may never be possible to identify these women with complete certainty".

Fuller worked in electrical maintenance at hospitals since 1989 and was at the Kent and Sussex Hospital, until it closed in September 2011.

He was transferred to the Tunbridge Wells Hospital at Pembury, where the offences continued until his arrest.

Investigators said Fuller would work late shifts and go into the morgue when other staff had left, often "visiting the same bodies repeatedly".

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A bespoke £1.5m victim support programme

Fuller's offending in the mortuaries is not something Kent Police, or any other force in the country, has ever had to deal with before.

Over the past nine months a bespoke package of care has been created with Victim Support, specially designed for this case.

It has cost £1.5m and involved drafting in 150 police family liaison officers, who were put through specialist training.

The families of the identified victims were visited for the force to break the news, and their assigned liaison officers will continue to support them going forward.

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David Fuller's hospital pass
Kent Police

There is evidence Ms Knell was raped during or after her death, the court heard.

Ms Knell was killed in her home in Guildford Road on 23 June 1987. She was found in her bed by her boyfriend the following day, after concerns were raised when she failed to turn up to work.

What happened to Ms Pierce after she was abducted from outside her home in Grosvenor Park on 24 November is less clear.

David Fuller in the 1980s
Kent Police

Neighbours reporting hearing screaming, but it took three weeks for her body to be spotted by a farm worker, more than 40 miles away in Romney Marsh.

Police said it was very likely Fuller met both women before he killed them.

Fuller was a customer of Supanaps, the photo development chain on Camden Road where Ms Knell worked.

Photos and diary entries found in Fuller's home also show he went to Buster Browns restaurant, on the same road, where Ms Pierce was a manager.

Fuller kept his 30-year-old diaries, detailing him going to Buster Brown at the time Ms Pierce worked there
Kent Police

Fuller kept a record of having carried out at least 30 burglaries, dubbed by police as "creeper-style", during the 70s.

But he never served time in prison, and the offending preceded the police DNA database.

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2021-11-04 15:16:36Z
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