LONDON — The British serial killer known as the "Yorkshire Ripper" died Friday, reviving unsettling memories of a killing spree that bred fear across northern England in the late 1970s. He was 74.
Peter Sutcliffe was serving a life sentence for the killings of 13 women in Yorkshire and northwest England between 1975 and 1980. British media reported that he had refused treatment after testing positive for COVID-19 and was suffering from a number of underlying health conditions.
Sutcliffe's barbaric attacks on young women were compounded by police failures that allowed him to evade arrest and continue killing. The manhunt for the Ripper was one of the biggest in British history, with some 2.5 million hours spent trying to catch him. But inquiries later chronicled how stubborn investigators stuck to their early theories about the case, missing key leads, ignoring contradictory evidence and wasting time.
News of Sutcliffe's death revived the anger of many who lived through those years.
Richard McCann was 5-years-old when his mother, Wilma, became Sutcliffe's first murder victim. Photos of Wilma have been shown repeatedly over the past four decades whenever Sutcliffe was in the news, reminding McCann of his young mother, who just 28 when she died near their home in Leeds.
"One positive to come from this is that we'll hear much less about him and no more reminders about what happened all those years ago," McCann told the BBC.
Sutcliffe, who left school at 15, worked menial jobs before becoming a grave digger and truck driver. His attacks began in July 1975 in the West Yorkshire town of Keighley, where he beat a woman with a hammer then slashed her with a knife. A month later, another woman was found with similar injuries, 12 miles away in Halifax.
The two victims survived, but police initially failed to connect the crimes. Sutcliffe's rampage continued.