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Authors: Nigel McCrery

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Dawn bought the sweets, and her friends last saw her at approximately 4
PM
heading towards Ten Pound Lane, a country path that was a shortcut between Enderby and Narborough. On her way she called on several friends, only to discover from their families that they were already out. If only this had not been the case, an awful tragedy might have been averted. I have read of—and been involved in—many cases where chance has played a significant role in the way that events unfolded. It is a powerful governing force in all our lives—and deaths.

Dawn began to make her way home along Ten Pound Lane.

When she wasn't home by 7
PM
to attend the party, her parents began to worry. It wasn't like her to be late; she was normally very reliable. Her mother discovered that she had left her friend's house at 4:30
PM
and hadn't been seen since, which increased their concern. They reported her missing to the police but were told to wait a little longer—it wasn't unusual for a teenage girl to go missing for a few hours. Dawn's parents knew that, in her case, it was.

By 9:30
PM
there was still no sign of her, and her father went out to search for her. He scoured the local streets and the footpaths and, just like Eddie Eastwood three years before, walked past the very spot where his daughter was lying without seeing her.

The following day, Friday, August 1, the police finally took action, and the Narborough area was alive with search teams and dogs.

As is normal in such cases, both Robin and Barbara Ashworth were interviewed at length and their house and yard carefully searched. During this time they were also subjected to anonymous silent phone calls, adding to their anguish. The papers were full of the search and included a personal plea from her father for Dawn to be returned safely.

On August 2, a police sergeant discovered a denim jacket close to Ten Pound Lane with a lipstick and a pack of cigarettes in the pocket. The area was immediately sealed off, and before noon a body was discovered near a clump of blackthorn bushes next to Ten Pound Lane. The body was naked from the waist down, just like Lynda Mann's had been. The police knew at once who they had found, though it fell to her father to make the official identification. With this done, at 6:30
PM
the
postmortem commenced. The pathologist established the cause of death as asphyxia due to manual strangulation, probably by having an arm hooked around her throat. She had been raped and sodomized, most likely after death.

The inquiry followed the normal pattern: interviews, door-to-door enquiries, reenactments, appeals. As the police sifted through the intelligence they had gathered, they realized that they had a promising lead. At least four witnesses had reported seeing a man on a red motorcycle or wearing a red crash helmet. Sightings of this man and his bike were made at various times and in various places. He was seen under a nearby bridge at noon, and a different witness saw him there again at around quarter to five. A third witness saw the bike on Ten Pound Lane at 5:15
PM
and a fourth reported seeing the bike being ridden up and down Mill Lane on the evening Dawn's body was discovered, as though the rider were taking a keen interest in the inquiry.

A seventeen-year-old boy, who worked as an orderly at the Carlton Hayes Hospital, was seen by a local police officer pushing a motorcycle. He was stopped and, after he admitted having seen Dawn shortly before she disappeared, was brought in for questioning.

On the following Thursday, August 7, a witness contacted the inquiry team and told them that the same boy, who was his colleague at the Carlton Hayes Hospital, had told him that the police had discovered Dawn's body in a hedge by the M1 highway bridge, hanging from a tree. While this last detail was not true, the rest of the description was uncannily accurate, considering that the police had not yet released this information. Another witness then came forward and explained that
the boy had told him, only hours after it happened, that Dawn's body had been discovered, again before the police had made an official announcement. It was also alleged that he had acted inappropriately with several women in the past, and that he had told one he was the last person to see Dawn Ashworth alive. One of these witnesses had also noticed scratch marks on his hand when they spoke.

As a result of all this information, Detective Sergeant Dawe and Detective Constable Cooke from the inquiry visited the boy at his house in Narborough and arrested him in connection with the murder of Dawn Ashworth. He was driven to Wigstone Police Station where he underwent a series of interviews conducted by various members of the inquiry team. Over many hours he was gradually worn down until at last he admitted to the murder of Dawn Ashworth. Many of his admissions were contradictory and more than a little vague, but when he was eventually presented with a statement admitting that he had carried out the murder, he signed it. He was then removed to Winson Green Prison in the nearby city of Birmingham.

With her killer safely behind bars, four weeks after her murder, Dawn Amanda Ashworth was finally laid to rest in the churchyard of St. John's Baptist Church in Enderby.

Now that they were sure they had their man, the police wanted to make a definite link between Dawn's murder and that of Lynda Mann. It was something the press had already been speculating about. However, there were flaws in the case against the boy. He had given blood and it was quickly established that he was not a Group A secretor PGM1+, something the police had placed a great deal of emphasis on when looking for the killer. But a forensic scientist reassured them by telling
them that they were only dealing with maybes and suggesting such things were perhaps not a “precise” science. The boy's mother had given him a strong alibi for the evening of Dawn's murder, but this was also dismissed on the grounds that she was a far from disinterested party. In retrospect it seems likely that the police were so relieved to have someone locked up for the crime, and so swayed by the circumstantial evidence against him, that they ignored what were actually real problems with the case.

Exactly what happened next is open to debate. In the end it depends who you believe. The boy's father maintains he had heard of the development of genetic fingerprinting and asked his son's lawyer to look into it. The police, on the other hand, maintain it was their idea to try to prove once and for all that they had the right man. It will never be clear who put forward the idea of using this new technology in the case, but put forward it was. Dr. Alec Jeffreys's work came into play. This was to be the decisive development in the cases of both Lynda Mann and Dawn Ashworth.

Before the murders, Jeffreys had already made legal history by proving through genetic fingerprinting that a French teenager was the father of an English divorcée's child. He was well known and highly respected within the scientific community but not particularly recognized outside that sphere. That was about to change.

A senior detective from the Leicestershire Constabulary asked Jeffreys to analyze samples of blood from the self-confessed murderer of Dawn Ashworth, “just to be sure.” He explained to Jeffreys that the police hoped to prove that the boy had also murdered Lynda Mann.

Jeffreys was given a semen sample from the Lynda Mann investigation. It was somewhat degraded but nevertheless he ran it through his usual process and hoped for the best. Luckily, he was able to obtain a proper DNA profile. “And there,” Jeffreys recalled later, “we could see the signature of the rapist.” More importantly, “It was not the person whose blood sample was given to me.” Jeffreys then went on to spend a week analyzing samples collected from the Dawn Ashworth murder.

When he finally had the results, he contacted Chief Superintendent David Baker and told him that he had both good news and bad news. Baker wanted the bad news first. Jeffreys told him, “Not only is your man innocent in the Mann case, he isn't even the man who killed Dawn Ashworth.” After the detective had finished using some particularly colorful language, he asked Jeffreys for the good news. “You only have to catch one killer. The same man murdered both girls.” Baker wanted to know if there could have been a mistake. Jeffreys was firm on this point. “Not if you've given me the correct samples.”

The boy appeared in Leicester Crown Court on November 21, 1986. It was a day on which both legal and forensic history was made. He became the first person ever to be set free on the evidence of a DNA test. To this day, nobody is entirely sure why he confessed to the crime in the first place, or indeed how it was that he seemed to know so many privileged details of it. It seems likely that he simply caved in to pressure under interview and that the information he had came from rumors he'd heard and repeated; it just happened to be uncomfortably close to the truth. His acquittal was a triumph for Jeffreys and for forensic science, and an enormous relief for the boy and his
family. For the Leicestershire Constabulary, however, it was a disaster. They had no choice but to begin their hunt once more.

They began to search for the real culprit with renewed urgency. A reward of £20,000 was offered for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the murderer, and a fifty-man squad was assembled at Wigston Police Station.

Then, at the beginning of 1987, a remarkable and, it has to be acknowledged, brave decision was made by the inquiry's senior investigation team. They decided to take blood from every unalibied male member of the local community between ages fourteen and thirty-one and from all males who had worked in, or had some other connection with, the villages of Narborough, Littlethorpe, or Enderby. (This was later amended to any male born between January 1, 1953, and December 31, 1970, who lived, worked, or had a recreational reason for being in the area.) This included past and present patients and employees of the Carlton Hayes Hospital.

“The blooding,” as it became known, took place in two locations, three days a week, between 7
AM
and 9
PM.
There was also a late session between 9:30
PM
and 11:30
PM
once a week. By the end of January there had been a 90 percent response and over a thousand men had given blood. However, only a quarter of them had been cleared through testing. The process was obviously going to take longer than the two months initially estimated.

January was a bad month for Colin Pitchfork. He was feeling troubled and having difficulty sleeping. His concerns had started when he received a letter from the Leicestershire Constabulary requesting that he go to one of their clinics and voluntarily give blood. It gave him a time and date to attend. When his
wife asked why he was so agitated about it, he explained that he was convinced that the police were going to set him up because he had a previous conviction for indecent exposure. He didn't go.

When the second request arrived, Pitchfork started to approach friends and colleagues at Hampshires Bakery where he worked, offering them £200 if they would take the blood test for him. He cited his conviction for flashing and his hatred of the police as reasons. To their credit, most of his colleagues refused. That was, until he approached Ian Kelly. Kelly was a twenty-four-year-old oven man at the bakery and had only worked there for six months. He and Pitchfork were not on particularly friendly terms, but they got along well enough.

Pitchfork took a different tack when trying to persuade Kelly. He told him that he had already given blood for a friend who was scared of getting into trouble because of a previous conviction for flashing and robbery. There was, he said, no chance this friend could have any connection with the murders because he wasn't even living in the village when they were committed. Now he, Pitchfork, was in trouble because he had done an innocent friend a favor. If discovered, his act of friendship might even land him in prison. The next occasion Pitchfork was due to give blood was January 27. Time was running out for him. He continued to put pressure on Kelly until he eventually agreed to give blood on Pitchfork's behalf.

The whole arrangement nearly fell through when Kelly got sick on the day he was supposed to attend the appointment. However, Pitchfork managed to talk him out of bed, and the two of them made their way to Danemill School on Mill Lane in Enderby, where blood was being taken. (Oddly, the school
was on the street where Dawn Ashworth had lived.) While Kelly gave blood, Pitchfork waited outside, standing in the shadows so as not to be noticed. Kelly did all that had been asked of him; he signed the consent form and gave both blood and saliva. The job was done.

By the end of May there had been an amazing 98 percent response to the call for samples. However, of the 3,653 men and boys that had been blooded, only 2,000 had been eliminated due to the laboratory's unusually heavy workload. By now the murder squad had been scaled down to twenty-four officers, and they had over a thousand people still to contact. Shortly after this, the squad was cut again, to sixteen officers. It was left to Inspectors Derek Pearce and Mick Thomas to fight on the inquiry's behalf against those who wanted to shut it down completely.

The breakthrough came, as is often the case, from an unguarded moment on the part of someone involved. One lunch break, Ian Kelly went to the Clarendon pub and met some of his colleagues from Hampshires Bakery. One way or another, the conversation turned to Colin Pitchfork and his inappropriate behavior toward women. During this conversation, Ian Kelly mentioned that he had given blood for Colin Pitchfork once. When he was asked why, he told them about the murder inquiry. Another of the bakers then mentioned that Pitchfork had offered him £200 to take the blood test but that he had refused.

One of the women there was profoundly disturbed by what she had heard. She asked one of the bakers what they should do about Pitchfork. The reply was simple: “Nothing.” Everyone seemed sure he wasn't guilty of anything. Besides, it would get Ian Kelly into serious trouble, and nobody wanted that. In spite of this, the woman wouldn't let the matter drop. She discovered
that the landlord of the Clarendon pub had a policeman for a son, and she decided that she had to pass the information on, though it was several weeks before she finally contacted the young constable.

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