John Cannan

John David Guise Cannan (born 20 February 1954)[1] is a British murderer and rapist. Cannan, a former car salesman,[2] was convicted in July 1988 of murder and sexual offences. He was given three life sentences, with a recommendation that he never be released, for the murder of Shirley Banks in Bristol in October 1987, the attempted kidnapping of Julia Holman on the previous night and the rape of a woman in Reading, Berkshire in 1986.[3]

Cannan is the only suspect in the murder of Suzy Lamplugh, who vanished in July 1986 after going to meet a man calling himself 'Mr Kipper'. In November 2002, however, the Crown Prosecution Service decided that there was insufficient evidence to charge him.[4] That month, Scotland Yard held a press conference at which, in a rare move, officers named him as the man they believe murdered Lamplugh.[5]

Sexual offences and robberies

In 1968, at age 14, John Cannan indecently assaulted a woman in a phone box in Erdington[6] and was placed on probation.[7][8] He left his wife in 1980 for Daphne Sargent, whom he assaulted when she tried to leave him.[6] In early 1981, Cannan robbed a petrol station and a knitwear shop at knifepoint; in the latter incident he tied up the shop assistant's mother with tights and raped the shop assistant after threatening to stab her baby.[7] He served five years of an eight-year sentence for rape after being convicted in June 1981.[1] Cannan served his sentence at HM Prison Bristol and before being transferred to London.[6] He was on day release from a hostel at Wormwood Scrubs in 1986 when Suzy Lamplugh went missing.[9]

Police say that Cannan's modus operandi was to pretend to be a West Country businessman. He would ply women with chocolates and flowers and then attack when the women rejected him.[10] While living in Bristol, Cannan had an affair with a solicitor, which ended in August 1986; he threatened her and her family.[11]

Only ten weeks after his release from prison,[7] Cannan raped a woman at knifepoint in Reading, Berkshire, in October 1986, an attack he was linked to by DNA from semen.[2] Cannan had been arrested for this offence earlier but he gave an alibi that he was in Sutton Coldfield at the time of the attack, and the forensic evidence was not strong enough to charge him. An early DNA profile was inconclusive, but the Home Office and ICI both ran the test again in 1988 and demonstrated a match. Police also used evidence from Cannan's cashpoint card to prove that he had travelled from London to Bristol that day. Reading is on the railway line between these cities.[12]

In October 1987, Cannan tried to abduct 30-year-old Bristol businesswoman Julia Holman from a car park at around 6.50 pm at gunpoint, but she fought him off and later identified him as her attacker.[2][12] The next night he abducted Shirley Banks.[2]

Murder of Shirley Banks

Disappearance

Banks, who was a newly married 29-year-old textiles factory manager from Clifton,[13] was abducted on the evening of 8 October 1987 some time after 7.40 pm[8] while out on a shopping trip to the Broadmead centre. Her husband Richard, then 30, searched for her in bars when she failed to return home, as they had agreed to meet for a drink; when he rang her work the next morning, he was told she had just phoned in sick with an upset stomach 15 minutes earlier. When she again failed to return home, he called the police.[8][12] Police believe that Banks was held overnight in Cannan's flat and that he then persuaded her to phone in sick to her work, after pretending he was going to release her.[7]

Investigation

150 officers from five police forces spent around 140,000 man-hours on the case. The police put out television appeals and searched Bristol Docks for Banks' car. They considered that the telephone call to her work could mean she had left voluntarily and also considered whether her husband Richard could be a suspect; he was quickly eliminated. The police had first planned to link the attempted abduction of Julia Holman the previous night on a Crimewatch reconstruction in November, before Cannan's further crimes led to his arrest.[12]

Regent Street in Leamington Spa

Arrest of Cannan

Cannan, then living at Foye House, Leigh Woods, Bristol,[14] was arrested on 29 October 1987 in Leamington Spa for an assault at knife-point on an assistant, at a Regent Street dress shop, Ginger.[12][14] Two passers-by had chased him and called the police. He evaded them briefly and they found a knife and bag with blood on it. The police spotted him and saw his hand was bleeding, then arrested him. They found his black BMW near the shop, which contained rope and an imitation handgun and they also found rope hidden in a toilet cistern in a garage.[12]

A Mini Clubman similar to Banks's

The police searched his car three weeks after Banks had gone missing, where they found a tax disc for her car, inside a briefcase in the glove compartment.[8][12][15] Her orange Mini Clubman was found, painted blue, in the lock-up garage at his block of flats.[2][12][14] The police bailed him from the station in Warwick, where he was being interviewed for the attempted robbery and police from Bristol immediately rearrested him regarding Banks's disappearance.

News media immediately linked Banks's disappearance to that of Suzy Lamplugh and published Cannan's prior criminal record. Cannan claimed he had bought the Mini from a man at an auction. The police charged him with assault on 2 November and he had no alibi for the night of Banks's disappearance.[12]

Witnesses

A taxi driver came forward to say that a woman had called a taxi to Cannan's flat at about 2 pm, on the day after Banks disappeared but Cannan told him nobody had called one. At about 2.30 pm, he borrowed a vacuum cleaner from a neighbour and was seen cleaning his car. Cannan's movements could not be accounted for between 3 pm and 7 pm. Police brought in Julia Holman, whom he had attempted to abduct and she immediately identified him in the line up.[12]

Hoping that Banks was still alive, the police released Cannan's picture to the press.[12] A 69-year-old woman came forward to say she was in traffic near Cannan's flat on 9 October 1987 and saw smoke from a small fire in a copse. In the woods she heard a struggle, punching, a woman saying "No, no" and the man saying "I warned you what I would do". There was also a choking sound.

She shouted towards the man with "dark, curly hair" who saw her, ran towards her and lunged at her.[12][16][17] The police were sceptical but believed that it was possible she had heard and seen something in the woods.[12]

Forensics

Police found a cleaning ticket for a shop in Sutton Coldfield and found that Cannan had dropped off a raincoat with red marks on it, late October. He claimed the marks were due to red mud from making love in a park; police found the marks were bloodstains, that could have been from the same blood group as Banks.[12]

The police built up a composite set of Banks's fingerprints from her parents' house, her home and her work. The left thumbprint matched a document in Cannan's flat. He acknowledged that the document came from his flat, before he knew about the thumbprint.[12] He was charged with her kidnap and murder on 23 December 1987.[12][18]

View towards the Dowsborough Hill Fort where Banks's body was found

Discovery of her body

Banks's naked, decomposed body was found in a stream by a woman, collecting moss, six months after her disappearance, on Easter Sunday (3 April 1988) in the Quantock hills, at a site named "Dead Woman's Ditch", part of an Iron Age camp at Dowsborough.[8][13][19]

The police found dark red mud at the site her body was left, gold jewellery and buttons from a dress she had bought.[12] According to pathologist Prof. Bernhard Knight, she was killed by being hit repeatedly in the head with a rock.[20] Banks's thumbprint, preserved by the ice-cold stream, also matched the thumbprint on the document.[2]

Trial

"You are extremely attractive to some women. But under that there lies a most evil violence and horrible side to your character."

—Mr Justice Drake at sentencing, 1989.[7]

The trial lasted three weeks. The jury reached a guilty verdict on the charges, after ten hours on 28 April 1989.[12] In April 1989, Cannan was jailed for life by Mr Justice Drake at Exeter Crown Court, for the murder of Banks and the attacks on two other women.[7][15] Drake praised the investigation led by Detective Chief Inspector Brian Saunders.[7]

Suspected cases

""He has gone down as an 'emerging' serial killer, but I have no doubt that he killed more than the three women whose deaths he is officially linked to".

—Christopher Berry-Dee, 2010[21]

John Cannan was a person of interest in the disappearance of 25-year-old estate agent Suzy Lamplugh in July 1986 and the murder of 27-year-old insurance clark Sandra Court by strangulation, in Bournemouth, May 1986 but he has never been charged in either case.[15][22]

Murder of Sandra Court

In November 2001, Police interviewed Cannan at a police station in York over the murder of Sandra Court during May 1986. Court was last seen by a taxi driver who dropped her in Throop, Dorset at her sister's house.[22] Court's body was found in a water-filled ditch.[22] A pay-and-display ticket proves that Cannan was in Bournemouth the day she was killed.[21]

In April 2008, an anonymous letter posted to police from Southampton claimed Court's death "was a complete and utter accident".[23]

Disappearance of Suzy Lamplugh

"Cannan will reoffend. He should never be released. If you look at his profile, I have no doubt he will strike again. He has been released from prison before and committed crimes. He is a danger to the female population, particularly the blonde, twenty-something professionals like Suzy. Even if he wasn't released until he was 60 he would go on to abduct, rape and murder women."

—Detective Superintendent Jim Dickie, 2006[24]

Cannan was questioned by police regarding the disappearance of Suzy Lamplugh in 1989 and 1990. He wrote a letter to the local paper Sutton News in August 1991 denying any part in her disappearance.[3] She was declared officially dead in 1994. In December 2000 John Cannan was arrested for Lamplugh's murder and questioned, but he was not charged.[25] In November 2002, detectives said publicly that they believed he had killed Lamplugh[26] and confirmed this in 2006 when arguing against any reduction in his tariff.[24]

In November 2002, Cannan complained via his solicitors about the police publicly naming him, saying he was "devastated and distressed". He again denied killing Lamplugh.[4] His solicitor complained about a lack of presumption of innocence and that the prison service had withheld letters Cannan had tried to send to national newspapers regarding the allegations.[27]

In November 2002 Mark Dennis, a senior Treasury counsel, decided that there was insufficient evidence to charge Cannan over Ms Lamplugh's death.[24][28] Lamplugh's parents considered, but decided against, bringing a private prosecution and civil action against Cannan.[3] In July 1993 The Independent argued that the judge's sentencing statement, that Cannan should remain in jail for the rest of his natural life, removed any incentive for him to confess post-conviction.[29]

Evidence

In November 2002 the police said that Cannan should have been a suspect much earlier in the investigation: they should have checked for recently released sex offenders and they should have followed up information given by her parents about a man from Bristol.[28]

Cannan was released from his prison hostel three days before Lamplugh disappeared.[30] His colleagues said he often went to wine bars in Fulham, where Lamplugh worked.[6] Lamplugh was supposed to meet a "Mr Kipper" when she disappeared and Cannan was said to have used the name "Kipper" in prison.[19][24] In 2000 a new investigating team, led by Jim Dickey, computerised the card index of the case and found that several estate agents in Fulham had been visited by a Mr Kipper.[6] Cannan may have had access to a black BMW and a dark BMW was linked to Ms Lamplugh's kidnap;[26] Lamplugh was last seen getting into a BMW with a man holding champagne, which led an ex-girlfriend of Cannan, Daphne Sargent, to say that "As soon as I heard about Suzy, I knew it was John. It had all the hallmarks – right down to the champagne."[31] Cannan resembles a photofit of a man seen with Lamplugh the day she disappeared.[26] A girlfriend of Cannan said he had "a strong interest" in the case,[32] and police believe Lamplugh may have been in a relationship with Cannan.[6]

In August 2010 a criminologist who had corresponded with Cannan said that DNA evidence linked Lamplugh to a Ford Sierra, once used by Cannan, that was recovered during 2000. It had the false number plate SLP 386, which might relate to her initials and year of disappearance.[21] The car was recovered from a second-hand dealership in North London where it had been parked for years.[33]

In April 2001 police said that the number plate SLP 386S had been placed on Banks' Mini by Cannan and that 386 might be a grid reference, as the site Banks' body was found is near Northing Line 386 and Norton Manor Barracks is near 3° 08' 06" West.[34] When the police interviewed Cannan about the significance of the number plate on the Mini, he acknowledged that the initials could stand for Suzy Lamplugh but said a "Bristol businessman" from whom he bought the car for £100 was responsible for the deaths of Lamplugh, Banks and another woman. Asked if that businessman was him, he replied "Yes", but then immediately recanted.[6] Cannan allegedly told an astrologist who visited him in jail that "a Bristol businessman" murdered Lamplugh and that "I know who killed Shirley, Suzy and another girl".[34]

Possible burial sites

Cannan's ex-girlfriend Gilly Paige told police as early as 1990,[35] that he had said Lamplugh's body was buried at Norton Barracks, although she later retracted the assertion.[24][30] In December 1999, after a letter was sent to Lamplugh's mother, Diane, claiming Suzy was buried there, a five-day search by more than 30 officers in and around the former site of the barracks, in December 2000, failed to find her body.[36]

In February 2001, the Metropolitan Police searched the barracks site again.[37] In April 2001, the police realised that it was possible the barracks named were actually Norton Manor Royal Marines barracks in Somerset, 8 miles from where Banks body was found.[34]

In August 2010, they searched a field three miles from the site in Worcestershire after a witness remembered seeing a mound of earth there in 1986, when he was a teenager. The police used ground-penetrating radar,[37] and trenches were dug by the side of the road between Pershore and Drakes Broughton, Worcestershire. At the same time they also searched woodland in the Quantock Hills, where Shirley Banks' body was found.[10]

In April 2001 a cellmate of Cannan said that Lamplugh was buried under the patio of Cannan's mother's house in Sutton Coldfield.[38] In October 2018 police officers returned to the house and dug up the garden.[39][40]

Murder of Melanie Hall

A possible involvement in the murder of Melanie Hall, who disappeared in 1996, was suggested by police in October 2009, following the discovery of her remains. Cannan discussed the "perfect abduction" with fellow prisoner Christopher Clark, a rapist who was jailed for life for attacking another woman, a month after being interviewed over Hall's disappearance.[19]

Prison life

Cannan is a Category A offender in HMP Full Sutton, York.[15] He still protests his innocence.[15] He has studied for an Open University degree while in prison.[3] His minimum tariff is 35 years, meaning he will not become eligible for parole until 2023, and he will only be released if the Parole Board rules that he is no longer a serious danger to the public.[41]

In July 1989, he failed to get the High Court to stop the BBC broadcasting a Crimewatch UK documentary on the investigation into the murder of Banks.[42] A case he took to the High Court in January 2003, claiming that his right to "free and unimpeded" legal advice was being restricted failed.[43]

In June 2009, he lodged another case at the High Court for alleged human rights breaches; he claimed that his ineligibility for a sexual offences treatment programme, due to his continued claim of innocence, was illegal.[15]

He appealed for his 35-year minimum tariff to be reduced, but the judge Mr Justice Coulson ruled against this in June 2008 because his crimes involved "a significant degree of planning and premeditation" and there were "no real mitigating factors at all".[1][41]

Personal life

Cannan came from a middle-class family, the son of an engineer, and attended public school until the age of 15.[44]:1 He was originally from Sutton Coldfield in the West Midlands.[2] He was in the merchant navy for three months aged 17 then began working as a car salesman in his father's company.[44]:21 When he was on day release from Wormwood Scrubs, he worked as a porter for a prop hire company.[6]

He claimed to have had 100 one-night stands and was said to be charming.[7] He was married in May 1978 to June Vale and had a daughter, but he left them in 1980.[44]:2[6] In 1987, he recorded a dating video, which was released by police.[6]

gollark: I don't know why people use oscilloscopes when they could just connect >GHz-speed ADCs to a computer of some kind.
gollark: So you'd have to not use that or it might cause issues.
gollark: Also, newer hash functions' implementations often come with convenient wrappers which automatically pick an iteration count and such.
gollark: Well, it's probably valid to do so but æ æ more code, as they say.
gollark: ↑

References

  1. "High Court setting of minimum terms for mandatory life sentences under the Criminal Justice Act 2003". Her Majesty's Court Services. 2 June 2008. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  2. "Trial told of thumbprint link to bride". Glasgow Herald. 7 April 1989. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  3. Laville, Sandra (6 November 2002). "I won't let him play with my mind, says mother". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  4. Herbert, Ian (16 November 2002). "Lamplugh suspect says police acted wrongly". The Independent. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  5. "Police name man who 'killed Suzy Lamplugh". The Daily Telegraph. 6 November 2002. Retrieved 5 July 2015.
  6. Who Killed Suzy Lamplugh? Real Crime, ITV, 2001
  7. "Evil charmer sent to jail for rest of his life". Glasgow Herald. 22 April 1989. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  8. "Casebook: Monster John Cannan murdered newly wed". Birmingham Mail. 18 August 2010. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  9. Goldby, Ben (15 August 2010). "Did Suzy Lamplugh have an affair with convicted killer John Cannan?". Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  10. Cowan, Mark (18 August 2010). "Crime File: Mystery of missing Suzy struck terror". Birmingham Mail. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  11. "Tears of a witness". Evening Times. 13 April 1989. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  12. Crimewatch File: The Shirley Banks Murder. 16 August 1989. BBC Television. Presented by Sue Cook.
  13. "Body in river is identified as missing newly-wed". Glasgow Herald. 5 April 1988. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  14. "Bride charge man in court". Evening Times. 2 November 1987. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  15. McCormick, K (5 June 2009). "Prison breaches human rights, says killer of Bristol newlywed". Evening Post. Bristol. Archived from the original on 28 August 2009. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  16. "Witness denies imagining woodland killing". Evening Times. 14 April 1989. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  17. "Elderly woman tells missing bride trial of a 'growling' man". Glasgow Herald. 14 April 1989. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  18. "Cannan is charged with murder of Shirley Banks". Glasgow Herald. 24 December 1987. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  19. Goldby, Ben (26 October 2009). "Sutton Coldfield killer John Cannan linked to murder of Melanie Hall". Sunday Mercury. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  20. "Inquest told of woman's injuries". Glasgow Herald. 7 April 1988. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  21. Goldby, Ben (15 August 2010). "Criminologist speaks out on details linking Sutton Coldfield sex monster to murder of Suzy Lamplugh". Sunday Mercury. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  22. "Lamplugh suspect linked to killing". BBC News. 7 November 2002. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  23. Hoskins, John (10 April 2008). "Letter could bring justice 22 years later". Southern Daily Echo. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  24. Townsend, Mark (30 July 2006). "We're sure of Suzy Lamplugh's killer: keep him in jail, police urge". The Observer. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  25. Babbington, Andrew (4 December 2000). "Man arrested for Suzy Lamplugh killing". The Independent. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  26. Alderson, Andrew (9 July 2006). "Lamplugh suspect linked to 'killer's car' 20 years on". The Sunday Telegraph. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  27. Carter, Helen (16 November 2002). "Lamplugh suspect denies playing games with police". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  28. Hopkins, Nick (26 November 2002). "Police spell out Lamplugh blunders". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  29. Kirby, Terry (14 July 1993). "Killers tell all for fame or parole: Michael Sams's post-trial confession was to show he was 'not brutal', but motives of others vary, Terry Kirby reports". The Independent. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  30. Buncombe, Andrew (6 December 1999). "Police to look for Suzy Lamplugh on SAS site". The Independent. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  31. Orr, Deborah (7 December 1999). "False hopes that prey on every woman's fear". The Independent. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  32. Bennetto, Jason (12 May 2000). "Suzy Lamplugh 'seized by more than one person'". The Independent. Retrieved 23 January 2017.
  33. Lashmar, Paul (29 May 2000). "Suzy Lamplugh police seize car used by suspect". The Independent. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  34. Alderson, Andrew (29 April 2001). "Police switch search to barracks in West Country". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 12 February 2011.
  35. Bennetto, Jason (24 December 1999). "Yard orders review to look for missed clues in Suzy Lamplugh inquiry". The Independent. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  36. Babbington, Andrew (15 December 2000). "Police call off dig for Suzy Lamplugh's body". The Independent. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  37. Baillie, Clare (12 August 2010). "Police set to call off search for Suzy Lamplugh's body". The Scotsman. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  38. Newton, Michael (2009). The Encyclopedia of Unsolved Crimes. Infobase Publishing. p. 213. ISBN 978-0-8160-7818-9.
  39. Davies, Gareth (30 October 2018). "Suzy Lamplugh murder: Officers dig up suspect's old garden as convicted killer nears prison release date". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  40. "Police dig up garden in Suzy Lamplugh murder investigation". Sky News. Retrieved 17 December 2018.
  41. "Sex killer fails in bid to cut 35-year term". Reading Post. 9 June 2008. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  42. "Killer fails to halt programme". Glasgow Herald. 27 July 1989. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  43. "Lamplugh suspect told policy 'not unlawful'". The Daily Telegraph. 21 January 2003. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  44. Berry-Dee, Christopher; Odell, Robin (2007). Prime Suspect: The True Story of John Cannan, the Only Man Police Want to Investigate for the Murder of Suzy Lamplugh. John Blake. ISBN 978-1-84454-420-2.

Further reading

  • Berry-Dee, Christopher; Odell, Robin (19 November 1992). Ladykiller: Inside the Mind of John Cannan. True Crime. ISBN 978-1-85227-397-2.
  • Berry-Dee, Christopher; Odell, Robin (2007). Prime Suspect: The True Story of John Cannan, the Only Man Police Want to Investigate for the Murder of Suzy Lamplugh. John Blake. ISBN 978-1-84454-420-2.
  • Timeline of Cannan's life and background researched by Erin Waddell, Breeanne Berlin, & Ryan Mank, Department of Psychology, Radford University.
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