Guernsey Press

Murderer whose conviction made legal history to have parole hearing in public

William Dunlop was brought to justice after his victim’s mother campaigned for more than a decade to get the double jeopardy law changed.

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A murderer who was brought to justice after his victim’s mother campaigned for a key change in the double jeopardy law is to have his parole hearing in public.

William Dunlop, now 60, strangled pizza delivery woman Julie Hogg in Billingham, County Durham, in 1989, and hid her mutilated body behind a bath panel where it lay undiscovered for more than two months.

The killer subjected the 22-year-old, who had a three-year-old son, to a violent sexual assault after she rejected him, in what prosecutors called a “premeditated and truly horrendous” attack.

He was tried twice for the murder but both juries failed to reach a verdict.

Julie Hogg
Julie Hogg was killed by William Dunlop in 1989 (PA)

Miss Hogg’s mother, Ann Ming, campaigned for 15 years to get the 800-year-old law changed so that he could be charged with the same crime twice, and in 2006 he became the first person to be tried under the new rules.

He was convicted of murder and jailed for life.

Chairwoman of the Parole Board for England and Wales Caroline Corby ruled that Dunlop’s parole hearing, on a date yet to be fixed, can be held in public, partly due to the unique legal background to the case.

William Dunlop sentencing
Ann Ming, the mother of murdered Julie Hogg, campaigned for several years for the crucial change in the double jeopardy law that saw William Dunlop brought to justice (Johnny Green/PA)

“The victims wish to attend a public hearing rather than a private hearing.

“Although the victims might have been given permission to attend a private hearing, their support for a public hearing is relevant and can also be taken into account.”

Last year the Justice Secretary blocked a bid to move Dunlop, known as Billy, to an open prison, in the interests of public protection, despite a parole panel recommending the plan.

Ms Corby said a public hearing would improve understanding of how these decisions are made.

Thomas Park
Thomas Park murdered Sharon Lester with a pair of scissors and then shook and battered her two-year-old daughter, Jade, to death (PA)

Sharon Lester, 22, and two-year-old Jade were killed in Merseyside when Miss Lester had been seeing Park for only a few weeks.

He hid the young mother’s body in a cupboard under the stairs at her home, and left Jade’s on waste ground.

Ms Corby said the seriousness of the crime and the victims’ requests for a public hearing had been taken into account.

Both defendants had claimed they suffered stress at the prospect of a public hearing and feared for their safety.

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