February 24, 1994 was the beginning of
the end -- the end of the
extraordinary things that had been
going on in the ordinary three- story
house in central Gloucester. But it
was also the beginning of a discovery
as the layers of secrets hidden at 25
Cromwell Street were slowly peeled
away. That afternoon, the police came to
find the owner of the house, Frederick
West. Instead, they found his heavy
set, sullen wife Rosemary, who called
her husband the minute they handed her
the warrant. "You'd better get back
home," she told Fred when he answered
the cellular phone in his van.
"They're going to dig up the garden,
looking for Heather." The dark-haired, simian-looking man
was not worried except that the police
wouldn't clean up the mess they were
sure to make lifting up the patio
stones in his garden, looking for the
body of their daughter. He stopped by
the police station on his way home
from work. He told them he and Rose
had no idea where Heather was, but he
was not worried. "Lots of girls
disappear," he explained, "take a
different name and go into
prostitution." He said she was a
lesbian and had problems with drugs. Rose, who was interviewed at the
house, told a similar story. Heather
disappeared at the age of sixteen,
back in 1987. She repeated the story
about Heather being a disagreeable and
lazy person and a lesbian to boot. That night Fred and Rose stayed up all
night and talked. The next morning,
he stepped into the police car. "I
killed her," he told Detective
Constable Hazel Savage. When he got
to the station, he told the police in
minute detail how he had cut Heather's
body into three pieces and buried
them. He kept repeating that Rose had
known nothing about the murder at all. Twenty minutes later he completely
denied everything he had just told
them. "Heather's alive and well,
right. She's possibly at the moment
in Bahrain working for a drug cartel.
She had a Mercedes, a chauffeur and a
new birth certificate." He told the
police that they could dig all they
wanted but they wouldn't find Heather. The police found three human bones,
but they didn't belong to Heather.
When Fred heard that human bones had
been found, he confessed once again to
murdering his daughter, but he denied
that there were the bones of anyone
else buried there. Fred told how it all happened. The
argument with the headstrong Heather,
slapping her for her insolence and
grabbing her throat to stop her from
laughing at him. He must have grabbed
too hard because she turned blue and
stopped breathing. He tried to revive
her, but he didn't have the training,
so he dragged her over to the bathtub
and ran cold water over her. He took
off her clothes, lifted her out of the
tub and dried her off. Then he tried
to put her in the large garbage bin,
but she didn't fit. So it was back in the bathtub where he
knew he would have to make her
smaller. But first, he strangled her
with some tights just to make sure
that she was dead. " I didn't want to
touch he while she was alive. I mean
if I'd have started cutting her leg or
her throat and she'd have suddenly
come alive " He closed Heather's eyes before he
dismembered her. "If somebody's sat
there looking at you, you're not going
to use a knife on that person are
you?"
When he cut off her head, he found the
sound -- a "horrible noise like
scrunching" -- very unpleasant. But,
once her head was off, he started on
her legs, twisting her foot until he
heard "one almighty crack and the leg
come loose, like." Cut into pieces,
she fit nicely into the garbage bin. That night after the remainder of his
family was asleep, he buried Heather's
body in the garden, where she lay
undiscovered for seven years.
In 1962, Fred's parents relented and
let him come back to live with them at
Much Marcle. That summer, his
girlfriend Rena Costello came back
from Scotland and took up with Fred
immediately. They seemed well
matched. Rena was not your average
girl, but rather an experienced
delinquent that as a teenager had a
record for prostitution and burglary.
That Rena was pregnant by an Asian bus
driver introduced a complication into
their relationship and to his parents'
acceptance of her as his mate. Secretly, they married in November of
that year and moved immediately to
Scotland. His parents believed that
the baby she was carrying was Fred's.
In March of 1963, when Charmaine was
born, Fred had Rena write to his
mother saying that their baby had died
in childbirth and that she had adopted
a mixed-race child. Even though Rena had been a prostitute
at various times, she was not happy to
be a prisoner to the voracious sexual
appetite of Fred West. Colin Wilson
in The Corpse Garden tells how Fred's
interest in "normal sex" was minimal.
"He wanted oral sex, bondage and
sodomy at all hours of the day and
night. Fred drove an ice cream truck which
afforded him unlimited access to many
young women. For someone as highly
sexed as Fred, it seemed like
paradise. His politeness, apparent
trustworthiness and sincerity, and his
ability to spin interesting tales made
him attractive to the teenagers who
flocked around his ice cream truck.
His continual seductions turned Rena
and Charmaine into afterthoughts.
Despite Fred's almost daily
infidelities, he was very possessive
of Rena and Charmaine. In 1964, Rena bore Fred's child, a
daughter they named Anna Marie. "On
again, off again" characterized their
roller coaster marriage for several
years. During that time, Rena and
Fred met Anna McFall, whose boyfriend
had been killed in an accident. At
that time, Fred was involved in an
accident with the ice cream truck that
killed a young boy. While Fred wasn't
at fault, he was concerned that he
would lose his job. So, he and Rena
and their two children, plus Anna
McFall moved back to Gloucester. Fred
had a job in a slaughterhouse. Colin Wilson sees this job in the
slaughterhouse as having a profound
affect on Fred. "One thing is clear:
that at some stage, West developed a
morbid obsession with corpses and
blood and dismemberment. There is no
evidence that he had shown any such
interest so far. It seems, then, that
Fred West's sexual perversion became
slowly more obsessive in the period
following his marriage, and the
evidence suggests that necrophilia and
desire to mutilate corpses began
during his period as a butcher." Rena and Fred's marriage became
increasingly unstable. Rena wanted to
take the two children back with her to
Glasgow, but Fred refused, so she went
back to Scotland alone. But she was
miserable without her daughters and,
in July of 1966, returned to
Gloucester to find Fred and Anna
McFall living together in a trailer. Rena told Constable Hazel Savage that
her husband was a sex pervert and
unfit to raise their children.
Coincidentally, there were eight
sexual assaults committed in the
Gloucester area committed by a man of
Fred's description. In early 1967, Anna McFall became
pregnant with Fred's child. She was
trying unsuccessfully to get Fred to
divorce Rena and marry her. Fred
responded to the stress of her demands
by killing her and burying her near
the trailer park sometime in July. Not only did he kill his mistress and
their unborn child, he slowly and
methodically dismembered her corpse
and buried her along with the fetus.
Oddly enough, he cut off her fingers
and toes, which were missing from the
gravesite. It would be his
ritualistic signature in future
crimes. Fred acted very nervous after McFall's
disappearance. Then Rena moved back
into the trailer and Fred became his
old self again. Fred happily sent
Rena out to earn some pocket money as
a prostitute and began to openly
fondle the young Charmaine. In
January of 1968, pretty 15-year-old
Mary Bastholm was abducted from a bus
stop in Gloucester. Howard Sounes
believes that Fred was responsible
because in later years, he abducted
other women in a similar fashion from
bus stops. There were a number of links between
Fred and Mary Bastholm: he was a
customer at the Pop-In (where Mary
worked) and Mary often served him tea;
Fred had been employed to do some
building work behind the café; Mary
had been seen with a girl fitting the
description of Fred's former lover,
Anna McFall; and one witness claims to
have seen Mary in Fred's car. In February, Fred's mother died of
complications of a gallbladder
operation. He launched into a series
of petty thefts, which caused him to
change jobs frequently. On November
29, 1968, while he was working as a
bakery delivery driver, he met the
girl who would become his next wife
and longtime soul mate, Rose Letts. Fred West came from a long line of
Herefordshire farm labourers. He was
born in 1941 in the village of Much
Marcle, approximately 120 miles west
of London, to Walter and Daisy West.
Fred began life as a beautiful baby
with huge piercing blue eyes and blond
hair. Despite the war and the poverty in
which the Wests lived, they had six
more children, one after another
within a ten-year- period. Fred and
his mother enjoyed a very close
relationship. He was her pet and did
everything she asked. Fred also had a
reasonably good relationship with his
father, who he admired as a role
model. The beautiful baby grew up into a
scruffy-looking boy. His blond hair
turned to a dark brown and became
curly and unkempt. He had inherited
some of his mother's less attractive
facial features: an overly large
mouth and a gap between his large
teeth. He looked distinctly like a
Gypsy. Fred was not a promising student and
was constantly in trouble for which he
was caned. Daisy, seriously
overweight and dressed unattractively,
would go to the school to yell at the
teacher for disciplining her favourite
son -- an action that made Fred the
butt of many jokes. He was a "mamma's
boy." He left school at age fifteen
almost illiterate and went to work as
a farm hand. By the time he was sixteen, he cleaned
himself up enough to be attractive to
girls. He was extremely aggressive
with the opposite sex and went after
any girl that caught his fancy. Fred claimed that his father had sex
with his daughters, using the logic,
"I made you so I'm entitled to have
you." But then, Fred was a notorious
liar. It's hard to say if his father
ever was ever guilty of incest or that
Fred made his sister pregnant as he
later claimed. When Fred was seventeen, he was
seriously injured in a motorcycle
accident which left him in a coma for
a week and resulted in having a metal
plate put into his head. His leg was
broken and was permanently shorter
than the other leg. Some thought that
this head injury made him prone to
sudden fits of rage and that he seemed
to have lost control over his
emotions. After his recovery from the accident,
Fred met the pretty 16- year-old
Catherine Bernadette Costello,
nicknamed Rena, who had been in
trouble with the police since early
childhood. By the time she met Fred
she was an accomplished and
experienced thief. They became lovers
almost immediately, but the affair
ended when she went back home a few
months later to Scotland. Fred quickly turned his attentions
elsewhere and stuck his hand up the
skirt of a young woman standing with
him on a fire escape at a local youth
club. She was impressed enough with
the gesture to knock him off the fire
escape. In the fall, he banged his
head and lost consciousness. The
lasting impact on Fred's behaviour
suggested that between this incident
and the motorcycle accident, he had
suffered some brain damage. In 1961, Fred and his friend stole a
watchstrap and cigarette cases from a
jewellery store and were caught with
the merchandise on them. Fred and his
colleague were both fined. This was
just the beginning of his troubles. A
few months later, he was accused of
impregnating a 13-year-old girl who
was a friend of the West family. Fred
was surprisingly uncooperative and
didn't see that there was anything
wrong with molesting little girls.
"Well, doesn't every one do it?" This attitude and the ensuing scandal
caused a serious breach with his
family. Fred was ordered to find
somewhere else to live. Distanced now
from his family, he went to work on
construction projects. It wasn't long
before he was caught stealing from the
construction sites and having sex with
young girls. At Fred's trial for having sex with
the 13-year-old girl, his physician
claimed that he was suffering from
epileptic fits. Consequently, he got
off without a jail sentence, but the
die was cast. At age 20, Fred West
was a convicted child molester and
petty thief -- and a total disgrace to
his family.
Rosemary Letts was born in November
1953 in Devon, England with a less
than auspicious heritage. Her father,
Bill Letts was a schizophrenic. Her
mother, Daisy Letts, suffered from
severe depression. Bill Letts was a
violent domestic tyrant who demanded
unconditional obedience from his wife
and children. He enjoyed disciplining
them and seemed to look for reasons to
beat them. Given Bill's psychotic
episodes and rigid Victorian
behaviour, he was not an ideal
employee and drifted through a series
of low- paying, unskilled jobs. The
family was always short of money. His son Andrew recalled, " If he felt
we were in bed too late, he would
throw a bucket of cold water over us.
He would order us to dig the garden,
and that meant the whole garden. Then
he would inspect it like an army
officer, and if he was not satisfied,
we would have to do it all over again
We were not allowed to speak and play
like normal children. If we were
noisy, he would go for us with a belt
or chunk of wood. He would beat you
black and blue until mum got in
between us. Then she would get a good
hiding." After giving birth to three daughters
and a son and trying to cope with her
violent husband, Daisy's deepening
depression resulted in hospitalization
in 1953. She was treated with the
controversial electroshock therapy.
Shortly after a number of these
treatments, which delivered electric
currents into the brain, Daisy gave
birth to Rosemary. The effect of the
electroshock therapy upon the daughter
growing in her womb was unknown. However, Howard Sounes in his book,
Fred and Rose, describes how Rose was
different from other children: She developed a habit of rocking
herself in her cot; if she was put in
a pram without the brake on, she
rocked so violently that the pram
crept across the room. As she became
a little older, Rose only rocked her
head, but she did this for hours on
end. It was one of the first
indications that, in the family's
words, she was 'a bit slow.' As Rose
grew from a baby to a toddler to a
little girl, she would swing her head
for hours until she seemed to have
hypnotized herself into
semiconsciousness." "Dozy Rosie," as she was called, was
not very intelligent, but she had very
pretty features: big brown eyes, a
clear complexion and attractive brown
hair. As she got older, she developed
a tendency towards chubbiness. Rose was smart enough, however, to
make herself her father's pet, always
doing whatever he wished immediately.
Thereby, she alone received paternal
affection and escaped the beatings.
Given her lack of intellectual gifts,
Rose was not a star performer in
school. Also, she was overweight,
which made her the butt of cruel jokes
by her peers. She lashed out at them
and attacked anyone who teased her.
Consequently, she became known as an
ill tempered, aggressive loner. As a teenager, Rose showed signs of
being sexually precocious, walking
around naked after her baths and
climbing into bed with her younger
brother and fondling him sexually.
Her father's rules forbade her to date
boys her own age and her heaviness and
temperament kept boys from being
interested in her. She focused her
interest in sex on the older men of
the village. In January of 1968, Rose and other
girls of the community began to fear
for their safety. A fifteen-year-old
girl named Mary Bastholm disappeared
from a bus stop in Gloucester. Mary
had been on the way to visit her
boyfriend, carrying a Monopoly set.
All that the police found at the bus
stop were a few pieces of the Monopoly
set. The disappearance was thought to
be linked to several other rapes in
the area. Rose was cautious for awhile, but her
boredom and loneliness drove her to
seek out male companionship. On one
occasion, an older man, who had taken
advantage of her naivete, raped her. Early in 1969, Daisy Letts became
tired of being her husband's punching
bag, took fifteen-year-old Rose, and
moved in temporarily with her daughter
Glenys and her husband. Without her
father watching her, Rose spent a lot
of time out at night. Her
brother-in-law, Jim Tyler claimed that
Rose carried on with a number of men
much older than she was and that Rose
had even tried to seduce him. In mid-1969, Rose moved back with her
father, an action that surprised
everyone. Some said that Rose and her
father had an incestuous relationship
and that Bill Letts had a reputation
for molesting young girls, but all of
this was unsubstantiated rumour. Thus in her early teens, Rose Letts
seemed destined for a dull and unhappy
life: she was not very smart and not
very pleasant tempered. She was an
underachiever, a rebel against
authority and unfocused toward any
productive goal, aside from finding a
lover older than herself.
However limited Bill Letts was as an
ideal parent, he saw Fred West as a
completely undesirable boyfriend for
Rose. When Bill found that Rose was
sleeping with Fred, he raised a fuss
with the Social Services. When that
was ineffective, he showed up at
Fred's trailer park and threatened
him. Meanwhile West was sent to prison for
various thefts and failure to pay
fines for previous offences. Rose
went back to stay with her father
until he found that she was pregnant
with Fred's child. At age 16, Rose
left her father's house to take care
of Charmaine and Anna Marie, as well
as deal with Fred, who seemed to
always be in trouble with the law. In 1970, she gave birth to Heather.
With three children to care for, a
boyfriend in jail and constant money
problems, Rose's temper flared
constantly. She resented having to
take care of Rena's children and
treated them badly. One day in the summer of 1971,
Charmaine was suddenly missing and
Rose told her sister Anna Marie that
Rena had come to get her. Colin
Wilson believes that Rose "simply lost
her temper, and went further than
usual in beating or throttling her.
She was, as Anna Marie said, a woman
entirely without self-control; when
she lost her temper, she became a kind
of maniac." Since Fred was in jail when Charmaine
was murdered, his involvement probably
extended to burying her body under the
kitchen floor of their home on Midland
Road where it lay undiscovered for
over 20 years. Before he buried
Charmaine, he took off her fingers,
toes and kneecaps. Fred would hold
this criminal secret over Rose for the
rest of her life. When her father came to take her away
from Fred, Fred reminded her: "Come
on, Rosie, you know what we've got
between us." Bill Letts noticed that
statement upset Rose. "You don't know
him!" she told her parents. "You don'
t know him! There's nothing he
wouldn't do -- even murder!" Gloucester had a large population of
West Indians that created
entertainment and extra income for
both Rose and Fred. Rose invited many
West Indian men over to their house on
Midland Road to have sex with her --
either for cash or fun. Fred, the
voyeur encouraged this behaviour and
watched through a peephole. As over-
sexed as he was, Fred was not at all
interested in ordinary sex. It had to
involve bondage, vibrators, acts of
sadism or lesbianism to get him
involved. Fred took erotic photos of
Rose and ran them as ads in magazines
for "swingers." When Rose murdered Charmaine, she
created both a problem and an
opportunity for Fred regarding his
first wife Rena. It was just a matter
of time before Rena came around
looking for Charmaine. In fact, in
August of 1971, Rena sought out
Walter, Fred's father, in hopes that
he could tell her what happened to
Charmaine. Fred saw that he had no choice but to
kill Rena. In all likelihood, he
probably got her very drunk and then
strangled her at his house on Midland
Road. He then dismembered her body
and mutilated it in the same odd way
that he had Anna McFall's body: he
cut off Rena's fingers and toes. Then
he put her remains into bags and
buried her in the same general area as
he buried Anna McFall. Later that year, Fred and Rose became
friendly with their new neighbour,
Elizabeth Agius, who baby-sat for them
several times. When Fred and Rose
returned home, Elizabeth asked them
where they had been. The surprisingly
candid answer was that they were
cruising around looking for young
girls, hopefully young virgins. Fred
thought that with Rose in the car that
a young woman would not fear taking a
ride with them. Elizabeth assumed at
the time that they were joking.
Another time, Agius was openly
propositioned by Fred. And still
another time, she was, according to
Colin Wilson, drugged and raped. In June of 1972, Rose had another
daughter by Fred. They named her Mae
West. This time, the child was
legitimate, Fred and Rose having
married in January of that year at the
Gloucester Registry Office. Fred and Rose decided they needed a
house to raise their growing family
and also accommodate Rose's
prostitution business. Number 25
Cromwell was just the place. The
house was not much to look at on the
outside, but the inside was large and
had a garage and a good-sized cellar.
They took in lodgers to help pay the
rent. Fred had plans for the cellar and told
Elizabeth Agius that he was either
going to make it into a place for Rose
to entertain her clients or he would
soundproof it and use it as his
"torture chamber." The first client was his
eight-year-old daughter, Anna Marie.
He and Rose undressed her and told her
that she was lucky that she had such
caring parents who were making sure
that when she got married she would be
able to satisfy her husband. Anna
Marie's hands were tied behind her and
a gag put in her mouth. Then while Rose held the girl down,
her father raped her. The pain was so
severe that the girl could not go to
school for several days. She was
warned that she would be beaten if she
ever told anyone about the rape.
Another time, Anna Marie was strapped
down while her father raped her
quickly on his brief lunch hour. In late 1972, Fred and Rose picked up
a 17-year-old girl named Caroline
Owens and hired her as a nanny. They
promised Caroline's family that they
would watch out for her while she
lived with them. Caroline was very attractive, so much
so that Rose and Fred competed with
each other to seduce her. In short
order, Caroline found the Wests
repugnant and told them she was
leaving. The couple abducted,
stripped and raped her. Fred told her
that if she didn't do what he wanted,
"I'll keep you in the cellar and let
my black friends have you, and when
we're finished we'll kill you and bury
you under the paving stones of
Gloucester." Terrified, she believed
him. When her mother saw her bruises,
she got the truth from her and called
the police. There was a hearing in January of
1973. Fred was thirty-one and Rose a
mere nineteen -- and pregnant once
again. Fred was able to con the
magistrate into believing that
Caroline was a willing partner.
Despite Fred's criminal record, the
magistrate did not believe the Wests
were capable of violence and fined
them each. For some time, the Wests had been
carrying on a friendship with
seamstress Lynda Gough. Eventually,
Lynda moved into 25 Cromwell Street to
take care of the children. Something
went amiss in the relationship and
Lynda was murdered. Fred dismembered
her and buried her in a pit in the
garage. True to his ritual, he
removed her fingers, toes and
kneecaps. When Lynda's family came
looking for her, they were told that
she had stayed there but had left. A hideous pattern was emerging. Young
women would come to stay at 25
Cromwell either as lodgers or friends
or nannies, but so few ever made it
out with their lives. The house was
slowly becoming a monument to the
depravity of its inhabitants.
1973 was a year for the Wests to
celebrate. They walked away from
Caroline Owens' rape and abduction
charge with only a fine and they
murdered Lynda Gough with no police
repercussions at all. Then in August,
their first son, Stephen, was born. Emboldened by their success, they
abducted fifteen-year-old Carol Ann
Cooper in November and amused
themselves with her sexually -- that
is, until she outlived her
entertainment value and was snuffed
out by strangulation or suffocation,
dismembered and buried. She joined
the growing city of the dead at 25
Cromwell Street. Industrious Fred, persistent in his
home improvements, had enlarged the
cellar and was demolishing the garage
to build an extension to the main
house. No matter that these
improvements were done at very strange
hours. A little over a month later,
university student Lucy Partington had
gone home to her mother's house to
spend the Christmas holiday. On
December 27, she went to visit her
disabled friend and left to catch a
bus shortly after 10 P.M. She had the
misfortune to meet up with Fred and
Rose, who probably knocked her out and
abducted her. Like Carol Ann Cooper,
she was tortured for approximately a
week and then murdered, dismembered
and buried in Fred's construction
projects. He cut himself while
dismembering Lucy and had to go to the
hospital for stitches on January 3,
1974. Lucy, like Carol Ann Cooper, was
reported missing, but there was
nothing to tie the two girls to the
Wests. Between April of 1974 and April of
1975, three young women -- Therese
Siegenthaler, 21, Shirley Hubbard, 15,
and Juanita Mott, 18, met the same
fate as Carol Ann Cooper and Lucy
Partington. Their tortured and
dismembered bodies were buried under
the cellar floor of the West's house. Bondage was becoming a major thrill
for Fred and Rose. Shirley's head had
been wrapped entirely with tape and a
plastic tube was inserted in her nose
so that she could breathe. Juanita
was subjected to even more extreme
bondage: Juanita was gagged with a ligature
made from two long, white nylon socks
(similar to those worn by Rose), a
brassiere and two pairs of tights, one
within the other. She was then
trussed up with lengths of
plastic-covered rope, of the type used
for washing line. The rope was used
in a complicated way, with loops tied
around her arms and thighs, both
wrists, both ankles and her skull,
horizontally and vertically, backwards
and forwards across her body until she
could only wriggle like a trapped
animal. Then the Wests produced a
seven-foot length of rope with a
slipknot end forming a noose. This
was probably used to suspend Juanita's
body from the beams in the cellar. Incredibly enough with this charnel
house in his cellar, Fred continued to
attract the police with continuous
thefts and fencing stolen goods. It
was necessary for Fred to keep
stealing to pay for his home
improvement projects. His home
improvement projects were necessary to
keep the monstrous habits of his wife
and himself covered up with layers of
concrete. In 1976, the Wests enticed a young
woman, designated as Miss A by the
courts, from a home for wayward girls.
At Cromwell Street, Miss A was led
into a room with two naked girls who
were prisoners there. She witnessed
the torture of the two girls and was
raped by Fred and sexually assaulted
by Rose. One of the girls that Miss A saw was
probably Anna Marie, Fred's daughter
who was a constant target of the
couple's sexual sadism. As if Fred's
rape and torture of his daughter was
not enough, he brought home his
friends to have sex with her. In 1977, the upstairs of the house had
been remodelled to allow for a number
of lodgers. One of them was Shirley
Robinson, 18, a former prostitute with
bisexual inclinations. Shirley
developed relationships with both Fred
and Rose. Shirley became pregnant
with Fred's child after Rose was
pregnant with the child of one of her
black clients. While Fred was pleased that Rose was
carrying a mixed child, Rose was not
comfortable with Shirley carrying
Fred's child. Shirley foolishly
thought that she could displace Rose
in Fred's life and, in the process,
jeopardized her own existence. Rose
made it clear that Shirley had to go. And go she did, seven months after
Rose gave birth to Tara in December of
1977, Shirley joined the rest of the
girls buried on Cromwell Street. The
cellar being full, Shirley was put in
the rear garden along with her unborn
child. This time, Fred dismembered
Shirley and their unborn baby. In November of 1978, Rose and Fred had
yet another daughter who they named
Louise, making a total of six children
in the bizarre and unwholesome
household. Fred also impregnated his
daughter Anna Marie, but the pregnancy
occurred in her fallopian tube and had
to be terminated. In May of 1979, Rose's father died of
a lung ailment. Several months later,
the Wests were up to their old tricks
and murdered a troubled teenager named
Alison Chambers after they raped and
tortured her. Like Shirley, Alison
was buried in the "overflow" cemetery
in the rear garden. The children were aware of some of the
goings on in the home. They knew that
Rose was a prostitute and that Anna
Marie was being raped by her father.
When Anna Marie moved out to live with
her boyfriend, Fred focused his sexual
advances on Heather and Mae. Heather
resisted her father and was beaten for
it. In June of 1980, Rose gave birth to
Barry, Fred's second son. Then again,
in April of 1982, Rose gave birth to
Rosemary Junior, who was not Fred's
child.
In July of 1983, Rose gave birth to
another daughter who they named
Lucyanna. She was half-black, like
Tara and Rosemary Junior. Rose became
increasingly irrational and beat the
children without provocation. The
stress of so many children in the
household took its toll on Rose's
already bad temper. The Wests probably continued to carry
on their sexual abductions, but did
not bury any of these new victims at
25 Cromwell St. In 1986, the wall of filial silence
that has protected the Wests, was
broken. Heather told her girlfriend
about her father's advances, her
mother's affairs and the beatings she
received. The girlfriend told her
parents, who were friends of the
Wests, and Heather's life was in
jeopardy. After her parents murdered her, they
told the children that she left home.
Fred asked his son Stephen to help him
dig a hole in the rear garden, where
Fred later buried Heather's
dismembered body. Rose built up her prostitution
business by advertising in special
magazines. She and Fred were on the
lookout for women who they could get
to participate in their various
perversions as well as prostitute
herself under Rose's direction. One
such woman, Katherine Halliday, became
a fixture in the West household and
saw first hand the black bondage suits
and masks that they had collected,
plus the whips and chains. With good
reason, Katherine became alarmed and
quickly broke off her relationship
with them. As time went on, Fred and Rosemary
became increasingly concerned about
creating a minimum façade of
respectability, not because they cared
what people thought of them, but
because they were concerned that
knowledge of what had gone on in their
house would jeopardize their freedom. The West's long run of luck was coming
to an end. One of the very young
girls that Fred had raped with Rose's
assistance told her girlfriend what
happened. The girlfriend went to the
police and the case was assigned to a
very talented and persistent Detective
Constable named Hazel Savage. Hazel
knew Fred from his days with Rena and
remembered the stories that Rena had
told her about Fred's sexual
perversions. On August 6, 1992, police arrived at
25 Cromwell Street with a search
warrant to look for pornography and
evidence of child abuse. They found
mountains of pornography and arrested
Rose for assisting in the rape of a
minor. Fred was arrested for rape and
sodomy of a minor. Hazel Savage went to work interviewing
family members and friends of the
Wests. When she talked to Anna Marie,
she heard for the first time the
shocking story about how she had been
so severely abused. She also
expressed her concerns about
Charmaine, who Hazel had known from
her experiences with Rena. Hazel had all she needed to bring
child abuse charges, but she needed to
further investigate the disappearance
of Charmaine, Rena and Heather. Hazel
was not satisfied that Heather had
disappeared without a trace.
Insurance and tax records showed that
Heather had not been employed nor had
she visited a doctor in four years.
Either she had left the country or was
dead. The younger children were taken
from Rose and put into government
care. With Fred in jail and the
police closing in on her, Rose took an
overdose of pills and attempted
suicide. Her son Stephen found her
and saved her life. Later, she
escaped from her loneliness by
stuffing herself with candy and
watching Disney videos.
Fred didn't do much better in prison.
He was very depressed and sorry for
himself. Actually, his luck was
holding -- for the time being. The
case against the Wests collapsed when
two key witnesses decided not to
testify against them. But the seeds
of their discovery had been sown. The
strange, inexplicable disappearance of
Heather was firmly implanted in Hazel
Savage's mind. Hazel took over the case and launched
an inquiry into Heather's whereabouts.
When no sign of the girl was found,
Hazel feared that the rumour was true
that Heather was buried under the
patio. The West children were
questioned repeatedly. Fred had
threatened them that if they didn't
keep their silence that they would end
up under the patio like Heather.
Detective Superintendent John Bennett
was in charge of the media-sensitive
case. Finally the warrant to search
the Cromwell Street house and garden
was signed, but the logistics of
digging up a fifteen by sixty-foot
garden were nontrivial. Furthermore,
Fred's extension to the house was
built over a portion of the garden.
The search would be very expensive and
be certain to attract attention of the
media. Things improved for the investigation
after Fred confessed to killing his
daughter and after human bones other
than Heather's were found in the
garden. When Rose was informed of
Fred's confession, she claimed that
Fred had sent her out of the house the
day Heather disappeared and had no
knowledge of Heather's death. The police set about the grim task of
digging up the large garden. Fred had
been released temporarily until there
was evidence to hold him. But, as
Fred watched the police dig up the
garden, he knew it was a matter of
time before they found Heather and the
others buried in the rear garden. Fred told his son that he had done
something really bad and would be
going away for awhile. Steve
remembered that "He looked at me so
evil and so cold. That look went
right through me."
Finally the police found the remains
of a young woman, dismembered and
decapitated. Then another victim was
found. When the police heard about
the disappearance of Shirley Robinson,
the scope of the investigation
widened. To protect Rose, Fred claimed
responsibility for the murders
himself. He was charged with the
murders of Heather, Shirley Robinson
and the as yet unidentified third
woman. Furthermore, an investigation
was opened into the disappearance of
Rena and Charmaine. For some reason,
Fred decided to tell the police about
the girls buried in his cellar. Fred
admitted to murdering the girls, but
not rape. These girls, he maintained,
wanted to have sex with him. As Fred chatted about his murders, the
police tried to grapple with the
evidence. Lining up bodies with names
was not an easy task. Nine sets of
bones were discovered in the cellar
and the police did not know whose they
were. Fred was not much help since he
could not remember the names and
details of some of the women he had
picked up. Considering the many women
who go missing every year, extensive
work had to be done to match up
missing person's reports with the
remains. As the case developed, Rose abandoned
Fred to save herself. She tried to
position herself as the victim of a
murderous man, but she was not
particularly convincing. Police
worked continuously to tie her in to
the crimes. The bodies of Rena, Anna McFall and
Charmaine were found as Fred continued
to cooperate with the police. On the
Mary Bastholm case, Fred decided to
quit cooperating and her body was not
found. At their joint hearing, Fred
attempted to console Rose, but she
avoided his touch. She told the
police he made her sick. The great
partnership in crime was over.
Rose's rejection was devastating to
Fred. On December 13, 1994, he was
charged with twelve murders. Again,
Rose brushed him off. He had written
to her, "We will always be in
love...You will always be Mrs. West,
all over the world. That is important
to me and to you." Just before noon on New Year's Day at
Winson Green Prison in Birmingham,
when the guards were having lunch,
Fred hanged himself with strips of
bedsheet. He had clearly planned his
suicide well in advance so that he
would not be discovered. Despite the paucity of direct evidence
linking her to the murders, Rose went
to trial on October 3, 1995. A number
of witnesses -- including Caroline
Owens, Miss A, and Anna Marie --
testified to Rose's sadistic sexual
assaults on young women. The goal of the prosecution, led by
Brian Leveson QC, was to construct a
tight web of circumstantial evidence
of Rose's guilt. The defence, led by
Richard Ferguson QC, tried to show
that evidence of sexual assault was
not the same as evidence of murder.
That Rose did not know what Fred was
doing when he murdered the girls and
buried them in various places. Ferguson made the mistake of putting
Rose on the stand. Her defiance came
through very clearly to the jury.
Furthermore, the prosecution learned
to extract damaging testimony from her
by making her angry. She left the
jury with entrenched beliefs that Rose
had treated the children badly and
that she was completely dishonest. Finally the defence played the
recordings of Fred West describing how
he had murdered the victims when Rose
was out of the house. Unfortunately
for Rose, Fred was shown to be lying
on key issues, which threw his entire
statement into doubt. The most dramatic evidence was given
by Janet Leach, who was called as the
"appropriate adult" (witness) to Fred
West's police interviews. Privately,
Fred had told her that Rose was
involved in the murders -- and that
Rose had murdered Charmaine and
Shirley Robinson without him -- but
that he made a deal with his wife to
take all the blame on himself. Janet was so stressed by this
confidential confession that she
suffered a stroke. It was only after
Fred's death that she felt that she
could tell the police what he had said
to her. After her testimony, she
collapsed and had to be taken to the
hospital. In his summary, Leveson called Rose
the "strategist" and the dominant
partner. "The evidence that Rosemary
West knew nothing is not worthy of
belief." Ferguson, in his summary,
stressed that the evidence only
pointed to Fred. The jury took very little time to find
Rose guilty of the murders of
Charmaine, Heather, Shirley Robinson
and the other girls buried at the
house. The judge sentenced her to
life imprisonment on each of ten
counts of murder.