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Joseph McGINLAY
Thirty-year minimum for killer
By Bruce McKain Law Correspondent
HeraldScotland.com
28 Mar 1997
A murderer who
struck for the second time was jailed for life yesterday, with a
recommendation that he serve at least 30 years.
Joseph McGinlay,
40, is one of the few men in Scottish legal history to have been allowed
out of prison to murder again. He was on weekend leave from Noranside
Open Prison, near Forfar, when he strangled 22-year-old Mandy Barnett
and stabbed her through the heart in her Edinburgh flat.
When he was 18,
McGinlay, from Dalmellington in Ayrshire, was jailed for life at the
High Court in Glasgow for the equally savage murder of 16-year-old Mrs
Elizabeth Cassidy. He was also sentenced to 10 years for the attempted
murder of her friend, Josephine Humphreys, 13.
After a jury at
the High Court in Edinburgh found McGinlay guilty unanimously of
murdering Miss Barnett, the dead woman's parents spoke of their relief
that their nightmare had ended and questioned a system which allowed
convicted murderers out to kill again.
Mr Terry Barnett
read from a prepared statement: ''This last year of our lives has been a
living nightmare which, hopefully, we can now put behind us. ''We are
glad that the right verdict has been reached and, hopefully, McGinlay
will spend the rest of his life behind bars. ''We feel that the people
that let these violent people out for weekends for drink, drugs, etc,
should be answerable for their actions. ''Our lives are not going to be
the same but now we can start looking forward.''
Both thanked
friends and Lothian and Borders Police for the support they had been
given throughout the case. After the jury returned its verdict, they
learned from Advocate-depute Michael O'Grady of McGinlay's violent past.
Mr O'Grady
highlighted two previous convictions, the first at Ayr Sheriff Court in
July 1972, when McGinlay was convicted of assault with intent to ravish
and sentenced to two years residential training. Then, in December 1974,
at the High Court in Glasgow, when McGinlay was 18, he was found guilty
of murder and attempted murder. The victims were girls aged 16 and 13.
Mr O'Grady added
that, when McGinlay murdered Mandy Barnett, he was still serving his
sentence for the murder and was on weekend leave.
Lord MacLean told
McGinlay his defence counsel had rightly described this as a dastardly
crime. ''It ranks amongst the worst he said he had experienced and,
indeed, it ranks amongst the worst I have experienced both as a judge
and as counsel.'' The death was a brutal one and the motive had not been
explained but he inferred from all the evidence, including the state of
the dead woman's clothing, that there was some sexual element on
McGinlay's part. ''What is clear to me is that she was a stranger to you
and wholly innocent in relation to you.''
The only sentence
he could impose was life imprisonment but he was empowered to recommend
a minimum period McGinlay should serve before he was released on licence.
In this case, he was going to recommend that McGinlay serve at least 30
years.
''Firstly, this
is the second brutal murder of a young woman you have committed in your
lifetime. Secondly, the second murder was committed while you were in
fact still serving a life sentence. ''Thirdly, you may be very
intelligent - the indications from the evidence was that that was the
opinion some held of you - but you are also wicked and, in my opinion,
you present a very serious danger so far as women are concerned.''
The murder hunt
which ended in McGinlay's arrest and conviction was launched after Miss
Barnett failed to visit her boyfriend John Balsillie in prison. When
police got to her flat in the Fountainbridge area of Edinburgh, they
found the victim's partly clothed body. She had been throttled and
stabbed through the heart before her body was dumped in the bath.
McGinlay changed his story a number of times but finally admitted having
been at the flat in April last year. He claimed he had been passing on
cannabis so that Mandy could take it to Balsillie in jail.
SEX: M RACE: W TYPE: N MOTIVE:
Sex.
MO: Lust killer of females age
16 and 23.
DISPOSITION:
Life term, 1973 (paroled 1996); life term, 1997.
Michael Newton - An Encyclopedia
of Modern Serial Killers - Hunting Humans