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Days later, on 12 November, the landlord of the Robin
Hood Pub at Rashwood, near Droitwich Spa, Worcestershire, discovered the
body of Rosemary Corcoran, 25, in a wooded lane near a nursing home.
On the same day, 20 miles away in Lea Bank,
Birmingham, a dog walker found the battered body of mother-of-six
Rosemary Jordan in parkland.
She had been viciously beaten and had to be
identified through her dental records.
CCTV pictures
All three women frequented The Rainbow, a pub in the
Digbeth area of Birmingham where Smith ran an unlicensed cab business.
Hours before Ms Corcoran's body was found, Smith was
caught on CCTV struggling with her outside a club in Handsworth.
Several hours later, a pensioner said he saw a man
fitting Smith's description, bloodstained and filling a petrol can in
Bromsgrove, a neighbouring town to Droitwich.
Man rejects blood-stain evidence
BBC News
Tuesday, 17 July, 2001
Police tampered with evidence in the case against
a man accused of killing three women in four days, a court has heard.
Philip John Smith, 36, made the claim after it was
put to him that blood from two of his alleged victims was found on jeans
discovered soaking in a bath.
Mr Smith, of Braithwaite Road, in the Sparkbrook area
of Birmingham, denies murdering Jodie Hyde, 21, Rosemary Corcoran, 25,
and Carol Jordan, 39, between 8 and 12 November last year.
Blood on boots
Defence counsel Rachel Brand QC asked Mr Smith if he
had formed any idea of how blood, said to come from Rosemary Corcoran
and Carol Jordan, had been found on the jeans.
Mr Smith replied: "The police may have tampered with
it or something like that."
He then gave the same explanation when asked why
there was blood from Miss Corcoran and Ms Jordan on boots he was wearing
the night they were murdered.
Leicester Crown Court heard a pair of size 10 women's
trousers, which the prosecution claim belonged to Miss Corcoran, were
also found soaking in the bath at Mr Smith's flat.
But Mr Smith claimed the trousers were among clothes
he stole from outside an Oxfam charity shop in the middle of the night.
Burnt body
He told the court: "There are bags that are left
outside shops that I pick up and take back to my flat at night time."
Rosemary Corcoran, from Castle Vale, Birmingham, was
found near the Robin Hood pub in Droitwich, Worcestershire on 12
November.
Carol Jordan, from Balsall Heath, Birmingham, was
found dead in Lee Bank, Birmingham, several hours later.
The burnt body of Miss Hyde, from Alum Rock,
Birmingham, was found in parkland in Golden Hillock Road, Sparkbrook.
Man 'killed and mutilated' women
BBC News
Tuesday, 3 July, 2001
Two women were battered to death and a third was
strangled and set alight by the same killer over a four-day period,
a court has been told.
Leicester Crown Court was told that Philip John Smith
mutilated the three women almost beyond recognition.
Mr Smith, 35, of Braithwaite Road in Sparkbrook,
Birmingham, denies three charges of murder.
The court was told how the smouldering body of Jodie
Hyde, 21, was discovered near an adventure play area in Birmingham on 9
November last year.
Mr Smith then battered to death Rosemary Corcoran,
25, and Carol Jordan, 39, on 12 November last year, the jury was told.
Prosecuting, Mr Tim Raggatt QC told the court that
all three murders were carried out by Mr Smith.
He said "powerful and compelling" scientific evidence
would link him to the killings.
"The prosecution suggest these killings were and
could only have been the work of one individual," he told the jury.
Vulnerable
"The idea that more than one person was responsible
for these killings, I suggest is frankly an absurdity.
"The Crown say that individual was Philip John Smith."
Mr Raggatt said Miss Hyde was a vulnerable individual
who had drug problems.
He told the court she was befriended by Mr Smith in
the Rainbow pub in Digbeth, Birmingham.
After taking her to a hospital appointment in
Birmingham, Mr Raggett told the court that Miss Hyde was probably killed
at his flat.
Fingerprints
He said her naked body was bundled into the back of
Mr Smith's Volvo car and driven to open land at Ackers Trust, an
adventure play area in Birmingham.
Mr Smith wrapped the body in a blanket and bound with
a green rope, the court was told.
Her body had received 60% burns and had to be
identified by her fingerprints, the jury heard.
Mr Raggatt added: "Clearly her killer had gone to
great lengths to remove all trace of her.
"To mutilate her and leave her in such a way that the
discovery of her identity would be impeded by a maximum degree. That
killer was Philip Smith."
The jury also heard that Mr Smith had beaten Miss
Corcoran with such ferocity that she was physically unrecognisable.
Mr Raggatt said: "He literally shattered her face.
"She was so badly disfigured that identification of
her body was only possible through fingerprints and dental records after
her jaw was put back together."
He added that Mrs Jordan, a care worker, had been
knocked down by Mr Smith as she walked to work.
He said: "It was a serious accident, the police were
bound to attend ... Carol Jordan had to die and she did die."
Philip Smith
Forensic.gov.uk
The Forensic Science Service® (FSS®) played a crucial
role in the conviction of Philip Smith who was found guilty of the
murder of three women in Birmingham over four days in November 2000.
Scientists analysed an overwhelming amount of
forensic evidence and the results linked Smith to each of the three dead
women - Jodie Hyde, Rosemary Corcoran and Carol Jordan.
A senior forensic scientist, who co-ordinated the
case for the FSS, said:
"A team of forensic scientists from different
specialities pulled together every strand of forensic evidence to create
a kind of 'spider's web' and in the centre of it all - linked to each
one of the murdered women - was Philip Smith.
"This was a difficult case to deal with because there
was so much evidence to look at. In 20 years of working for the FSS, I
have never had to deal with so much in relation to one suspect - it was
quite overwhelming.
"But the results of our work gave police a very
strong case against Smith. Throughout the investigation, the FSS and the
police worked very closely together."
The FSS first became involved after the discovery of
Jodie Hyde’s body on a recreation ground in the Sparkbrook area of
Birmingham on 9 November.
The FSS was called in to provide expert scientific
support to West Midlands Police. Two members of staff - one a senior
forensic scene examiner and the other a DNA expert - attended the scene
and the post mortem to advise on, amongst other things, the taking of
samples.
Three days later the on-call forensic scene examiner
was called to Droitwich by West Mercia Police where the body of Rosemary
Corcoran had been found in a secluded lane off the A38.
The scientist carried out an examination of the blood
distribution at the scene and, while he was there, he received another
call to attend the scene of another murder – that of Carol Jordan - in
Birmingham. He arranged for another senior forensic scientist to attend.
At this time all three murders were being treated by
police as entirely separate as there was nothing about them that
suggested they had been carried out by the same person.
Once Smith was arrested, two FSS scientists visited
his home whilst another examined his Volvo car and searched for evidence
linking the suspect to the three crimes.
The evidence recovered was crucial to the case. At
Smith’s home, they found a bath full of murky, brown water that
contained apparently bloodstained clothing.
Back at the FSS lab, scientists examined items from
his home and the crime scenes and found many links between the suspect
and the three murders, including:
Blood matching each of the three victims on Smith’s
belongings – including blood matching Carol Jordan and Rosemary
Corcoran found on a pair of steel toe cap working boots.
A pair of ladies’ trousers found at Smith’s home
which could be directly linked to Rosemary Corcoran through DNA.
A pink fibre found at Smith’s home and in his car
which matched fibres from the blanket in which Jodie Hyde’s body was
wrapped.
In Smith’s car, scientists found:
Rosemary Corcoran’s blood on the outside offside
tyre and mud flap and the rear offside wing.
Smears of blood found on the back of one of the
front seat head rests that matched Jodie Hyde.
A partial DNA profile of Rosemary Corcoran
recovered from an apparent fingermark in blood, found on one of the
back windows.
Examinations of tyre impressions showed that marks on
the inside of one of Rosemary Corcoran’s arms matched with some of the
pattern elements of one of the tyres. Tyre impressions at the scene
where her body was found were also found to match Smith’s car tyres.
Paint found on Carol Jordan’s trousers was found to
match paint from the suspect’s car.
Smith, 35, was jailed for life at Leicester Crown
Court in August 2001.