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Anthony Paul ARKWRIGHT
Anthony Arkwright
MurderUK.com
Arkwright had lived in children's home and
local authority care from a young age, his entire childhood was
very distorted and disturbed.
Known to police as a petty criminal, Arkwright
had served a 30 month youth custody sentences for burglary and
disorder, he was frequently at odds with neighbours. He has also
served a 6 month jail term. Anthony Arkwright, had boasted to
friends that one day he would be as famous as Jack the Ripper.
After getting the sack from his job, working in a Mexborough
scrapyard, due to a bad attendance record, he went crazy. He then
started a 56 hour killing spree that earns him the title as a
'Mass murderer'.
Friday 26th August 1988, 4:30pm. After his sacking, he went
straight to find his grandfather, whom he believed (incorrectly)
was in fact his father, and that he had been born in an incestuous
relationship between his grandfather and mother.
He attacked his 68 year old Lithuanian born grandfather Stanislav
Puidokas while he tended to his allotment in Ruskin Drive,
Mexborough. He stabbed him in the neck, severing an artery,
rendering the old man almost instantaneously unconscious, and then
attacked him with an axe and a lump hammer before locking the body
in a shed.
That night he visited several pubs in the area, with neighbours,
showing his interest in becoming a public figure, by dropping
hints about his crime. Neighbours later reported that he was
behaving in a very odd was, even for him.
Saturday 27th August 1988, 3am. He was now back in Wath, and
entered the flat of his neighbour, 45 year old ex-teacher Raymond
Ford.Naked, with a Prince of Darkness devil-mask covering his
face, he stabbed Mr Ford 250 times, plunging his knife into every
part of his body.
He gutted and disembowelled the corpse with a surgical precision
which criminologists later said was remarkably similar to the
technique used by Jack the Ripper.
Mr Ford's body was discovered three days later at his Wath home
with his entrails draped around the room, some of his internal
organs were scattered around the corridor and halway.
Four hours later Arkwright was arrested on suspicion of burglary
at Mr Ford’s house, and was kept in custody before being released
to appear at court the following weekend, at this stage police had
no ideas that Arkwright had become a murderer only hours before.
Sunday 28th August 1988. Marcus Law died in a similar frenzied
attack at his Denman Road, Wath, home after an argument. Law was
in a wheelchair after a motorbike accidents, and completely defenceless against Arkwright.
He was savagely butchered, being stabbed over 70 times, before
being left, with cigarettes stuffed in his mouth and ears, he also
had his eyes gouged out and cigarettes placed in the sockets.
Arkwright said it was revenge for all the cigarettes Lee had
scrounged.
Monday 29th August 1988. On a routine visit to see her son, Marcus
Law's mother called round, and discovered the horrific scene.
Police were called, they quickly realised that Arkwright was a
suspect, a few hours later he was picked up and arrested on
suspicion of murder.
At this stage they had little evidence against Arkwright, and he
denied the murder.
Police wanted to speak to neighbours in particular Raymond Ford
who Arkwright had burgled days earlier. They went to Denham Road
where Arkwright lived to conduct enquiries.
PC David Winter went to the property of Ford in Denham road,
across the road from Arkwright's flat, there he discovered the
horrific scene, police now knew thy were looking at double murder.
Arkwright is also suspected of killing his grandfather's elderly
housekeeper Elsa Konradaite, but the case never reached court and
was ordered to lie on his file.
1989. At Sheffield Crown Court, Anthony Arkwright was jailed for
life, with a recommended minimum term of 25 years. He showed no
emotion when sentenced, and has to this day never given any
explanation for his actions.
1990. The Home Secretary reviewed his case and imposed a whole
life sentence.
He is therefore on the Home Office list of prisoners, never to be
released, serving a 'Whole life Tariff'.
19th February 2014. Arkwright along with killer Arthur Hutchinson
appealed against the whole life tariff imposed on them, Three high
court judges rejected the appeal, saying the governments "Whole
Life tariff" was completely lawful.
Savage murderer never to be released from
prison
DoncasterFreePress.co.uk
February 19, 2009
A murderer who killed at least three people
in South Yorkshire has been named on a list of notorious convicts
who will die in prison.
Anthony Arkwright is among 35 killers that judges agree must never
be freed from jail because of the seriousness of their crimes.
Arkwright, now aged 40, was jailed for the savage murder of his
grandfather and two neighbors in Wath and Mexborough 20 years ago
The murderer, who was 21 at the time, killed his 68-year-old
grandfather Stasys Puidokas and neighbors Raymond Ford, 46, and
Marcus Law, 26, in August 1988.
He is also suspected of killing his grandfather's elderly
housekeeper Elsa Konradaite, 73, but the case never reached court
and was ordered to lie on his file.
Arkwright stabbed his grandfather in the head, cheek and abdomen
before shattering his skull with a sledgehammer.
He then broke into Mr Ford's home , stabbing him 540 times and
breaking 11 of his ribs. The former teacher was also disembowelled.
On the same day he trussed up and gagged his disabled neighbor
Marcus Law and stabbed him around 70 times. He was jailed for life
in 1989.
The list of Britain's worst killers has been released under the
Freedom of Information Act.
Others on the list include Moors murderer Ian Brady, 71, Dennis
Nilsen, 64, who is believed to have killed 16 men after luring
them back to his flat in London and Black Panther, Donald Neilson,
who killed an heiress and two post-masters.
The only woman included is Rose West, 55, convicted in 1995 of
murdering ten young women with her husband Fred at their home in
Gloucester. Among them was their eldest daughter.
When Life Means Life – The “Four Of Hearts”
Murders
Truecrimeenthusiast.wordpress.com
January 3, 2017
“It was the most brutal act of slaughter I have ever seen. It is
all the more chilling when you realise that he must have spent at
least half an hour inflicting those terrible wounds” – (Ret’d) Det
Insp Bob Meek – South Yorkshire Police describing the scene of the
Raymond Ford murder.
Anthony Paul Arkwright wanted nothing more than to become
infamous. In the belief that he had found the most successful way
to do this, over the space of 56 hours in the summer of 1988,
Arkwright killed four people in what are some of the most horrific
and bloodthirsty crimes in British criminal history.
He has spent
nearly 30 years behind bars for these crimes, and has been told
that he will die in prison. Yet the name Anthony Arkwright is not
largely known, and he has never gained the notoriety that he so
craved and that cost four people their lives. He does remain a
monstrously evil killer, and his story is worth telling.
An extremely disturbed young man, Arkwright was the product of a
broken home, and had had several spells in children’s homes and
care from a very early age. This dysfunctional childhood led to
his eventual expulsion from school, and after drifting into
criminality, by the age of 21 Arkwright was well known to police
as a prolific petty criminal. He was a violent bully and a
habitual burglar who had spent several spells in Borstal, young
offenders institutions, and ultimately prison.
Throughout his many
spells in custody, he used to while away time in the various
prison libraries reading as much as he could about serial killers. Arkwright idolised Peter Sutcliffe and Jack The Ripper, and used
to boast to whoever would listen that one day he would emulate
their crimes, and one day become as infamous as them.
When he was released from his latest incarceration, Arkwright
lived in a council flat on Denman Road in the town of Wath, South
Yorkshire, where he had been born and raised. Arkwright fancied
himself as a bit of a survival fanatic, but this didn’t extend any
further than building a series of dens around the area.
Arming
himself with a hunting knife, Arkwright would then spend hours sat
in these hideouts fantasising about people who he wanted to hurt
or kill. Arkwright did work- albeit periodically, and 1988 found
him doing menial labour at a scrapyard in nearby Mexborough. But
on the 26th August 1988 he was sacked from his job for appalling
attendance and bad attitude.
It was the trigger for one of the most horrific killing sprees in
British criminal history, one that eventually earned Arkwright a
whole life tariff.
After being sacked from his job, Arkwright took his severance pay
and went on a drinking spree that afternoon in a nearby pub. By
4:15pm, he was very drunk, and his fantasies of killing were about
to make the leap from fantasy to reality.
One of the people Arkwright had most fantasised about killing was his maternal
grandfather, 68 year old Lithuanian born Stasys Puidokis, whom
Arkwright (incorrectly) believed was actually his father and that
he (Arkwright)was the product of an incestuous relationship
between Mr Puidokis and Arkwright’s own mother.
That afternoon, Arkwright headed to his grandfather’s home in Ruskin Drive,
Mexborough, but found no-one home. He then headed to his
grandfathers allotment a mile away, and found the old man there
tending his vegetable patch. Turning to greet his grandson, Stasys
was stabbed with such ferocity in the neck that his spinal cord
was severed, and was instantly paralysed.
Arkwright then dragged
his grandfather inside his small shed, and proceeded to embed a
large axe into the old man’s chest. He then smashed his skull to
pieces with repeated blows from a 14lb lump hammer. He then locked
the body inside the shed and went back to his grandfather’s house
to steal his life savings of Ł3000.
Finding his grandfather’s housekeeper at the house, 72 year old
Elsa Konradite, Arkwright smashed her skull in with an axe and
left her dead in the kitchen.
Arkwright spent the evening drinking in several pubs in the area,
deliberately drawing attention to himself by dropping hints about
his crime, and attempting to pick fights with several people.
People remarked later that they remembered the “wild eyed weirdo”,
demonstrating this craving for recognition and attention.
“It’s been murder on the allotment today” – Anthony Arkwright
(to a barman that evening)
By 3am on the morning of Saturday 27th August, Arkwright was back
at his home in Wath – and was ready to kill again.
A favourite target of Arkwright’s to terrorise was his neighbour,
45 year old ex-teacher Raymond Ford. Ford was a severely depressed
and ill heavy drinker who lived in near squalor, rarely venturing
out except to buy more cheap cider and The Guardian.
Often, Arkwright would smash his windows for fun and force dog faeces
through his letterbox, and just a few days previously had broken
into his home and stolen a valuable antique clock and a microwave
oven. Mr Ford had reported this to the police, and had named
Arkwright as the likely perpetrator. In Arkwright’s eyes, this
signed Mr Ford’s death warrant.
When Arkwright returned home at 3am, he stripped naked and put on
a “Prince Of Darkness” devil mask. He then entered Mr Ford’s home
through a broken window, which Arkwright himself had broken a few
days previously when he had thrown a dustbin through it. Finding
Mr Ford slumped in an armchair, heavily drunk, Arkwright then
unleashed his full sadistic nature on the defenceless man.
In
scenes that sickened hardened detectives who later saw the scene, Arkwright stabbed Mr Ford more than 250 times in every part of his
body. Some accounts put the figure as nearer to 500 times. Such
was the ferocity of the attack, and the extent of Arkwright’s
bloodlust, that one of the knives broke off and was left in the
wound. Arkwright then fetched another knife and continued stabbing
him.
Finally, Ford was then gutted and disembowelled, and his
entrails and organs were draped and scattered around his bungalow.
Police officers at the scene described it as the most horrific
crime scene they had ever encountered.
After spending about an hour mutilating Ford, Arkwright went home
and showered the blood off himself, then went to bed. At 8:00am
that Saturday morning, police knocked on his door and arrested him
on suspicion of the burglary earlier in the week at Mr Ford’s
house. He was detained for a few hours before being released on
bail to attend court the next week. Arkwright would make it to
court, but on a much more serious and horrific charge.
When he was released, Arkwright spent the Saturday evening
drinking around several pubs, again in Mexborough. In the early
hours of Sunday 28th August 1988, he found himself back at home
and in an almost carbon copy of what had transpired just 24 hours
before, Arkwright again targeted another of his neighbours to
kill.
25 year old Marcus Law lived across from Arkwright in a specially
adapted bungalow that catered for his wheelchair, having become
paralysed in a motorcycle accident some years previously.
Arkwright broke into Marcus’ home and slaughtered and mutilated
him, beginning with stabbing him over 70 times.
When an attempt to
disembowel Marcus failed, one of his own crutches was rammed into
a large wound in his stomach. What sickened police called to the
scene more than anything was that Arkwright had gouged out Marcus’
eyes, and had placed unlit cigarettes in the empty sockets, into
the victim’s ears and nostrils, and into his mouth.
Obscenely, the following morning Arkwright had a chance meeting
with the mother of Marcus Law, and smirked as he told her:
“Sorry about poor old Marcus – he’s killed himself” – Anthony
Arkwright to Mrs Law
Mrs Law hurried around to her son’s bungalow, and made the
horrific discovery.
Arkwright was arrested a few hours later on suspicion of the
murder of Marcus Law, and the interview that followed is as
bizarre as it is macabre. Arkwright had a pack of playing cards
with him, and shuffled through them as detectives attempted to
question him about Marcus’ killing. Stopping when he got to the
four of hearts card, Arkwright said:
“I can read the future from these cards. This is the master card –
it means you have four bodies and a madman on the loose. I can see
Marcus Law, but the others are indescribable. They are just too
horrible to describe” – Anthony Arkwright to detectives.
Were there four murders? Police didn’t know, because he wouldn’t
say any more than give cryptic ramblings. He revelled in being the
centre of attention, but wouldn’t expand on anything more, just
that he denied killing Marcus.
Police had little evidence against Arkwright, but with him as their prime suspect in mind, they held
him in custody whilst they set about making enquiries in the
Denham Road area. Upon learning that Arkwright was due to appear
in court on the burglary charge, they went to speak to Raymond
Ford, and PC David Winter discovered a sight that he would never
forget. Seeing the broken window, PC Winter made his way into
Ford’s flat.
On the floor in the corridor were several items, bits
and pieces – including a Prince of Darkness Devil mask. The
television was on, and the central heating, and it was then that
PC Winter noticed deep bloodstaining to the entirety of the flat.
When the unmistakeable stench of decomposition led PC Winter to
the bedroom, he discovered the remains of Raymond Ford.
“All the bits and pieces in the hallway, that were his internal
organs. He’d removed practically every internal organ in his body”
– PC David Winter(upon discovering the body of Raymond Ford)
Police had found the second body – and knew that Arkwright was
telling the truth.
Attempts were then made to trace friends and acquaintances of
Arkwright, in an attempt to try to identify anybody missing. Six
days after they had both been murdered, the bodies of Stasys and
Elsa were discovered.
Arkwright soon confessed to the murders of
his grandfather, Raymond Ford, and Marcus Law. He stopped short of
actually confessing to the murder of Elsa, but went as far to say
that he had stood over her body with the axe in his hand. He was
charged, and was incarcerated at Hull prison whilst awaiting
trial.
Not being content with being out of the limelight, Arkwright “invented” a fifth victim, which led police on a wild
goose chase searching a nearby lake and drainage ditch. It was
simply to gain attention, and this continued whilst he was
awaiting trial. Arkwright was angered at what he deemed was a lack
of respect and recognition, and regularly staged “dirty protests”,
smearing his cell walls with excrement.
When this failed to gain
him the notoriety he craved, Arkwright then changed tack and
managed to convince prison doctors that he was insane. Transferred
to Rampton Secure Hospital in Merseyside, detailed examinations
found this to be a ruse, and that he was fit to plead.
“He is the sanest man in the building” – Psychiatrist at
Rampton Secure Hospital
In July 1989, Anthony Arkwright came to trial for the murders he
had committed. After an adjournment requested by his legal
representation, Arkwright changed his not guilty plea to that of
guilty of the murders of his grandfather, Raymond Ford, and Marcus
Law.
He maintained a plea of not guilty to the murder of Elsa Konradite, and that charge was ordered by Mr Justice Boreham, the
presiding judge, to be left on file. Anthony Arkwright was
sentenced to life imprisonment, with a recommendation that he
serve at least 25 years. In 1990, the then Home Secretary Jack
Straw declared this term as too lenient and increased the term to
that of a whole life tariff.
Why then, did Arkwright kill? It was established that he had a
deprived upbringing, and at his trial his defence portrayed a
picture of a young man suffering from severe personality damage
and disorder. Did he brood and brood until one day, the trigger
for his killing spree was being fired from his job? More likely is
that Arkwright craved infamy, so many of his actions show this.
The choice of victims – all that could be
easily traced back to him. The bragging and making jokes and quips
about his having committed murder. The macabre act with the
playing cards, the dirty protests in prison, the creation of a
fifth victim and the ruse to convince doctors that he was insane.
All the evidence points to a deeply disturbed individual that
craved attention and would have loved nothing more than to have
been one of Britain’s best known and most reviled killers.
But for all his horrific crimes, the name of Anthony Arkwright has
never made it into the public consciousness like either of the
Ripper’s that he so desperately wanted to emulate. Instead, he
serves his time in prison with no possible chance of release. He
has never expressed any emotion, or remorse, or explanations for
his actions. The closest he has ever come to doing so is to claim
that he killed Marcus Law because he was fed up of him asking
Arkwright for cigarettes!
The name of Anthony Arkwright is hardly
remembered, indeed, even largely unknown. But the families of
Arkwright’s victims will never forget what he has done, and even
years later his horrific actions still caused tragic ripples. 14
years after his son’s horrific murder, Marcus Law’s father Tony
committed suicide by gassing himself in his car. He had never got
over his son’s horrific death.
A retired police officer who worked on the inquiry into
Arkwright’s crimes was supportive of the sentence that Arkwright
received.
“From the day we brought him in for the Marcus Law murder to the
day he was jailed, Arkwright seemed genuinely proud of what he had
done. He expected everyone to revere him, to be fascinated by him.
He was a messed up kid, desperate for attention. In his defected
mind he chose murder to get the attention he craved. He’s the most
dangerous person I ever met in 25 years on the job – he should
never get out”. – (Ret’d) Det Insp Bob Meek – South Yorkshire
Police.