By Alex Jones

 

A FORGOTTEN serial killer and the UK’s longest-serving living inmate who confessed murdering up to eleven people – including a four-year-old boy and his grandmother as well as a priest slain with an axe – may soon be walking the streets a concerned author has warned.

West, Shipman, Sutcliffe, Nilsen, Hindley, Brady.

All names, amongst many more, which send a shiver down the spine as you recall the brutal and often callous crimes of the UK’s most famous murderers.

However, in 1975, there was another name that had the UK equally enthralled and dismayed following a spree of gruesome murders across London and Kent: Patrick ‘Pyscho’ Mackay.

LONDON: Nazi-obsessed Patrick Mackay. Photobooth self-portrait. Mediadrumimages/JohnLucas/PenandSwordBooks

Remarkable photos show the various demented faces of the criminal named ‘the most dangerous man in Britain’ at his court trial, a hacked-up body of a priest in a bathtub, and the cold dead eyes of a deranged killer staring directly into the camera.

These stomach-churning photos form part of John Lucas’ new book Britain’s Forgotten Serial Killer: The Devil’s Disciple, a detailed and dramatic account of the notorious Nazi-obsessed killer and his victims.

“Convicted of three killings, suspected of another eight, Patrick David Mackay was dubbed the Monster of Belgravia, the Devil’s Disciple and simply The Psychopath amid a torrent of public anger at the way he had repeatedly slipped through the grasp of the criminal justice system,” explained Lucas.

LONDON: Mackay was an arrogant psychopath who planned world domination under the
name Franklin Bolvolt the First. He boasted of wanting to ‘wipe out’ old people. Mediadrumimages/JohnLucas/PenandSwordBooks

“When the authorities added it all up, Mackay had been incarcerated, sectioned or otherwise detained at least nineteen times before he was finally brought to justice for his horrific killing spree.

“It was a case that left the nation stunned, both by the pure brutality of Mackay’s crimes and his unrepentant evil.

“Yet the extraordinary story of this 22-year-old Nazi-obsessive, who hacked a priest to death with an axe and killed two elderly women during a remorseless robbery campaign on the upmarket streets of West London, was all but forgotten by Christmas of 1975.

“It had been expected to run and run. Among the unsolved cases Mackay had apparently confessed to in prison — but later denied under questioning — was the murder of a teenage nanny on a train and the heinous double killing of a widow and her four-year-old grandson.

“He was also suspected of murdering a popular café owner from Essex.

“While police had taken the initial decision not to charge Mackay with those crimes, it seemed to be only a matter of time before more evidence came to light. But the charges never materialised.

LONDON: Police search land close to Ivy Davies’ cottage. Although the murder weapon
was found in the house, a number of knives were handed in by the public.
(Southend Echo). Mediadrumimages/JohnLucas/PenandSwordBooks

“Perhaps it was because, despite his alleged gloating to fellow prisoners, Patrick Mackay did not really kill all those people. Yet while he languishes in prison to this day — still too dangerous to be released — every one of those crimes remains unsolved.”

Mackay was born in 1952 and was raised in an abusive household and regularly beaten by his alcoholic father. It was not long before Mackay was committing criminal acts himself, particularly arson, animal cruelty, theft and stealing garden gnomes.

Medical professions saw that he had psychopathic tendencies and he was sectioned in 1968. He was released four years later and would soon be responsible for the death of at least three people.

The murderer quickly developed a fascination with Nazism and often referred to himself as ‘Franklin Bollvolt the First’ and frequently spoke of his desire to ‘wipe out’ the elderly.

He was convicted of three killings. Mackay’s first identified victim was 87-year-old widow Isabella Griffiths, who was strangled and stabbed at her home in Cheyne Walk, Chelsea. Next was Adele Price, 89, strangled at her home in Lowndes Square, Kensington. Finally, Mackay killed Father Anthony Crean in a frenzied attack using his fists, a knife and an axe in the picturesque village of Shorne, Kent, leaving the 63-year-old’s mutilated body floating grotesquely in a bath full of bloody water.

LONDON: Detective Chief Inspector Peter Croxford with the pry bar used to kill Ivy
Davies. The weapon was found just yards from her body. (Southend Echo).
Mediadrumimages/JohnLucas/PenandSwordBooks

The date was 21 March 1975. Two days later Mackay was arrested.

But Mackay’s horrifying crimes probably did not end there.

Although he was charged with five counts of murder, Mackay’s convictions were only for three counts of manslaughter due to diminished responsibility.

The other two cases were allowed to lie on file, meaning prosecutors believed they had enough evidence but a trial was felt not to be in the public interest.

The first victim in this group was 73-year-old widow Mary Hynes. She was choked and stabbed at her home in Willes Road, Kentish Town. Second was 62-year-old shopkeeper Frank Goodman. He was battered with a piece of metal pipe at his premises in Rock Street, Finsbury Park.

Finally, there were five unsolved murders, which Mackay allegedly confessed to while in jail, later telling police he was not responsible. The victims in those cases were 18-year-old Heidi Mnilk, Stephanie Britton, Christopher Martin, Sarah Rodmell and Ivy Davies. Mackay also admitted to killing an unidentified homeless man by pushing him into a canal. The body was never found.

LONDON: Book cover. d killer and his victims. Mediadrumimages/JohnLucas/PenandSwordBooks

Despite his alarming crimes and the sordid accusations surrounding Mackay, Lucas is concerned that the serial killer may soon be released from prison without the general public’s knowledge.

If he really did kill eleven people, he would be the UK’s fifth most prolific serial killer.

“Mackay faded into obscurity in the minds of the British public, far more than other serial killers of his era,” added Lucas.

“In fact, he has been able to change his name and win the right to live in an open prison — the first step on the road to eventual freedom — without a shred of publicity surrounding the decision.

“Far from being one of Britain’s most notorious inmates, he is not even recognised as being the country’s longest-serving living prisoner.

“That title was wrongly held by murderer John Massey before he was released in May 2018, even though he had been jailed seven months after Mackay in May 1976.

LONDON: Portrait of a psychopath. Mackay in a photobooth with chicken he took
from his mother’s after killing Father Crean. Mediadrumimages/JohnLucas/PenandSwordBooks

“Most assume the flamboyant and infamous Charlie Bronson now holds the record, but that is not the case.

“Instead, it is the forgotten serial killer, Patrick Mackay, who has been inside the longest.

“It is worth noting that Mackay may have had some influence over his low profile.

“Unlike other killers such as Dennis Nilsen and Ian Brady, Mackay is not known to have ever replied to a letter sent by ‘fans’ or ‘pen pals’ who would inevitably have sold any response to the newspapers.

“Perhaps it was a calculated move, perhaps it was a result of poor literacy.

“The question remains: was Patrick Mackay really one of Britain’s most prolific serial killers, as detectives originally suspected?

“That mystery is what this book sets out to examine.”

 

John Lucas’s Britain’s Forgotten Serial Killer: The Devil’s Disciple, published by Pen and Sword Books, is due for release this July.