UK UK- Sally Shepherd, 24, Worked @ Young Vic Theatre, Dragged through wire fence, Raped & beaten by ‘Beast of Peckham’, 1 Dec.'79 *Rootless Hair*

DNA Solves
DNA Solves
DNA Solves

dotr

Well-Known Member
Joined
Oct 21, 2009
Messages
53,222
Reaction score
152,631
1661270573323.png
By
Holly Evans
14 AUG 2022
rbbm. Lengthy article.

''One such case was that of Sally Shepherd, a young woman who was stripped, raped and brutally beaten to death with a blunt instrument in south London. She was only 24 years old when she was attacked in Peckham in December 2019, with her body found in a builder’s yard behind the police station.''

''At the time of her grizzly murder, Sally was working as a restaurant manager at the Young Vic theatre, and was living near the bus depot in Peckham. On November 30, she spent an evening visiting friends in Essex, before collecting an Indian takeaway and boarding her bus at New Cross.

During the early hours of December 1, it stopped at Clayton Road, its final destination for passengers, she disembarked and began the walk back to her home on Staffordshire Street. It is unclear what happened to Sally from then onwards, but at some point she met her attacker who brutally dragged her through a wire fence with such force that her leather boots were left behind.


She was then stripped naked, raped and beaten to death in a builder’s yard, which ironically was located behind the local police station. She suffered multiple broken ribs and a damaged spine, with detectives at the time stating that they believed she had been stamped on during the course of the attack.

Her body was discovered the following day by a worker, with her Indian takeaway strewn across her clothing and bloodstained bricks nearby. A murder investigation was launched, with the killer quickly dubbed ‘the Beast of Peckham’, but he was never captured nor brought to justice.

https://ad.doubleclick.net/ddm/trac...IeBJABEXoLDxljL6vFbTjOkNSC7_1go-t7514zahPn6AQ
A bus conductress who was interviewed told police that she recalled seeing a white Ford Cortina with a dark patch of primer on one wing parked in the High Street nearby, and saw a man running from Staffordshire Street. In September 1991, a 55-year-old man was arrested and questioned in connection with the killing, but was soon released on bail without any charges being brought.

Connection to the Ripper?

In 2013, retired police officer Chris Clark claimed that the Yorkshire Ripper could have been responsible for her murder. Peter Sutcliffe was convicted in 1981 for the murders of 13 women and the attempted murders of another seven, and died in prison in 2020.

Following his death, Clark, who had formerly worked in intelligence, called for a new national probe into the unsolved murder of Sally. He said: “The National Crime Agency should be looking into these cases as a UK-wide force. As opposed to separate forces. Sally is not a stand-alone case – there’s another six cases in London which as far as I’m concerned he committed. All of the hallmarks of the Yorkshire Ripper are in Sally’s case.”


Sutcliffe was a lorry driver who often travelled the country, and it was confirmed that he had been in London on a delivery at the time of her killing. His first wife had also completed a teacher training course in nearby Deptford, therefore he had “good knowledge” of the Peckham area. Clark also noted that the Ripper’s method of killing his victims by using ligatures and weapons and then dragging their bodies was also replicated in Sally’s murder.

Despite this evidence, Sutcliffe was never formally charged or investigated for her murder. The depraved killer has also been associated to another 16 unsolved murders across the country.

A new DNA appeal

In 2016, the Met Police said that with advances in forensic science, they were once again re-examining Sally’s case. Three strands of hair which were believed to belong to her killer had been recovered from the crime scene in 1979 and had been kept as evidence.

However, the three strands were rootless, which made it difficult to determine ethnicity which would have helped narrow down the field of potential suspects. Without the root, scientists told the BBC that they were “very cautious” about examining hairs as there was a risk they’d use up the sample as it underwent testing.''
 
Noting..
June 15, 2022
''Recently, using advanced DNA sequencing technology to extract DNA from rootless hair found on the victim, scientists built a genetic genealogy profile that ultimately helped identify the young woman as Peggy Anne Dodd, who was 29 years old at the time. Minyard, along with volunteer genealogists with Intermountain Forensics and Astrea Forensics, were able to identify the remains.''

July 2022

''How a single strand of rootless hair helped crack the 1982 murder of a 5-year-old girl​

Forty years after Anne Pham vanished on her way to school, a Nevada man was charged in her killing.''​

2021
''While the sky is, indeed, the limit on applications to forensic DNA cold cases, the truly amazing opportunities are in two specific evidence samples. Rootless hairs and severely degraded (usually bone) samples obtained from the crime scene.
Rootless hair:
I cannot stress to you how amazing this particular application of the scientific advance is. There is, very often, trace hair sample(s) that are obtained in the crime scene evidence. Up until now, the only useful sample were those hairs that had root material left on the hair shaft. An actively growing, "pulled" hair was the only sample that yielded enough DNA for forensic investigation. That left the vast majority of potential suspect hairs completely useless to investigators.''
 
I think they've messed up the date in the article, this was in 1979.
Thank you, the date had me confused, will report!
1661271885939.png
''Sally Shepherd, 24, was making her way home to Friary Road on December 1, 1979 when she was clubbed unconscious, sexually assaulted and stamped to death.''

''Ex-police officer, Chris Clark, has spent his retirement looking into the unsolved murder – and he believes it was the work of Peter Sutcliffe.

Speaking to the News after killer Sutcliffe’s death last Friday, Mr Clark called for a new national review into a string of unsolved cases linked to the Ripper following his death, including the murder of Sally.''

''Three hairs were recovered from the scene of Sally’s murder, but at the moment the science is not advanced enough to test them for DNA.

“The hairs recovered at the scene were rootless and therefore, at this time are not viable for testing,” she added.''
 
I guess then the police found Black hairs. If the hair had been any other colour the Detective on the case would probably not suspect him. Could be dog hair though?
 
1676415796554.png
Her body was found near Peckham Police station near Staffordshire Street
By Holly Evans 14 AUG 2022
UPDATED 2 JAN 2023 rbbm Lengthy article.
  • ''In 2016, it was announced that a dedicated team of British detectives were working on a select group of unsolved murders, in the hope of finally bringing some of the country’s most dangerous killers to justice. With significant advances in technology, it was believed that a series of gruesome killings during the 1970s and 1980s could eventually be solved.

    One such case was that of Sally Shepherd, a young woman who was stripped, raped and brutally beaten to death with a blunt instrument in south London. She was only 24 years old when she was attacked in Peckham in December 1979, with her body found in a builder’s yard behind the police station.

    Whilst 44 suspects were identified and eliminated from the original inquiry, including the Yorkshire Ripper, it was three strands of hair that were regarded as the most crucial piece of evidence. As they were rootless, forensic science in the 1970s was unable to determine a DNA profile but despite significant advances in modern day technology, her killer has still managed to evade justice.''

A bus conductress who was interviewed told police that she recalled seeing a white Ford Cortina with a dark patch of primer on one wing parked in the High Street nearby, and saw a man running from Staffordshire Street. In September 1991, a 55-year-old man was arrested and questioned in connection with the killing, but was soon released on bail without any charges being brought.

''Connection to the Ripper?

In 2013, retired police officer Chris Clark claimed that the Yorkshire Ripper could have been responsible for her murder. Peter Sutcliffe was convicted in 1981 for the murders of 13 women and the attempted murders of another seven, and died in prison in 2020.

Following his death, Clark, who had formerly worked in intelligence, called for a new national probe into the unsolved murder of Sally. He said: “The National Crime Agency should be looking into these cases as a UK-wide force. As opposed to separate forces. Sally is not a stand-alone case – there’s another six cases in London which as far as I’m concerned he committed. All of the hallmarks of the Yorkshire Ripper are in Sally’s case.”


''Whilst they examined the evidence obtained from the scene in 1979 and a fresh appeal for information was placed in local papers, no one has been identified and charged with her killing. If you have any information about Sally's murder, contact the Met Police on 101 or contact Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.''
 
Not sure if press media sites are acceptable links, they do provide the photos used in press releases after all so there should be no issues. Anyway I noticed there are a few photos of the site where Sally was attacked and of her boots which it's said were dragged off when being pulled under the fence.

 
So similar to the attack on and murder of Lynne Weedon, seemingly stalked on the way home in the dark, hit in the head and knocked unconscious, dragged over / under a fence, raped and discarded.


Had either case been a decade or more later then Levi Belfield would have been a suspect. Levi drove around looking for victims, approached women and girls at bus stops even followed buses to catch up with girls / women getting off then followed them or waited ahead in his vehicle for them to pass.

There's obviously no DNA unless they are able to find a way to get some from those hairs...interesting they didn't mention the hair colour since it would have helped in a description of the attacker with no witnesses.
 
I know I'd never walk through there if coming back from my Nan and Grandads in the dark.
One police theory was that she was forced into that road against her will then bludgeoned and dragged into the place her body was found.
In one news story from the time they considered the fact it may have been two people, I'm not sure why, it doesn't say and I only found it in one press release.

I do wonder if they got a boot / footprint as it's also often suggested that someone was stamping on or jumping up and down on her. I know such prints have been found on people before in bruising, as the police often keep something to themselves we don't know what was withheld.
 
I guess then the police found Black hairs. If the hair had been any other colour the Detective on the case would probably not suspect him. Could be dog hair though?
Microscopically they could tell if it were human hair or dog hair with or without the root the shafts themselves are different enough to easily distinguish
 
It must have taken a fair bit of time for the murderer to attack, drag, strip, rape and murder her. It’s also extremely brutal. It’s hard to imagine that, unless the killer knew Sally, she was his only victim.

If he’s still alive, which I would think he would be, I hope his heart races every time he hears his doorbell. It’ll be the police one day and the sooner the better.
 
Some screenshots from google maps streetview as well as satellite views which show the area now. For contemporary photos look at Alamy, link on post #9 of this thread, there are street view and aerial shots which show Sally being taken away in a coffin, the murder spot being photographed both before and after Sally's removal. It's near an entrance to the yard to the rear of the police station, both still there. The same curved pavement appears to have remained in situ even if the resurfacing has changed. I have marked the spot Sally was found with a red marker.
At the time of Sally's death that road didn't have the housing it has now as can be seen in the Alamy photos. A very lonely looking place just off Peckham High Street.Screenshot_20230223-120346_Maps.jpgScreenshot_20230223-120519_Maps.jpg
 

Attachments

  • Screenshot_20230223-115945_Maps.jpg
    Screenshot_20230223-115945_Maps.jpg
    155.8 KB · Views: 1

The Daily Telegraph

London, Greater London, England. Monday, December 03, 1979

Wow, I have read so often that Sally left work at The New Vic, central London and went to visit friends in Essex, and for the first time I read hear that it was Woodford, and Woodford is where Lynda Farrow was murdered, it's a stone's throw from where Eve Stratford was murdered (who was murdered by the same person as Lynne Weedon, attacked and killed in a similar manner to Sally), Eve had caught the central line home from central London to Leytonstone Station which is only two stops from Woodford on the central line, which is the station Sally was escorted to by friends to catch a tube home. Sally exited on Tottenham Court Road to catch a bus to Peckham.

Also Sally was 5ft 6" according to this, the same height as Eve Stratford. (As well as also being blonde and attractive like the others we've linked).

In this it says police believe it may have been two men. In various press releases at the time I have searched, they usually write that police believe it is either someone very strong, or two men. In Lynne Weedon's case the police believed it was someone very strong. This is for the way the body of each young lady was moved around while unconscious and therefore a dead weight, plus in Sally's case the energetic furosity of the physical attack after rape.
I'm not sure if I am missing something here, but I don't know why there is no DNA as Sally was raped, even though all they did then was check bodily fluids for blood group, often exhibits were kept and could be retested as new techniques became available, so I don't understand where the DNA is.

I don't recall any witness reports of anyone following Sally from Woodford or onto or off the bus. The bus conductress mentioned people or a car she noticed in the area when Sally got off the bus, but not of anyone following Sally, it is an incredible coincidence.

Sally's clothes were left in the same arrangement as Lynne Weedon's, pants and jeans removed and upper clothing pulled up under the chin, exposing the breasts.
 
Last edited:
Finally another photo of Sally.
This would have been supplied by family or police for the purposes of LE jogging people's memory if they saw her or anyone with her around the time leading up to her death. Not copywritten to press iow.
20230301_014554.jpg


CLIPPED FROM

The Guardian

London, Greater London, England
03 Dec 1979, Mon • Page 4

Sally shared a flat with another female and a male above an empty shop on Friary Road, close to where she was murdered.

Sally's avoidance of ever using Staffordshire Street (known locally as Muggers Paradise), is why police believe She was dragged there.


Evening Standard
Monday, December 03, 1979

Police think Sally may have been followed off the bus.
£5-£6 was missing so they ponder if it started as a mugging.

The previous Monday there was a report of Sally seen crying in The Duke of Sussex on Friary Rd and this after arguing with the tall man accompanying her, the pub requested she depart the premises.


The Liverpool Echo
 

The suspect was probably killed by Kevin Mulholland[/URL]
I have no idea who you are referring to and can't see anything on the link you supplied either, which most refers to Peter Sutcliffe. There's as much proof that the murderer who killed Lynne Weedon/ Eve Stratford as there is anyone, and probably more so than Sutcliffe since there has been zero proof of PS killing anyone in London while the mystery killer not only killed LW in a very similar way to SS apart from beating and crushing her, but so far is only known to have killed in the London area.
I think there are definitely reasons to keep Sally's murder in consideration for PS and our mystery murderer that we're mainly discussing on Eve Stratford's thread...since there appears to be no DNA despite being raped, but also the possibility it was more than one person, it could have been more than one egging each other on in violence, it would gave been easier to persuade her down that road and move her too. One press entry I read mentioned her being repeatedly raped, that's more likely with either a young man or more than one person although we don't have a timeline to know how long the person or persons stayed with her body, of course I don't know how accurate that comment was in the article I read and if they had the forensic capability to know if someone was repeatedly raped.
That link is based on information random people have sent them, it doesn't have some of the information I have found and some could be classed as hearsay since it may not have anything to back it up.


Btw our mystery killer of LW & ES had sex with them live, he wasn't a necrophiliac.

Liverpool Echo
December 05, 1979

https://www.newspapers.com/image/796968586/?terms=Sally%20shepherd%2C%20two%20men%2C%20peckham&match=1

This article says little new, however it mentions the police raiding a Peckham house in the early hours and questioning two men, not named. Obviously they weren't charged as I have found nothing relating to that plus this a cold case. These and the man in his 50s mentioned on your link and who I found references to in the press, are the only people I have found info on being taking in by the police.
 
The article suggests that SS was killed by a traveller living along the street where she was located.
 

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
56
Guests online
1,601
Total visitors
1,657

Forum statistics

Threads
602,342
Messages
18,139,338
Members
231,352
Latest member
8xbet81bet
Back
Top