UK UK- Diane Sindall, 21, florist/barmaid, enroute home, SA, bitten, & beaten to death, Birkenhead, 2 Aug; '86, *Reopened, new DNA*

they never forensically proved that a crowbar was the murder weapon - that was the crown tailoring evidence to fit a witness who claimed that Sullivan had borrowed a 2ft crowbar from them around the relevant time.
Yes! The title of this thread is misleading.
 

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"After nearly 40 years behind bars
and repeated attempts to clear his name,
Peter Sullivan
has finally had his conviction for murder quashed."
 
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''Merseyside police have promised to continue searching for Sindall’s real killer and called on help from the public.
Det Ch Supt Karen Jaundrill said: “If you were in the area, or had concerns about an individual at the time, let us know so our team can trace and request a DNA sample from the person you suspect, or a relative of theirs if they have perhaps passed away, or they have emigrated to another country.”

May 13, 2025 #PeterSullivan #DianeSindall #BBCNews
A man who has served almost 38 years in prison for the murder of a woman has had his conviction quashed by the Court of Appeal after new DNA evidence emerged. Peter Sullivan was jailed over the 1986 killing of 21-year-old barmaid Diane Sindall, who was subjected to a frenzied sexual attack in Birkenhead, UK, as she walked home from a shift. The Criminal Cases Review Commission had referred Mr Sullivan's case back to the appeal court last year after fresh testing found a DNA profile pointing to an unknown attacker in semen samples preserved from the crime scene. Mr Sullivan, appearing on video-link from HMP Wakefield, sobbed and held his hand over his mouth as he was told he would be released.
 
This case hit the headlines in my country.

"He spent 38 years in prison.

It turned out he was innocent.


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Sullivan, who attended the hearing via video link from Wakefield Prison,
became emotional
and cried as the sentence was announced."

:(

Comments?

'The question is who will give him life back?'

'He is already a wreck of a person'.

'The man fitted the prosecutor's investigative concept'


"Tears and emotions in Court.
Shocking Story".


"Convicted man is not the 'Beast of Birkenhead'. Acquittal after 38 years".


 
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''Today Peter Sullivan has been released from custody after the Court of Appeal decided that his original conviction of the murder of Diane Sindall in 1986 was unsafe following advancements in testing of DNA and we do not underestimate the impact of the conviction on Mr Sullivan.

In June 2023 Merseyside Police reopened the investigation into the murder of 21-year-old Wirral florist Diane Sindall, following notification from the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC), who were in the process of carrying out a review which identified that DNA recovered at the scene was not a match for Peter Sullivan.

Merseyside Police decided not to wait for the outcome of the review but to reopen the investigation immediately.

Once the CCRC completed their review they referred the matter to the Court of Appeal in October 2024 as the finding of the new DNA had cast doubt on the reliability of his conviction.

At the time of Diane’s murder DNA testing was very much in its infancy and this vital evidence was not available to the original investigation team.

The murder of Diane Sindall was fully investigated by detectives in 1986 and a range of evidence was put before a jury who found him guilty in 1987.

Detective Chief Superintendent Karen Jaundrill said: “Our thoughts remain with the family and friends of Diane Sindall who continue to mourn her loss and will have to endure the implications of this new development so many years after her murder. We are committed to doing everything within our power to find whom the DNA, which was left at the scene, belongs to.

“Unfortunately, there is no match for the DNA identified on the national DNA database.

“We have enlisted specialist skills and expertise from the National Crime Agency, and with their support we are proactively trying to identify the person the DNA profile belongs to, and extensive and painstaking inquiries are underway.

“We can confirm that the DNA does not belong to any member of Diane’s family, nor Diane’s fiancé at the time, and we believe it could be a vital piece of evidence linking the killer to the scene.

“To date more than 260 men have been screened and eliminated from the investigation which was reopened in 2023. The investigation team has obtained most of the samples locally, however, screening has also taken place in Swansea, Perth, London, Hull and Newcastle with the provision of voluntary DNA elimination samples.

“At the time of her murder Diane and her fiancé were saving up to get married and she had a part-time job working behind the bar at the Wellington public house in Bebington.

“On the night of Friday, 1 August 1986, Diane had been working at the pub. She had left work at 11.45pm in her blue Fiat van, but on her way home the van ran out of petrol on Borough Road. Diane got out of the van and was seen by several witnesses at the time walking along Borough Road between midnight and 12.20am on the Saturday morning.

“Twelve hours later on 2 August Diane’s body was discovered by a member of the public in an alleyway off Borough Road. Diane had been sexually assaulted and brutally murdered.

“She had suffered extensive injuries to her body. Her cause of death was established as a cerebral haemorrhage following multiple blows.

“On 17 August 1986 property belonging to Diane was recovered on Bidston Hill. The investigation team at the time subsequently identified witnesses who had seen a small fire, at the location where the property was found, on Sunday, 3 August, and had witnessed a man running from the scene.
“Diane’s murder sent shockwaves through Birkenhead when it happened and I would appeal to anyone who lived in the area at the time, and has any information which could help us with our inquiries, to come forward.

“We believe there are people who have information, or suspicions, about the murder of Diane in 1986 and I would appeal to those people to come forward, as the information they have could be key to finding who the DNA belongs to.

“You may have been in the area of Borough Road on the night of the murder and may have seen someone acting suspiciously.

“If you were in the area, or had concerns about an individual at the time, let us know so our team can trace and request a DNA sample from the person you suspect, or a relative of theirs if they have perhaps passed away, or they have emigrated to another country.”

Anyone with information should contact Merseyside Police social media desk via X @MerPolCC or on Facebook ‘Merseyside Police Contact Centre’. You can also report information via our website: https://www.merseyside.police.uk/ro/report/ocr/af/how-to-report-a-crime/ or call 101 quoting incident reference 23000584997.''
 
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"In a statement
read by his lawyer Sarah Myatt outside the court on his behalf,
Sullivan said
too many horrors had been inflicted on him to detail.

'As God is my witness,
it is said the truth shall take you free',
he said.

'It is unfortunate that it does not give a timescale as we advance towards resolving the wrongs done to me,

I am not angry, I am not bitter.

I am simply anxious to return to my loved ones and family
as I’ve got to make the most of what is left of the existence I am granted in this world'."

 
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He was convicted partly because bite marks on her matched his teeth perfectly, according to a forensic dentist and he also admitted it but retracted it and never admitted it again. so no parole. Could there have been 2 men?
 
He was convicted partly because bite marks on her matched his teeth perfectly, according to a forensic dentist and he also admitted it but retracted it and never admitted it again. so no parole. Could there have been 2 men?

Bite marks are no longer considered reliable evidence.

"Bite mark evidence has been a contentious area in forensic science,
and there's considerable evidence suggesting it's not a reliable form of evidence.

Several factors contribute to this, including
- the elasticity of skin,
- the difficulty of capturing bite mark impressions accurately,
- and the potential for errors in analysis and interpretation."

 
''Det Ch Supt Jaundrill said that while the DNA was the main focus of investigative efforts, her team will rely heavily on people who lived in Birkenhead at the time for answers.

"I'm really hopeful with the work that we are doing but we really are relying on the community, particularly Birkenhead, just to really think about the nature of that investigation at the time," she said.

"Try and reflect on any individuals that you weren't happy with at the time.

"It may be that somebody has passed away and you weren't happy with their behaviour at the time and you think they were linked.

"My ask would be please contact us, regardless of how insignificant you think the information is, and let us judge where that fits into our investigation."
 

" 'Never forgotten’:

hunt for Diane Sindall’s real killer continues

as Peter Sullivan freed.


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People still lay flowers at the granite memorial stone
close to the place in Birkenhead
where Diane Sindall met her horrific, shocking death.

It reads:

'Murdered 2.8.1986 because she was a woman.

In memory of all our sisters who have been raped and murdered.

We will never let it be forgotten'.


In Merseyside
the shocking murder is still remembered,
and police now under pressure
after 1987 conviction quashed."

 
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Now we have got the DNA sample they can be cleared or otherwise, I just wish police could have something to go on because they're starting again
Jo Wood, RASA

“No one’s ever been able to come forward and we haven’t got a name – I wish somebody would just give us a name.

“It’s been nearly 40 years. People’s consciences must prick them.

“The person who has done this, if they’re still living, must be having real sleepless nights.”

She said: “Diane has always been part of what we do. When police told us they thought the appeal was going to win I just felt like somebody had hit me in the forehead.

“It felt an utter letdown.”
 

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