"Over the past two weeks,
the frail pensioner listened attentively to court proceedings via a special hearing loop
but has shown no sign of any emotion.
Clearly adept at hiding his true nature,
at least one member of Headley's own extensive family still refuses to accept his guilt
and insists he is 'the nicest, kindest man'.
Another relative describes him
as being 'a little mouse'
who played second-fiddle to his 'matriarch' wife.
'He always seemed to be in his own world.
He never joined in with anecdotes or reminiscences or jokes.
He just sat quietly in the corner'.
Having got away with murder,
Headley might have been expected to keep a low profile
but by 1977
– the Queen's Silver Jubilee Year –
Suffolk Police suspected they had a serial sex attacker in their midst
after attacks on elderly women.
Home Office psychiatrist Dr David Muller concluded
that the attacks, by a 'very disturbed man',
'may be a campaign of revenge against females for some reason hidden in his past'
and warned that the rapist was
'cunning, devious and could commit murder if he meets with resistance'."