Peter Tobin: Serial killer dies after falling ill in prison, aged 76

Peter Tobin
Peter Tobin was serving three life terms for the murders of Angelika Kluk, Vicky Hamilton and Dinah McNicol

Serial killer Peter Tobin has died aged 76, sources have told the BBC.

Tobin was convicted of raping and murdering Polish student Angelika Kluk, 23, and hiding her body under the floor of a Glasgow church in 2006.

He was also serving life terms at HMP Edinburgh for the murders of 15-year-old Vicky Hamilton and 18-year-old Dinah McNicol.

Vicky, of Redding, near Falkirk, and Dinah, of Tillingham, Essex, both vanished in 1991.

Their bodies were found 17 years later, buried in the garden of Tobin’s former home in Margate, Kent.

Last month, a newspaper reported that Tobin was lying “chained to a hospital bed” and was pictured in a hospital gown, appearing seriously ill.

The Sunday Mail said the murderer had cancer and had fallen and broken his hip. It said he was refusing food and medication.

In January it emerged that Tobin had been transferred from HMP Edinburgh to the city’s Royal Infirmary after becoming unwell.

In February 2016 he was taken to the Royal Infirmary by ambulance after he reportedly collapsed in his cell.

Tobin was only unmasked as a serial killer after his final victim – Angelika Kluk – was found hidden under the floorboards of a church in Glasgow in 2006.

His arrest set in motion a UK-wide investigation which ultimately led officers to the remains of two teenage girls.

Vicky Hamilton, 15, disappeared in February 1991 as she travelled home to just outside Falkirk. 18-year-old Dinah McNicol from Essex was last seen in August that year after she hitched a lift from Tobin after a music festival.

Both girls remains were found 16 years later.

Former Strathclyde Police detective David Swindle, who led the investigation into Peter Tobin, said he definitely killed more people.

“This is someone who had no respect for humanity,” he said.

Tobin was later convicted of murdering Dinah McNicol and Vicky Hamilton
Tobin was later convicted of murdering Dinah McNicol and Vicky Hamilton

 

Vicky and Dinah had gone missing within six months of each other in 1991, at opposite ends of the UK.

They were only found after Tobin killed again.  His murder of Polish student Angelika Kluk in Glasgow was followed by a nationwide police inquiry which led eventually to the back garden in Irvine Drive in Margate.

For 16 years, Dinah and Vicky’s families had absolutely no idea what had happened to them.

Without a body, there could be no funeral, no grave to visit, no prospect whatsoever of anything remotely resembling closure, if that’s ever possible in such cases.

Vicky’s mother died two years after her daughter went missing. Her family say it was from a broken heart.

Angelika
Angelika Kluk’s body was found hidden under the floorboards of a Glasgow church (Image: PA Media)

 

When the girls were found, their relatives were relieved because at last they knew the truth, no matter how terrible it was. They had them back and they could lay them to rest.

Detectives who investigated Tobin are convinced he had other victims.  He targeted young girls and women when they were vulnerable and took care to conceal his crimes.  He was in his 40s when he killed Vicky and Dinah, an unusually late age for a serial killer to start committing murders.

If the police are right, Tobin could have revealed his secrets and given some semblance of comfort to other families.

But he would never have spared a moment’s thought for Dinah’s father, or for the relatives of any of his victims.

In that man’s foul and wicked soul, there was nothing but darkness.

Analysis box by David Cowan, Home affairs correspondent, BBC Scotland

‘A particular brand of hell’

In the days following the discovery of Peter Tobin’s first known victim, I witnessed a moment I’ll never forget.

The police had found 15-year-old Vicky Hamilton buried behind Tobin’s former home in Margate.

The news that they had uncovered a second body came through when I was interviewing Ian McNicol, whose daughter Dinah had been missing for 16 years.

With the camera rolling, Ian raised his hand, crossed his fingers, and said: “Please be Dinah…and get us out of this misery.”

Imagine that.

Imagine hoping that your beloved daughter was lying in a shallow grave, in the shadow of a murderer’s old house.

Serial killers like Tobin inflict a particular brand of hell on their victims’ families.

Source: bbc.co.uk

 

 

 

 

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