Kevin Milkins
04-Nov-08, 22:35
I posted a little while ago about my brothers first book about some murders of young girls that took place in South Wales in the early 1920’s
Every Mother's Nightmare: Abertillery in Mourning (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Every-Mothers-Nightmare-Abertillery-Mourning/dp/190596711X/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1225831261&sr=1-3) by Neil Milkins In the book, Neil tells of the eventual fate of Jones, his return visits to Abertillery in later years and raises the intriguing question whether he was responsible for further murders including Swansea schoolgirl Muriel Drinkwater in 1946 and the 1960’s murders by Jack The Stripper in London where Jones was living at the time under a different name.
The police in South Wales and Scotland Yard in London have been investigating some of the lines of inquiry that has come to light as a result of the 16 years investigative work done as research for the book.
On the news tonight I caught the back end of a news story that the police have used new DNA techniques to analyse the oldest samples taken from a crime scene and are about to reveal their result.
RESEARCH into 1920s Abertillery double murderer Harold Jones has led to an investigation involving the world’s oldest crime scene stain.
Every Mother's Nightmare: Abertillery in Mourning (http://www.amazon.co.uk/Every-Mothers-Nightmare-Abertillery-Mourning/dp/190596711X/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1225831261&sr=1-3) by Neil Milkins In the book, Neil tells of the eventual fate of Jones, his return visits to Abertillery in later years and raises the intriguing question whether he was responsible for further murders including Swansea schoolgirl Muriel Drinkwater in 1946 and the 1960’s murders by Jack The Stripper in London where Jones was living at the time under a different name.
The police in South Wales and Scotland Yard in London have been investigating some of the lines of inquiry that has come to light as a result of the 16 years investigative work done as research for the book.
On the news tonight I caught the back end of a news story that the police have used new DNA techniques to analyse the oldest samples taken from a crime scene and are about to reveal their result.
RESEARCH into 1920s Abertillery double murderer Harold Jones has led to an investigation involving the world’s oldest crime scene stain.