On Thursday, 22 June, 1995, Christine McGovern was found strangled in her flat in Walthamstow, east London.
The 47 year-old lived alone with her Rottweiler dog at a flat at 53a Hamilton Road and was a known sex worker.
She was last seen alive at around 6.30pm on June 21, 1995, in the street outside and at 11pm neighbours heard a dog barking.
At 12pm the next day a friend found her lying naked in her flat. She had suffered a broken spine and nose and severe bruising and a pathologist gave the cause of death as asphyxiation.
There was no sign of forced entry to her home but it had been ransacked and a video recorder, a satellite decoder, four gold rings and a gold necklace with a St Christopher’s pendant had been stolen.
Christine McGovern
Detectives believe she was murdered by someone she knew and issued a new appeal for witnesses and information in 2011.
Detective Inspector Ken Hughes, of the Homicide and Serious Crime Command, said: “We are appealing for anyone who didn’t originally come forward to contact us.
“Circumstances change over the years and it may be someone now feels they can approach us in confidence and anonymously if they wish.
“Even if you just have a hunch or had suspicions about someone at the time we would like to hear from you – we can quickly eliminate people from the enquiry from the evidence we have recovered from the scene but a piece of information you may think is useless could be crucial.”
Contact Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.
Support murdermap
We rely on subscriptions and donations to fund the website. Sign up for just £5 per year.
Wilbert Anthony Dyce got away with the murders of a mother and her two children for nearly three decades.
He was 26 when he raped and stabbed Norma Richards, 27, to death after following her home from a nightclub on July 17, 1982.
He then stabbed her nine year-old daughter Samantha to death and drowned seven year-old Syretta in the bath at their flat at 54 Kingsgate Estate, Dalston, east London.
Norma RichardsSamantha RichardsSyretta Richards
Dyce, whose mother lived just a few hundred yards away, left the scene after daubing the National Front NF symbol on the walls in an attempt to make it look like a racist murder.
The bodies of all three were found two days later on July 19 by their grandmother Myra and step-sister Rhodene. The murder weapon may have been a 19th century bayonet which was kept in the flat as a bayonet.
Nobody suspected Dyce’s involvement, his name was never given to police and he was never interviewed.
It was only during a review in 2009 – sparked by a query from a journalist researching a book about footballer Laurie Cunningham, the brother of Norma’s partner – that his DNA was matched to semen samples found at the scene.
Confronted with the damning evidence, he claimed that he had sex with Norma Richards in the toilets of a nearby club hours before her death.
But he was convicted of all three murders on December 17, 2010, after a trial at the Old Bailey. The court heard he had also sexually attacked two other women in their own homes and stabbed his ex-wife
At the age of 54 Dyce was jailed for life with no chance of parole.
Wilbert Dyce in 2010Wilbert Dyce in 1982The bayonet used as a murder weapon
Detective Chief Inspector Steven Lawrence, of the Homicide and Serious Crime Command, said: “This was a truly appalling crime, with the lives of a young woman and her two children, aged just nine and seven, tragically taken.
“It has been the prosecution case that Norma Richards was murdered as part of a sexual attack; her attacker then killed her in her own home and went on to murder the children in cold blood to prevent his identification.
“Wilbert Dyce is an evil, violent man who preys on the weak and vulnerable. He has never accepted responsibility for these terrible crimes nor at any stage shown remorse. He lied and denigrated the victim’s reputation by giving evidence that he and Norma had sex in the toilets of a club prior to the murder.
“I would like to pay tribute to those members of the local community who came forward to give information about this case. I would also like to thank those who have shown such courage in giving evidence at the trial. It is a tribute to all concerned that members of the community in east London now have the confidence in police to come forward and assist.
“This case highlights the determination of the Met Police to solve every murder and bring those responsible to justice. A case is never closed.”
The police also issued a statement from surviving daughter Rhodene, 32. It read: “When I was four, I found my mum and my sisters dead in our flat we lived in. I was really scared; my mum was just lying there covered in blood. I ran upstairs and my sisters were in the bath. They were dead too.
“After the funeral, I went to live with my dad’s parents. I had a good upbringing, I enjoyed school, had a lot of friends, but at the back of my mind my mum and sisters were dead. I couldn’t understand who would want to hurt them.
“It was weird going from being the youngest to the eldest, not being able to talk to my sisters about boys, make-up and secrets. I can remember taking their things and running off with them, having fun and laughing with them. What could it have been like growing up with them? I’ll never know, I never got the chance.
“As I got older it got harder. I knew they weren’t coming back. Every year on my birthday I would cry, it would be tears of happiness as I remembered them all but also of great sadness. As for my other family members, no-one would talk about my mum. I guess it was too much for them, they must have been too horrified to even say her name. I don’t think it was deliberate, just too painful to talk about.
“I fell pregnant at 18. I wanted my mum so bad, to hear her say she was there for me, and to hold her granddaughter for the first time. I told myself I can be a good mother, be the mother my mum would have been.
“I will never have my mum back to hug or see her smile, I will never be able to share a laugh or evening out with my sisters, but I will always have them in my heart and that will never change.”
Support murdermap
We rely on subscriptions and donations to fund the website. Sign up for just £5 per year.
The murder of a 17-year-old student in east London bore the hallmarks of a gang attack, an inquest heard Shortly before 1am on 2 August 2017, Joshua Bwalya and his friends were standing outside the Way 2 Save supermarket in Ripple Road, Barking, when they noticed six youths on bicycles…
You must be a paid subscriber to view this page - we rely on donations to keep the website going.
For £5 a year, subscribers receive the following benefits:
Police say they found no evidence to support a possible motive for the shooting of a 26-year-old personal trainer who lived in fear of retribution from a gang he helped convict and put in jail more than a decade earlier Abraham Badru was 15 years years old when he witnessed…
You must be a paid subscriber to view this page - we rely on donations to keep the website going.
For £5 a year, subscribers receive the following benefits:
Former British high jump champion Claude Moseley was allegedly murdered by a notorious north London crime gang.
The 32-year-old athlete was stabbed in the back with a samurai sword at a house in Bethune Road, Stoke Newington on 4 February 1994.
Although he had been a successful member of the Haringey Athletics Club, detectives believed he began working for the Adams Family syndicate’s drug trafficking operation. It was rumoured he was killed for skimming off the profits.
Claude Moseley
An enforcer for the syndicate, Gilbert Wynter, was charged with the murder after a witness came forward to police.
But on 16 February 1995, Wynter walked free from the Old Bailey when the witness refused to give evidence after being told he could not remain anonymous.
He claimed that he had been threatened by a prison officer and an inmate.
Sentencing him to three months imprisonment for contempt of court at the Old Bailey, Judge Michael Coombe said: ‘A murderer such as the person who killed the victim in this case is likely to strike again and again until men have the courage to give evidence whatever the consequences are to them.
‘It is terrifying that a man who commits a murder of this kind can get away with it because a man refuses to do his duty and give evidence.
‘This was a particularly vicious type of murder and I am told that those who were there belonged to that section of society which could be described as hardened criminals.
‘There is no doubt you are a terrified man. Equally however, you could have taken the opportunity to have a disguised identity and got help in protecting yourself and your family.’
Wynter, a ‘self-employed jeweller’, went missing on 1 March 1998. It is thought he too was killed by the Adams Family. Legend has it he was buried under the Millennium Dome.
In May 2011, detectives launched a ‘last ditch’ investigation into his disappearance, linking it to the murder of another Adams associate Solly Nahome. Both cases remain unsolved.
Support murdermap
We rely on subscriptions and donations to fund the website. Sign up for just £5 per year.