Anthony Hardy

Killer

Popular As Camden Ripper

Birthday May 31, 1951

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Burton upon Trent, Staffordshire, England

DEATH DATE 2020-11-25, HM Prison Frankland, County Durham, England (69 years old)

Nationality United Kingdom

#36821 Most Popular

1951

Anthony John Hardy (31 May 1951 – 25 November 2020) was an English serial killer who was known as the Camden Ripper for dismembering some of his victims.

1982

Hardy married and fathered three sons and one daughter; in 1982, he was arrested in Tasmania for trying to drown his wife, but the charges were later dropped.

1983

Whilst in custody Hardy was transferred to a psychiatric hospital, under section 37 of the Mental Health Act 1983, remaining there until November 2002.

1986

In 1986, Hardy's wife, Judith, divorced him.

After the divorce, Hardy spent time in mental hospitals, diagnosed with bipolar disorder.

He was also treated in psychiatric hospitals across London for depression, drug-induced psychosis and alcohol abuse.

He lived in various hostels in London, picking up convictions for theft and being drunk and disorderly.

1998

He was arrested in 1998 when a prostitute accused him of raping her, but the charges were dropped due to lack of evidence.

He became an alcoholic and diabetic.

2000

The other Thames sex worker murder that was linked to Hardy was that of Zoe Parker, who had last been seen in Hounslow in December 2000 before her dismembered torso was found in the river.

2001

One of the murders Hardy was originally linked to, that of London sex worker Paula Fields whose body was dumped in the Thames in 2001, was in fact solved in 2011 when John Sweeney was convicted of her murder.

2002

In January 2002, police were called to the block of flats where Hardy lived by a neighbour complaining that someone had vandalised her front door and that she strongly suspected Hardy.

When the police investigated Hardy's flat, they found a locked door and, despite his claims to the contrary, found that Hardy had a key to it.

In the room the police found the naked dead body of a woman lying on a bed with cuts and bruises to her head.

She was identified as Sally White, 38, a prostitute who had been living in London.

Forensic pathologist Freddy Patel subsequently concluded that White had died of a heart attack, in spite of the circumstances.

On 30 December 2002, a homeless person scavenging in rubbish bins found the dismembered body parts of two women, wrapped in black plastic bin-liners.

The victims were identified as Bridgette MacClennan, 34, and Elizabeth Valad, 29.

The investigation led to Hardy, who was arrested a week later.

He had gone on the run, but was spotted by an off-duty policeman when he went to University College Hospital to collect his prescription for insulin.

During a search of the grounds of the hospital, Hardy was found hiding behind bins.

A fight took place as he resisted arrest, during the course of which a police officer was knocked unconscious and another officer was stabbed through the hand and had his eye dislocated from its socket.

Despite suffering these injuries, the wounded police officer held Hardy until backup arrived and he was arrested at the scene.

A subsequent search of his flat found evidence, including old blood stains, indicating the two women had been killed and dismembered there.

Both had died over the Christmas holidays.

Under arrest, Hardy simply replied "no comment" to every question put to him by police.

He was eventually charged with the murders of both MacClennan and Valad, and of White, the woman whose death had originally been put down to natural causes.

2003

In November 2003, he was sentenced to three life terms for three murders, but police believe he may have been responsible for up to six more.

Born in Burton upon Trent, Staffordshire Hardy had an apparently uneventful childhood and excelled in school and college.

He earned an engineer's degree from Imperial College London and subsequently became the manager of a large company.

At his trial in November 2003 Hardy, despite his initial lack of cooperation with the police, abruptly changed his plea to guilty to all three counts of murder and was sentenced to life imprisonment.

Because of Hardy's history of psychiatric problems and violent behaviour, an independent enquiry was announced into his care.

Hardy was diagnosed with a personality disorder.

2009

Patel later came under scrutiny for this and other findings in his career, including the 2009 Death of Ian Tomlinson, resulting in a suspension from the government's register of pathologists pending an inquiry.

2010

In May 2010, a High Court judge decided that Hardy should never be released from prison, placing him on the list of whole life tariff prisoners.

Mr Justice Keith, sitting in London, said: "This is one of those exceptionally rare cases in which life should mean life."

2012

In 2012, his name was erased from the medical register by the General Medical Council, meaning that he can no longer practise medicine in the United Kingdom.

Hardy pleaded guilty to a charge of criminal damage and claimed he had no knowledge of how White came to be in his flat due to his drinking problem.

2020

Hardy died of pneumonia in prison on 25 November 2020, aged 69.

It was originally reported that police believed Hardy was possibly connected to the unsolved cases of two prostitutes found dismembered and dumped in the River Thames, and up to five or six other murders that bore marked similarities to the ones for which he was convicted but where not enough evidence was available directly implicating him.