Peter Moore (serial killer)

Killer

Popular As The Man In Black

Birthday September 19, 1946

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace St Helens, Lancashire, England

Age 77 years old

#2350 Most Popular

1946

Peter Howard Moore (born 19 September 1946) is a British serial killer who managed cinemas in Bagillt, Holyhead, Kinmel Bay and Denbigh in North Wales at the time of his arrest.

1995

He murdered four men in 1995.

Due to his trademark attire of a black shirt and tie, he was dubbed the "man in black".

Between September and December 1995, he stabbed to death and mutilated four men "for fun".

1996

He was sentenced to life imprisonment in November 1996 with a recommendation that he never be released.

He also committed 39 sex attacks on men in North Wales and the Merseyside area over a 20-year period.

2004

Shipman committed suicide in his cell in January 2004.

2008

In June 2008, Moore was told by the High Court that he would spend the rest of his life in prison.

2011

On 3 March 2011, Moore challenged the ruling in the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR), with a view to having his sentence quashed and such whole life order sentences outlawed throughout Europe.

On 13 October 2011, it was falsely reported that Moore had died at Broadmoor hospital on 30 July 2011.

Moore talked to police and said that he knew the identity of Clocaenog Forest Man.

It was reported that this theory was discounted due to conflicting dates.

2012

On 17 January 2012, it was announced that his appeal had failed.

2013

During his trial, Moore told the jury the crimes were committed by a fictitious homosexual lover he nicknamed Jason after the killer in the Friday the 13th horror films.

The jury found him guilty on all counts.

During his time in Wakefield Prison, Moore befriended fellow serial killer Harold Shipman (known to acquaintances as Fred Shipman).

However, on 9 July 2013, it was announced the ECHR had ruled there had to be both a possibility of release and review to be compatible with human rights.

A fresh challenge by another "whole life" prisoner, Jamie Reynolds, who murdered a teenage girl in Shropshire in 2013, is now reportedly pending with the ECHR.

By this stage, there were believed to be more than 70 prisoners in England and Wales serving whole life sentences.

2015

In February 2015, the ECHR upheld the lawfulness of whole life orders, on the ground that they can be reviewed in exceptional circumstances, following a fresh challenge by murderer Arthur Hutchinson, who had been sentenced to life imprisonment for a triple murder in Sheffield more than 30 years earlier.

2017

Another legal challenge to the court by Hutchinson was rejected in January 2017.