Review of Don Hale's book
Town Without Pity, by Tom Bates
This review is by Tom Bates,
and is reproduced with his kind permission.
It may be of interest to those with Bakewell connections.
TOWN WITHOUT PITY
Don Hale (with Marika Huns & Hamish McGregor)
Published by Century; Random House.
ISBN 0 780712 615303 : £14-99.
Published 4th April 2002.
April saw the launch of award-winning journalist and former Matlock
newspaper editor Don Hale's book 'Town Without Pity', which tells
the story - both skillfully and graphically - of the author's successful
eight year campaign to clear local man Stephen Downing of the 1973
murder of Wendy Sewell in Bakewell churchyard.
This is a true life drama that looks and reads like a best-selling
detective novel - which if it were, could justifiably be catagorised as
'compelling'; but this is a true story - and as such it goes onto my
'absolutely rivetting' list.
The Downing Case has received worldwide media coverage.
Infamously known as the 'Bakewell Tart Murder' it has been the
subject of much speculation and conjecture and has hardly been out of
the news in recent years. This book dispenses with the need to
speculate further and in providing the answer to the question on
everyone's lips - 'if Stephen Downing is innocent then who did kill
Wendy Sewell?' - gives the authors own account of how he unearthed
an elaborate cover-up which convinced him of Downings innocence
and revealed the truth of what took place that fateful day back in
September 1973 at Bakewell cemetery.
The book, co-written with local husband and wife team, Hamish
McGregor and Marika Huns tells how Stephen Downing, who was a
naïve seventeen year old with a reading age of eleven, worked as a
gardener in the cemetery. He was taken to the police station,
interrogated for nine hours without access to a solicitor and signed a
confession he could not read. Forever afterwards and during his 27
years in jail he maintained his innocence even though he was offered
his freedom if only he would 'admit' his guilt.
After Don Hale was approached by Stephen's parents he began a
private investigation and learned of all the evidence, including witness
statements, which seemed to show a version of the events of the day of
the murder, which contradicted the 'official' version - evidence which
the police seemed to discount. Who was the man a witness claims to
have seen running away from the murder scene? Who was the man
seen with Wendy Sewell minutes before she was attacked? Everyone in
the town seemed to have a theory as to who the real culprits might be.
As Don Hale continued his investigation he was threatened, warned
off, and attempts were made on his life.
This is the story of how one man operating on his own, fought
tirelessly and courageously in order to piece together the evidence -
and how his heroism eventually secured the release of Stephen
Downing after the longest running miscarriage of justice in British
legal history. The reader can follow the trail of clues and discover
what the authorities want to hide.
Since the book's publication Derbyshire police have announced the
re-opening of the Wendy Sewell murder case - and the book has
repeatedly sold out, especially in Bakewell!
"Town Without Pity" is set to become a best-seller and has already
been nominated by Century for two major awards with the Crime
Writers Association - the Debut Dagger Award and the Macallan Gold
Dagger Award for non-fiction.
Review by Tom Bates; 550 words, April 2002
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