Inseparable Bond

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Authors: David Poulter
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and service doors typical
of these buildings, he found easy pickings on the streets in the
sky.
    Although he
did not murder or inflict injury to his victims, he left
fingerprints at the scene and was soon identified due to a previous
conviction when he tried to rape a 60-year-old woman as she left
the local library in Birmingham.
    Another mate
of Bell’s was Donald Sanderson, he was a tall, thin guy, quiet and
unassuming and apart from contact with Bell, kept himself to
himself. He was a 52-year-old loner who attempted to rape flight
stewardesses on stopovers while he was an airline pilot for British
Airways. His two year sentence resulted in a divorce which he had
trouble coming to terms with, and was on constant suicide watch by
the screws.
    Mickey Nelson,
the guy in the cell opposite from Bell, refused to have any contact
with anyone. At meal times he would take his tray to his cell and
never gathered on the open landings with the other inmates. Bell
would listen to him crying himself to sleep every night, probably
recalling his crimes he had committed or the isolation he found
hard to endure.
    He had
kidnapped a hitchhiker on the Yorkshire moors, drove her to his
remote house on the outskirts of Hull where he beat, raped and
strangled her. He then stripped her of her clothes and wore them
while his victim hung from a hook on the back of the kitchen door,
where he sliced off her left breast. The same night he disposed of
her naked body in the River Humber.
    His other
victim endured a similar fate. A salesman came to his door where he
knocked him unconscious with a baseball bat, stripped him and tied
him to a hook on the garage ceiling. When he regained
consciousness, Nelson buggered and sexually assaulted him and cut
off his penis with a Stanley knife before strangling him and
dumping his body in the River Humber at the same spot as his
previous victim. He kept his penis in his refrigerator alongside
the woman’s amputated breast as trophies.
    His crime
spree went undetected for two years when it came to an abrupt end
after his nephew called to his house unexpectedly and found the
severed feet and hands from a victim along with a skeleton he had
hung on the shower hose. The skeleton had been his third victim. He
admitted on his arrest to have eaten some of the victims flesh
after seasoning it with salt and pepper and tomato sauce. His
nephew called the police who were waiting to arrest Nelson on his
return home. That was the end of his career of slaughter and he was
given a life sentence.
    The new wing
housed an array of offenders, not all were categorised as
psychopathic murderers, some were known to have severe personality
disorders, but to Bell there was little difference as he freely
mingled among all categories on a daily basis.
    The move to
the new wing was not only to offer Bell a cleaner and quieter
environment; it was also for the conditioning of a possible early
release to the outside world after an assessment of his
behaviour.
    The recent
move to this more relaxed environment was a formal conditioning
through the official punishments and rewards.
    Bell was not
considered to be as aggressive or manipulative as he had been in
the outside world. His freedom on the new wing was constantly under
supervision by specially trained officers who would study his
response and general behaviour to the lavish rewards he was
offered.
    The rewards
ranged from cigarettes and ice cream, to visits to the cinema,
trips to town and coach trips to the coast.
    On constant
assessment of Bell’s attitude to the rewards given, the authorities
of the prison filed for a parole hearing, which would be attended
by a psychiatrist, the prison doctor, his social worker and the
governor. Should these official bodies be in agreement to his early
release, it had to be finalised by the Home Office due to the
severity of the crimes he had committed.
    Bill was
informed of his possible early release on a visit from his social
worker that explained

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