Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe Dies of COVID-19 at 74
Serial killer who murdered 13 women in 1970s England dies in custody after refusing treatment
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Quick Facts
Quick Facts
Peter William Sutcliffe, known internationally as the Yorkshire Ripper, died on November 13, 2020, at University Hospital of North Durham. The 74-year-old serial killer succumbed to COVID-19 after testing positive in late October and refusing treatment for the virus. He had been hospitalized two weeks earlier for a suspected heart attack.
Sutcliffe's death marked the end of one of Britain's most notorious criminal cases. Born on June 2, 1946, he worked as an HGV driver while conducting a campaign of violence against women across Yorkshire and North West England. Between 1975 and 1980, he murdered 13 women and attempted to kill seven others.
Claimed to be on a "divine mission" to kill sex workers, Sutcliffe's victims included both women working in the sex industry and innocent women who did not fit his stated profile. This contradiction between his stated motivation and his actual targets highlighted the arbitrary brutality of his crimes.
The investigation into the Yorkshire Ripper became one of the largest manhunts in British police history. A significant turning point—and a critical failure—occurred in 1979 when police received a hoax tape featuring a voice claiming to be the killer, delivered in a distinctive northeast accent. Believing the tape to be authentic, investigators pursued leads in the wrong direction. This error allowed Sutcliffe to remain at large for an additional three years, during which he claimed three more victims.
Sutcliffe was finally arrested in January 1981 and confessed to being the Yorkshire Ripper. His trial began on May 4, 1981, and concluded swiftly with guilty verdicts on May 22. He was convicted of 13 murders and 7 counts of attempted murder, receiving 20 concurrent life sentences with a minimum 30-year recommendation.
