Freed M25 road rage killer Kenneth Noye tells victim’s lover to come out of hiding after she helped nail him
ROAD rage killer Kenneth Noye has assured his victim's girlfriend she has nothing to fear following his release from jail.
The ex-gangster stabbed Stephen Cameron, 21, to death following a row on the M25 in 1996.
Stephen's girlfriend Danielle Cable, then aged 17, was forced into witness protection after giving evidence against Noye.
Noye has now spoken out about his horrific crimes in a new book by Donal MacIntyre and Karl Howman after being released from jail in 2019.
He also reassured Danielle "she is at no risk from me", the reports.
Noye said: "She gave honest evidence at the trial. I have no issue with her. I am truly sorry for her loss and I am glad she has moved on with her life.
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"She may not believe me but I do want to say this. I am not a danger to her in any respect.
“I was never a danger to her and there was never a million-pound price on her head, as the police suggested. She should be able to fully enjoy her family and friends because there are no threats to her from me – there never was.
“I am devastated at Stephen’s death and the circumstances around it.”
Noye was on licence when he fatally stabbed electrician Stephen in front of his fiancée Danielle.
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She bravely went to Spain with police to secretly identify him in 1998 after he went on the run.
Danielle gave evidence against Noye at the Old Bailey the following year.
She was later given a new name and secret home away from her native Kent.
Before killing Stephen, Noye stabbed undercover cop John Fordham to death in the grounds of his 20-acre home in West Kingsdown, Kent, in 1985.
The cop had been tasked with keeping a watch on Noye as he was suspected of handling gold bullion snatched in the £26million Brink’s-Mat raid.
The raid at Heathrow is currently at the centre of BBC drama The Gold.
Leading underworld figure Noye was later acquitted of murder after claiming self-defence - despite the officer being stabbed ten times.
But he was eventually brought to justice over his involvement in the robbery in 1986 and jailed for 14 years. He was released in 1994, having served eight years.
As part of the book, he sat down with former Detective Superintendent Ian Brown, who investigated Brink's-Mat.
Speaking after, Ian said: "Do I think he has genuine remorse for John Fordham? Only he knows.
"We are both old men now, with a decade or so left, and clearly there are some secrets we’ll both take to the grave."
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Noye was controversially released from jail on licence in June 2019 following a successful Parole Board hearing.
He served almost 21 years in total for the May 1996 fatal stabbing of Stephen.