RUTHLESS, MURDERING BULLIES

Stunning pictures of the murky criminal underworld capture a time when brutal gangs like the Krays and Richardsons ruled London

THE brutality of London’s gangland heyday has been laid bare in a new book examining the role of organised crime in the capital.

Fascinating pictures have also been revealed of the notorious Kray twins and their rivals Charlie and Eddie Richardson, who between them ran a reign of terror over much of the capital.

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Three Kray brothers pictured together: from left, Reggie, Charlie and Ronnie

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The Krays’ deadly rivals were the Richardson Brothers: Charlie, left, and Eddie

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Albert Dimes and his wife Rosie celebrate his acquittal for GBH against Jack Comer in 1955

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Jack ‘Spot’ Comer was a legendary East London gangster from the 1930s to 50s

Murder, torture and extortion all feature prominently in London’s Gangs at War, by ex-police officer Dick Kirby, pulls no punches as it looks in depth at some of the most infamous names from the criminal underworld.

The author investigates the impact of gangsters in London in the 50s and 60s.

He used old police reports, court and newspaper records to give an accurate portrayal of what life was like at the time of the Krays and the Richardsons.

And Kirby says it was ex-gangsters’ boastful portrayal of their own wicked crimes that prompted him to start researching the underworld.

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He said: “I got a little fed up with ‘gangster books’ in which the person concerned trivialises, boasts about or justifies their crime

“Matters are not improved when offences for which they were acquitted at court, amidst howls of police malpractice, they now claim that they were, in fact, guilty of.

“And therefore, I wanted to show the reader the true facts of the cases in which they figured.”

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Zoe Progl, tho-called ‘woman of the underworld’ who was the first to escape from Holloway Prison

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‘Scarface Jock’ Russo was a gangland enforcer who told an Old Bailey trial her was paid £500 to be slashed in a bid to frame Jack Spot

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Billy Hill, Jack Spot’s one-time partner who was a supposed mentor to the Kray twins

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Ron, left, and Reggie Kray in their younger days as boxers

Kirby says he pored over the accounts of several London gangsters as research for his book, before comparing what he’d read to official documents to get the real truth behind the legends.

He found that the glamorous reputations that gangsters such as the Kray twins enjoyed were often misguided.

He said: “I read the books which the Krays and their hangers-on had written; then, for comparison, I checked police reports, court and newspaper records and spoke to the police officers who were there at the time, to get at the truth.

“What I found out about the twins were that they were self-serving, ruthless and murdering bullies.

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Police diver Sgt Ken German of the Underwater Search Unit attempts to find the ‘Richardson Torture Box’

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Richardson gang member George Cornell was murdered by Ronnie Kray

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Kray shot Cornell at the bar in the Blind Beggar pub in Whitechapel

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Jack ‘The Hat’ Mcvitie, who was murdered by Reggie Kray

“The most harrowing of the stories was undoubtedly the Richardson Torture Gang, though, who used their particular talents to utterly humiliate and denigrate their victims for their own gratification.”

Kirby also sees parallels between the gangsters of the post-war years and the thugs that terrorise neighbourhoods today.

The ex-cop said: “There’s little difference in the gang culture nowadays from the 1950s and 60s.

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A huge police guard as the Krays arrive for an appearance at Bow Street Magistrates Court in central London

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Jack ‘The Mad Axeman’ Mitchell, whose murder was linked to the Krays

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Reggie Kray, centre, pictured after being let out of jail for his mother’s funeral in 1982

“The problem is that the police are hampered with nonsensical rules and regulations as well, of course with political correctness and ‘elf n’ safety rules, so that little is done to contain gang violence.

“It’s only when police officers get real leadership and guidance from their senior officers that law and order on the streets will be reclaimed.”

“Because the majority of senior officers see themselves as politicians, eager for advancement or inclusion in the Honours List, rather than police officers with a strong knowledge of the law, who can inculcate dedication and enthusiasm into their subordinates, this can’t happen.”


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