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| - A notorious British serial killer dubbed the "Yorkshire Ripper", who murdered 13 women across northern England between 1975 and 1980, died on Friday aged 74. Peter Sutcliffe was convicted in 1981 of the killings and seven more attempted murders after a reign of terror that is still seared on the public memory. He received 20 life sentences and was ordered to serve at least 30 years in prison, but in 2010 a High Court judge ruled that he should never be freed. Sutcliffe had tested positive for Covid-19 but according to British media reports this week had refused treatment. No immediate cause of death was given. Boris Johnson's spokesman said the prime minister's thoughts were with the victims, survivors and their families, calling Sutcliffe "a depraved and evil individual". "Nothing will ever detract from the harms that he caused and it is right that he died behind bars," he added. Former lorry driver Sutcliffe, who was assessed to have had paranoid schizophrenia at the time of his crimes, had spent time after his sentence at a high-security psychiatric unit. But he was transferred to a prison in northeast England after his mental state was deemed stable enough. He had been attacked in jail, losing the sight in his left eye, and had underlying health conditions including heart trouble, diabetes and obesity. The hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper was one of Britain's biggest but police failings and shortcomings led to an overhaul of how complex criminal investigations were conducted. A 1982 assessment into how police handled the case, only released in 2006, concluded Sutcliffe probably committed more crimes. Detectives, the media and lawyers have been criticised for dismissing many of the Ripper's victims as sex workers, even though some were not. The chief constable of West Yorkshire Police, John Robins, on Friday apologised for the "language, tone and terminology used by senior officers at the time". "Such language and attitudes may have reflected wider societal attitudes of the day, but it was as wrong then as it is now," he said. One former detective involved in the inquiry likened Sutcliffe to other notorious British killers such as the 1960s "Moors Murderers" child killers Ian Brady and Myra Hindley. "I've walked with my dog this morning and people have said, 'Good news, good riddance', and that's what a lot of people will be thinking about it," Bob Bridgestock told BBC radio. He said he hoped Sutcliffe's death would provide "some kind of closure" for the families of victims and survivors. Sutcliffe used lump hammers to bludgeon his victims and screwdrivers to mutilate them. Marcella Claxton, who survived an attack 44 years ago, told Sky News she still felt the effects. "I have to live with my injuries, 54 stitches in my head, back and front, plus I lost a baby, I was four months pregnant," she said. "I still get headaches, dizzy spells and blackouts." Police in the Sutcliffe case were sent on a wild goose chase trying to find a man who called himself "Wearside Jack", who claimed responsibility for the killings in tape recordings. But the tapes were found to be a hoax. A former labourer who admitted sending them was jailed for eight years in 2006. Sutcliffe evaded capture for years despite being interviewed several times, eventually confessing to the crimes in 1981 after being arrested for using stolen number plates on his car. The killings of sex workers and young women between 1975 and 1980 sparked widespread fear across Britain. Vigilante groups were formed and women were warned not to go out at night. Richard McCann, whose mother Wilma was Sutcliffe's first victim in October 1975, told Sky News he had "ruined so many lives". "He will go down as one of those figures from the 20th century in the same league, I suppose, as someone like Hitler," he added. phz-csp/har
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