Mary McLaughlin's killer jailed for life after DNA breakthrough

Mary McLaughlin
Author: Selena JacksonPublished 18th May 2021
Last updated 18th May 2021

A sexual predator who murdered a "trusting and friendly'' mother in her home more than 36 years ago has been jailed for life after being snared through a DNA breakthrough.

Convicted rapist Graham McGill, 59, was an inmate at HMP Edinburgh on temporary release when he strangled Mary McLaughlin, 58, in Partick, Glasgow in 1984.

The mother-of-11 had enjoyed a night out drinking and playing dominoes at different bars on Wednesday September 26 of that year and was last seen at about 10.45pm heading to a chip shop on her way home.

McGill strangled her with her own dressing gown cord and her body was found days later by one of her sons.

Mary McLaughlin

McGill was convicted following a trial at the High Court in Glasgow last month.

Ms Mclaughlin's death sparked a major police investigation and spawned dozens of lines of inquiry, but the cold case remained unsolved until modern DNA techniques placed McGill in her flat with a greater than billion-to-one likelihood, the trial heard.

McGill's ex-wife, Suzanne Russell, also told jurors that in 1988, he had confessed to murdering a woman because he "just wanted to know what it felt like''.

He was sentenced at the High Court in Aberdeen on Tuesday to life imprisonment and will have to spend 14 years behind bars before any possible release on licence.

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