A man's failed to clear his name despite seeing some of his convictions for a series of fatal fires in Hull during the 70s overturned
that's despite seeing some convictions overturned.
A man convicted over a series of fatal fires in Hull in the 1970s has failed in a Court of Appeal bid to clear his name, despite seeing some convictions overturned.
Peter Tredget, previously known as Bruce Lee and Peter Dinsdale, had originally confessed to responsibility for the blazes in houses around the East Yorkshire city between 1973 and 1979.
But last year the 61-year-old brought an appeal over 10 counts of arson and 15 of manslaughter, after his case was investigated by the Criminal Cases Review Commission (CCRC).
In a ruling on Tuesday, judges quashed two arson convictions and three of manslaughter, but concluded that his remaining convictions were "safe".
Lord Justice Fulford, sitting with Mr Justice Hilliard and Lord Hughes, said Tredget's appeals had been allowed in relation to fires at 9 Gorthorpe in June 1976 and 4 Belgrave Terrace in April 1977.
Tredget has been detained in a secure mental hospital since 1981 after previously pleading guilty to 11 counts of arson and 26 counts of manslaughter on the basis of diminished responsibility in relation to the Hull fires.
During a previous Court of Appeal bid in December 1983, judges upheld most of Tredget's convictions, but they quashed one count of arson and 11 charges of manslaughter in relation to a fire at an old people's home in Hessle in 1977.
In a new appeal brought after the CCRC investigated his remaining convictions, Tredget's lawyers argued that due to his "psychological vulnerability" at the time of his 1980 confessions he was an "unreliable narrator" and no "credence" should be given to his guilty pleas.
Tredget, who has "unswervingly" denied responsibility for all the fires for the last 35 years, was previously assessed as "semi-paralysed down the right side", with a "withered" arm and a limp, the court was told.
His barrister, Tim Barnes QC, told a Court of Appeal hearing in October: "The degree of physical dexterity required to access some of these properties, carrying a container of paraffin and setting the fires in the way the prosecution allege, would have been extremely difficult if not impossible for someone with such physical disabilities."
In their ruling, judges concluded that given Tredget's disabilities it was "impossible" or a "wholly unrealistic suggestion" that he climbed through an upper broken window to enter and leave the Belgrave Terrace premises where 13-year-old Deborah Gould and seven-year-old Mark Jordan died.
They also found that Tredget "could not have been responsible" for the fire at Gorthorpe, where 13-month-old Andrew Edwards died, concluding that his "account of starting the fire under the stairs is an impossibility".