19/07/96 - Murderer with
sick mind who lived out his fantasies
LOUISE JURY
Independent
Howard Hughes outlined his fantasy of raping and murdering
a little girl 18 months before seven-year-old Sophie
Hook was left for dead on a Welsh beach.
In a confession to Michael Guidi, himself a convicted
sex offender, Hughes spoke of his desire to have sex
with a girl and then kill her."He said he would
strangle her or cut her throat," Mr Guidi told
Chester Crown court, in a horrifying prediction of what
was to come.
"He said this over a period of time and on more
than one occasion," said Mr Guidi, who was Hughes's
friend since theage of 13, and his former lodger in
Colwyn Bay, North Wales.
This was not the only warning sign. It took the jury
more than an hour to view Hughes's extensive collection
of pornographic pictures of naked or scantily-clad children.
During a search of the home he shared with his mother
in Yerburgh Avenue, policealso found a collection of
children's underwear in a stone wall in the garden.
Hughes was an unnerving presence, roaming the district
on his mountain bike or with his Rottweiler, Bryn, at
his side. Yet nothing could have prepared the small
North Wales community for the day when he decided to
turn his fantasy to reality.
On the summer's day on which Sophie was to die, Hughes
had first approached a seven-year-old girl doing hand-
stands in the park and asked her to go with him. She
ran away, scared. Sophie Hook was less fortunate.
As she and her sister Jemma excitedly splashed naked
in a paddling pool, the family was not to know that
Hughes was already lurking nearby. The Hooks had travelled
from their home in Budworth, near Winsford, Cheshire,
to visit Mrs Hook's sister, Fiona Jones, and her husband
Danny, in Llandudno for cousin Luke Jones's ninth birthday.
As the celebrations drew to a close, the children were
so enthusiastic about continuing the fun that the families
agreed to allow them to camp out in a tent in the garden.
There seemed no reason to worry. But it was from the
tent that Sophie was abducted.
Stripped of her nightdress, she was raped, beaten about
the head and strangled. One arm was broken, probably
in an act of deliberate violence. She was dumped in
the sea, apparently in an attempt to hide evidence.
Police arrested Hughes within hours.
He maintained his innocence, despite having been spotted
carrying a sack with a limb hanging out of it. Only
when his father visited him at the police station did
he break down and confess: "Dad, I did it ...You
don't know what it is like to be sexually frustrated;
you don't know what it is."
Hughes went on, his father said, to tell unprompted
the story of what happened. He was to deny it all in
court. "I didn't do it," he shouted, even
as he was led away to start his sentence.
The Hook family were left baffled and numbed. Jemma
Hook, two years older than her sister, said that she
wanted to join Sophie in heaven. The girls' parents
said they could not understand how anyone could be so
evil.
Today Julie Hook, 35, and her husband Christopher, 38,
an advertising executive, are expected to speak publicly
about their traumatic 12 months.
They have shown dignity and courage throughout, according
to the policewoman who has supported them, Detective
Chief Inspector Lorraine Johnson. "This is not
the end for them," she said yesterday. "They
will carry this cross for the rest of their lives."
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