19/07/96 - Police knew him
for years as a violent paedophile
Louise Jury and Chris Blackhurst
Independent
Police in north Wales knew for many years about the
paedophilic and violent tendencies of Howard Hughes,
it emerged yesterday after he was jailed for life for
the savage double rape and murder of seven- year- old
Sophie Hook.
Hughes's record dates backto his mid-teens when he was
arrested after attempting to assault a boy indecently
and then strangle him. Social services officials in
north Wales yesterday argued that his subsequent conviction
and suspended sentence for assault - a Schedule One
offence - meant police should have entered his name
on a warning register and alerted the children's agencies.
However, a north Wales police spokeswoman said last
night that criticism from the social services staff
made little sense when Howard Hughes had been known
to social services from an early age. She said that
the police had had a good working relationship with
social services, and that arrangements for working with
other agencies had been tightened up across the country
since 1981.
North Wales police are understood, however, to have
interpreted the definition of Schedule One narrowly,
applying it only to sex offenders.
After Hughes was found guilty, the judge at Chester
Crown Court yesterday called for a change in the law
to protect society against men like him. Recommending
that Hughes should never be released, Mr Justice Curtis
said that the country needed astatutory system of supervision
and control.
"Your crimes are every parent's nightmare. No girl
is, or ever will be, safe from you." The Home Office
said later that the judge's recommendation about tighter
supervision for paedophiles had already been addressed
in a consultant document launched last month when Michael
Howard, the Home Secretary, announced preliminary plans
to set up aregister of sex offenders.
Hughes had been the subject of complaint from various
sources over the years. Among them, the Independent
has learned, was the Llwyn Onn children's home in Colwyn
Bay who told police that Hughes had contacted one of
their boy residents.
The boy had previously been a resident at Bryn Estyn,
the children's home at the centre of the Clwyd child
abuse scandal, where he had been abused. Hughes himself
spent 13 days in Bryn Estyn on the way to treatment
at St Andrew's Hospital, Northampton, under the Mental
Health Act.
"Social work staff were very worried about Hughes,
who was hanging around the home," a senior social
services source said yesterday. "They went to the
police, who could have arrested him." Police did
issue a warning, through their child protection team,last
year, shortly before Sophie was killed at Llandudno
in August.
The social workers argue that the police should have
maintained a vigil instead. In the close-knit community
of Colwyn Bay where he grew up, Hughes was known as
"Mad Howard". The son of Rene and Gerald,
a successful and well- respected businessman, he had
been difficult from an early age and shown signs of
emotional insecurity.
Achromosomal abnormality had left him exceptionally
tall, at 6ft 8ins. Shortly after his 10th birthday he
had been sent to a special school for children with
behavioural problems in Derbyshire. His parents paid
for private tuition, but he was never togain any qualifications.
Hughes' peers spoke of his violent tendencies even as
a youth. "He was always in fights with people much
older than him," one said. " He was always
killing things, like small animals. Everyone knew his
reputation - you didn't mess with him." He was
obsessed with children.
In the mid-Eighties he approached a girl, thought to
be 11 or 12, in some woods for sex. In 1993, a 15- year-old
alleged she was assaulted by him with intent to rape,
and an 11-year-old claimed he spied on her. Last year,
two witnesses spoke of indecent suggestions being made
to them, and a 15-year-old girl was threatened with
rape.
Detective Superintendent Eric Jones confirmed Hughes
had been closely watched since 1981, but added: "I
have had a look at the papers we have in relation to
Howard Hughes and I am quite happy in my own mind that
everything that could have been done atvarious stages
was done."
Malcolm King, policy and resources chairman at Wrexham
Borough Council and former chair of Clywd social services,
said: "It appears that this person was known to
all the agencies in Colwyn Bay for many years and it
must give everybody the greatest cause for concern that
he had been on the loose for so long. If we dealt with
the issue of Schedule One offenders differently, maybe
this would not have happened."
Mr King also sits on the North Wales Police Authority,
and plans to raise the Hughes case at its next meeting.
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