Man, 92, guilty of 1967 rape and murder of woman

Louisa Dunne in a black and white photograph. She is wearing a hat and a brown jacket with a white shirt. Image source, Avon and Somerset Police
Image caption,

Louisa Dunne was murdered in Bristol in June 1967

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A 92-year-old man has been found guilty of the rape and murder of a Bristol woman in a case that remained unsolved for nearly six decades.

Louisa Dunne, 75, was found strangled on her living room floor by a neighbour on Britannia Road in Easton, Bristol, on 28 June 1967.

Convicted rapist Ryland Headley, of Clarence Road in Ipswich, has now been found guilty of Mrs Dunne's murder following a trial at Bristol Crown Court.

Senior investigating officer Det Insp Dave Marchant said Headley, who was in his 30s when he killed Mrs Dunne, had left "a legacy of misery and pain".

Despite the efforts of police investigating Mrs Dunne's death 58 years ago, no key suspect was identified.

Police collected about 19,000 prints from men and boys at the time with no success. They also made about 8,000 house-to-house inquiries and took 2,000 statements.

It was only when the case was re-examined by Avon and Somerset Police decades later that DNA testing of a swab that contained semen was linked to Headley.

Det Insp Marchant called him a "dangerous serial offender" with a "shocking and abhorrent history" and said there was a sense of "gravity" when police were told of the positive result.

"This is a marrying of old school and new school policing techniques," he said.

Det Insp Marchant added it was believed to be the oldest cold case solved in the UK.

Headley's custody picture. He has white hair, eyebrows and short facial hair, and wears a white collared shirt and a blue jumper. He is looking straight ahead with a serious expression. Image source, Avon and Somerset Police
Image caption,

Headley was arrested in November 2024 at his home

Mrs Dunne had been twice widowed and lived alone, but was well-known in the local area.

Headley was accused of forcing entry into her home before sexually attacking her and then strangling her.

The night of her death, neighbours reported hearing a woman's "frightening scream".

Det Insp Marchant said a neighbour was first alerted to something unusual happening when the paper they left for Mrs Dunne was not taken in on the morning of 28 June 1967.

Media caption,

Bodycam captures moment Ryland Headley arrested on suspicion of murder

After Headley's arrest, fingerprint experts compared his palm print to one collected from the rear window of Mrs Dunne's home, which matched Headley's.

He previously admitted breaking into the homes of two widows, aged 84 and 79, and raping them in Suffolk in October 1977, in crimes police described as "eerily similar".

Trevor Mason, a Special Branch detective in Suffolk drafted in to assist in the 1977 cases, described Headley as "worse than an animal".

Speaking to Channel 4 News, Mr Mason said what the women had suffered was "absolutely horrendous", adding Headley's victims were "obviously frail" and "didn't stand a chance".

Headley had denied both the rape and murder of Mrs Dunne after being charged in November 2024. He is set to be sentenced for both crimes on Tuesday.

Additional reporting by Cheryl Dennis

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