Gitta Sereny

The Case of Mary Bell

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In December 1968 two girls who lived next door to each other — Mary, aged eleven, and Norma, thirteen — stood before a criminal court in Newcastle, accused of strangling two little boys; Martin Brown, four years old, and Brian Howe, three.
Norma was acquitted. Mary Bell, the younger but infinitely more sophisticated and cooler of the two, was found guilty of manslaughter. She evaded being branded as a murderer due to what the court ruled as 'diminished responsibility', but she was sentenced to 'detention' for life.
Step by step, Gitta Sereny pieces together a gripping and rare study of a horrifying crime; the murders, the events surrounding them, the alternately bizzare and nonchalant behaviour of the two girls, their brazen offers to help the distraught families of the dead boys, the police work that led to their apprehension, and finally the trial itself. What emerges from this extraorindary case is the inability of society to anticipate such events and to take…
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  • hopeshared an impression16 days ago
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Quotes

  • hopehas quoted16 days ago
    It is, of course, impossible for anyone who murders, including Mary Bell and these boys, to “pay” in terms of years of imprisonment, for killing another human being. In that sense, eight or ten years are as irrelevant as 15—or life.
  • hopehas quoted16 days ago
    This present case, because of its extreme nature, has demonstrated most forcibly what is wrong. It is wrong to treat children as adults and to demand that they comprehend the language and thought processes of adults. It is wrong to sit children in a dock for weeks on public exhibition.
    However talented police interrogators may be, it is wrong that they should question children for days on end about an act, a deed, a crime, without the training or authority for a parallel goal of understanding. It is wrong to use tricks, emotion or a parent to coerce a child, for however necessary and right it may seem in the essentials of the moment, the child will never forget.
    Truth must emerge not through the pressure of, or the longing for, love, but out of an inner need. The admission of guilt, and the relief of remorse, are only given to human beings through self-knowledge. And children, just as human, only smaller, have exactly the same needs.
  • hopehas quoted24 days ago
    He is a powerful-looking man, but quiet, with warm eyes. The moment we began to talk about those days in February a year ago, they filled with tears. He tried to joke, “Just a reflex”, he said, and added that his wife would tell me there was a softy inside that big man. I didn’t think so. There was a very human being inside that man.
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