Tangled Web UK Review November 2002
File Updated: 05/03/03

Buy at Amazon Price Jill Dando: Her Life and Death by Brian Cathcart
pbk out October 02 (Penguin) at £7.99

`Between the car and the door the whole complex of talents, experiences, habits and emotions that made up the person called Jill Dando had ceased to be.' With these words, writer Brian Cathcart poignantly sums up life's arbitrariness. One moment Jill Dando was walking towards her door, carrying the ingredients for her evening meal. The next moment, a man put a gun to her head and fired.
We know that the killer was a man because neighbours saw him fleeing the scene. The police had little more to go on and spent the next year checking out her acquaintances and exploring the possibility of a professional hitman. Finally, their interest centred on Barry George, who lived nearby.
With his hairlip, epilepsy and unemployed status, Barry George knew that he had his work cut out to attract women. His low IQ of 76 didn't help. As such, he reinvented himself to females he was attracted to, telling them that he was a professional stunt man or a military officer or Freddy Mercury's cousin. Sadly, he went further, groping women he liked. He was twice accused of such incidents and in 1983 went to prison for attempted rape.
Barry George realised, albeit belatedly, that he couldn't just touch women he liked, so from 1985 onwards he had no further criminal convictions. That said, he was still a nuisance to women, trying to strike up conversations with them inside shops and outside. He was clearly very lonely and would walk about his native London for hours each day. He also invented so many medical problems that most local doctors refused to have him on their books.
But he didn't fit the profile of Jill Dando's murderer. The hit had been fast and assured, whereas Barry George's medical condition makes him physically awkward. He'd only owned replica guns and simply wouldn't have been bright enough or dextrous enough to turn a non functioning gun into a functional one.
The media tried to suggest that he was obsessed with Dando, but of the hundreds of newspapers and magazines in his cluttered flat, only eight of them even referred to her. Brian Cathcart duly acknowledges `the weakness of the case' against a clearly inadequate man.
This is an immaculately researched and very readable account of an unfathomable crime. The least interesting part, for this crime writer, was the pages devoted to Jill Dando's childhood and career path. But in fairness, the book is subtitled Her Life And Death and Dando fans will be interested in her rise to fame.
Subsequent to this book being published, Barry George has been visited in prison by Don Hale. He was the journalist who fought tirelessly for the freedom of Stephen Downing, a man with a low IQ who spent twenty six years in prison for a murder he did not commit. Stephen has recently been released.
Asked by this reviewer to comment on Barry George's case, Don said `I think he is innocent, another miscarriage victim and someone completely incapable of plotting, planning or carrying out such a professional killing.'
You read it here first.


( Carol Anne Davis Author of Children Who Kill)

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