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Colin Pitchfork’s parole listening to will happen in public in July

Double child killer Colin Pitchfork’s next parole hearing will take place in public in July.

The Parole Board granted an application for a public hearing in the case in the ‘interests of justice’, a decision published on Thursday said.

Pitchfork was jailed for life in 1988 after raping and strangling two 15-year-olds, Lynda Mann and Dawn Ashworth, in Leicestershire in 1983 and 1986.

Mugshot of Colin Pitchfork, the first murderer convicted and jailed using DNA evidence

Mugshot of Colin Pitchfork, the first murderer convicted and jailed using DNA evidence 

Dawn Ashworth, 15, was raped and murdered by Pitchfork in 1986 in Leicestershire

Dawn Ashworth, 15, was raped and murdered by Pitchfork in 1986 in Leicestershire 

Lynda Mann was also one of Pitchfork's victims, also being killed and raped in 1983

Lynda Mann was also one of Pitchfork’s victims, also being killed and raped in 1983 

The Parole Board met last year to decide whether the double child killer could be released and ruled in December he should not be freed.

But Pitchfork applied for the decision to be reconsidered and this has been granted, the Parole Board has said.

It means he will face another parole hearing, now set for July, to decide if he can be freed from jail.

Parole Board hearings are typically conducted behind closed doors but can, in certain circumstances, take place in public following changes in the law in a bid to remove the secrecy behind the process.

Caroline Corby, chair of the Parole Board, said: ‘I have carefully considered Mr Pitchfork’s representations and I have concluded that the interests of justice outweigh the points raised on Mr Pitchfork’s behalf.’

The families of Lynda Mann and Dawn Ashworth, the two Leicestershire schoolgirls raped and murdered by Pitchfork, have been notified of the Parole Board’s decision.

Convicted child killer Pitchfork is seen walking in a local park near young families after his release in 2021

Convicted child killer Pitchfork is seen walking in a local park near young families after his release in 2021

Lynda Mann (pictured) who was raped and murdered by Pitchfork in 1983 when she was just 15

Lynda Mann (pictured) who was raped and murdered by Pitchfork in 1983 when she was just 15

Pitchfork raped and murdered Dawn Ashworth (pictured) three years after his first attack

Pitchfork raped and murdered Dawn Ashworth (pictured) three years after his first attack

Pitchfork’s first application for parole was rejected after it emerged that he had been loitering in forests and parks, even approaching lone women during his spell of freedom.

He had been released under ultra-strict licence conditions in June 2021 before being recalled to prison just three months later in September that year.

The killer became eligible for release again in June 2023 but the decision was blocked by the government after pressure from MP Alberto Costa, who represents South Leicestershire where the vile crimes were committed.

In a rare move, the Parole Board has now agreed to Mr Costa’s request for Pitchfork to face his latest parole hearing in public. 

The MP for South Leicestershire has welcomed the decision to hold Pitchfork’s latest parole hearing in public.

The double child-rapist and murderer successfully appealed the December 2023 decision to keep him behind bars triggering a fresh parole hearing this summer.

This decision comes after the Mr Costa wrote to Parole Board chair Caroline Corby calling for the hearing to be held in public due to his concerns about how the Parole Board has handled Pitchfork’s case.

During the Parole Board hearing last year in which Pitchfork’s bid for release was rejected previously unknown details about why he had been recalled to prison came to light. 

After his release in a town on England’s south coast, on one occasion the monster was spotted by his parole officer approaching a lone female – a direct contravention of his licence term – in the car park directly outside his parole office.

Pitchfork was also said to have spent a lot of time ‘walking aimlessly’ in a forest and parkland areas, where he claimed he was simply picking up litter.

On a different occasion Pitchfork shouted at a parole officer after trying to cheat a polygraph test by controlling his breathing.