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OPERATION MINSTEAD: What do we really know about the Night Stalker?


DETECTIVES who have spent a decade hunting for a serial sex attacker dubbed the Night Stalker have blocked News Shopper’s attempts to get the latest information on the case.

The Met police launched Operation Minstead in the late 90s after a string of vulnerable pensioners around south-east London were attacked in their homes by a masked man.

Officers have described the assailant as a gerontophile - someone who is sexually obsessed with the elderly - and he is wanted for attacks in Orpington, Beckenham, West Wickham, Bickley and Penge.

Pensioners in Sidcup, Catford, Forest Hill, and in the neighbouring borough of Croydon, have also been targeted.

In 2003 he was thought to be responsible for up to 32 burglaries and sex attacks. Last year that figure had risen to 108.

Keen to know how the international manhunt was progressing, News Shopper asked the Met a series of questions about Operation Minstead but were thwarted by staff claiming the answers may hamper the case.

Our questions, asked under the Freedom of Information Act, included how many Minstead-related offences are now being investigated, how many officers have worked on the case since its inception and how much the investigation has cost.

But we were told the answers would threaten the success of Operation Minstead or take too much time and money to process.

A Met Police spokesman said: "It is one of the Met's top priorities to catch this man, and we are doing all we can to make sure that happens."

The Met did reveal that a total of 2,054 DNA samples have been analysed during their inquires at a cost of more than £100,000.

Despite Operation Minstead's lead officer Detective Superintendent Simon Morgan offering a £40,000 reward and capturing the Night Stalker's DNA, no one has ever been arrested.

OPERATION MINSTEAD: What do we really know about the Night Stalker?

WHAT IS KNOWN ABOUT THE NIGHT STALKER

The Night Stalker targets pensioners, both men and women.

Their homes are broken into in the middle of the night and he removes light bulbs, cuts phone lines and shines a torch in his victims’ faces, so they cannot see his face.

He robs them and, in many cases, he also sexually assaults them.

In one attack in Orpington, his victim was so badly injured, she almost died.

The Night Stalker has been described by his victims as a light-skinned black man, about 5ft 11 tall, wearing dark clothing, gloves and a balaclava.

He could be aged anything from mid-20s to mid-40s.

GENETIC CLUES LEAD DETECTIVES ABROAD

DNA research suggested the Night Stalker’s family came from the Caribbean’s lower Winward group of islands, including Barbados, Trinidad, Tobago, St Lucia and St Vincent.

As a result, Operation Minstead sent officers to the islands to liaise with police there and appeal for information.

The Met was able to reveal to News Shopper eight officers went on investigations overseas, but refused to say where, when, why, how long for and how much the trips cost.

It again said trying to recover the information from years of documentation would be too costly and take too long.

Yet newspaper coverage at the time revealed details of one trip which involved five officers, including Mr Morgan, who has been in charge of the investigation since Operation Minstead was launched in 1998, six years after the first attack.

According to the reports, the officers spent eight days visiting Tobago and Barbados in October 2006, at an estimated cost of £10,000.

It is not known whether they returned with any useful information.

WHAT THE MET REFUSED TO ANSWER

How many definite Minstead offences have there been?

How many suspected offences have there been?

When and where was the last definite Operation Minstead offence committed?

When and where was the first definite Operation Minstead offence committed?

How much has Operation Minstead cost since its inception?

How much of the cost has been staff wages?

How many people have been arrested to obtain their DNA?

How many officers have worked on the operation since its inception?

How much in overtime has been claimed by Operation Minstead officers overall and in the last year?

When did officers travel abroad as part of the investigation?

Where did they go?

What was the reason for their trips?

How long did they stay?

How much did each overseas trip cost?

WHAT THE MET DID ANSWER

How many DNA samples have been collected? Answer: 2054 voluntary DNA samples in relation to Operation Minstead

How much has it cost to process them? Answer: Each sample costs approximately £50 to process

How many suspects have been arrested or interviewed where obtaining DNA was not the objective? Answer: None

How many officers are working on Operation Minstead now? Answer: There are currently 20 police officers and nine civilian staff, although the staffing levels vary depending on the workload

How many officers have travelled abroad on Operation Minstead? Answer: Eight officers

WHAT DO WE REALLY KNOW ABOUT THE NIGHT STALKER?

So, after nearly 18 years is the Met any nearer to catching the Night Stalker? We do not know.

Has he struck in recent weeks, months or years? We do not know.

Do the police have any suspects? We do not know.

Does the Met know how many victims he has claimed? We do not know.

Do the police know how he chooses his victims? We do not know.

Have millions of pounds been wasted and have many elderly people’s lives blighted unnecessarily through Operation Minstead’s incompetence?

We do not know.


Your Say YourShopper

City, Square Mile says...
5:58pm Wed 28 Oct 09

Let the police get on with catching this individual rather than making out the are avoiding your questions!

What relevance would the cost of this operation have if ultimately they catch the perpetrator??

hell, kent says...
6:36pm Wed 28 Oct 09

If I was a victim I would be very angry if the police were wasting time responding the Newsshopper questions. I'd want them to spend every moment looking for this man. I think the police cost is of no relevance to the victims. What kind of a world do we live in if a price is put on an enquiry. If you think the police aren't doing their job then thats a different matter but at the end of the day all they have is a vague discription - a light skinned black man. Unless they DNA test every man in a 100 mile radius then I'm not sure what else they can do. An article appealing for help from the public would have been more helpful

greenwich, charlton says...
7:56pm Wed 28 Oct 09

The only way this offender will be caught is by a run of the mill - stop check, between the hours of midnight - 6am, for a traffic or other minor offence - possibly some one acting suspiciously in rear gardens!?. His DNA will be taken as routine and matched up with the outstanding offences by pure chance.
It has been widely reported that he is believed to be using a motorcycle. Any one in the early hours, in the boroughs affected, should be stop checked and carefully, looked at by patrolling officers. Especially if he matches the description, is carry a burglary tools and cannot account for his movements???

elcapitan, Unknown says...
11:13pm Wed 28 Oct 09

Newsshopper, I just wish to say that this article is a complete shambles!. I've noticed recently that you don't know a lot about most things you write about ("we do not know"). This article is a waste of time and has simply been written to attack the police and the work they do. My newsshopper days are swiftly coming to an end.

City, Square Mile says...
7:09am Thu 29 Oct 09

I love the way "Exclusive by" is used - not really an exclusive is it - more an attack on the police.

Can not believe it took two people to write this rubbish either.
Does the Newsshopper really think police are idly twiddling their fingers on this case, while wasting tax payers money? We do not know.

Robin2, London says...
9:33am Thu 29 Oct 09

I had the unpleasant experience of a male intruder last year. It was about 1am and I was closing the house down for the night and as I always do looked out of my upstairs window. I saw a man walking up my garden path. It frightened the living daylights out of me. He realised I had seen him & calmly turned around & walked away. I telephoned the police & had an excellent response, they were with with me within 10mins. During this time the man came back for a 2nd time, he must have heard the sirens and went again. The police searched the area said the would keep a patrol & left. Unable to sleep I stayed in my living room. I finally drifted off about 4am and my dog (who was a puppy at the time) started barking profusely, as I looked out of the window the same man had is hands on my window & was staring back at me. Fear is not the right word to describe how I felt. The police came back & were concerned that the man was indeed the Operation Minstead offender as he fitted the profile and I live in a row of houses that prodominately have elderly people living in them. To this day I am grateful for the police response, I even had a follow up call the next day to see how I was. The man was never found. It was unnerving how determined he was to gain entry to my property as he came back 3 times over a 3 hour period. In conclusion, I cannot see what the News Shopper think they achieve by writing such an article. Is it to spread fear in the community? Is it an anti-police article? I am baffled. Perhaps if the police weren't having to answer to local hacks they could spend their time and resources on doing the job you are insinuating they are not doing properly.

typecastboy, Orpington says...
10:34am Sat 31 Oct 09

I always thought the News Shopper was above the actions of the national gutter press that seem to like to slate the police as much as possible. I can assure you that the police are working very hard to catch this person. They do have a limited amount of information, but are waiting for a lucky break to catch him. It has been going on for a long time, but without that lucky break it will continue. Bromley police are committed to making the Borough a safer place, you can't put a cost on that, and in officers have to claim overtime, so be it.

arichards, chichester says...
9:49am Fri 6 Nov 09

Thank you so much for this information.

mr2wheels100, Beckenham says...
7:59pm Sun 15 Nov 09

I wonder if the Police bashing Newsshopper will report that a man has now been arrested for these offences?

I don't expect any positive comments will come from this bias reporting of Linda Piper and Scott Mullins.

Comments are closed on this article.

OPERATION MINSTEAD: What do we really know about the Night Stalker? OPERATION MINSTEAD: What do we really know about the Night Stalker?

OPERATION MINSTEAD: What do we really know about the Night Stalker?

OPERATION MINSTEAD: What do we really know about the Night Stalker?




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