Former Halifax journalist gives 'shocking' recall on Netflix's new Yorkshire Ripper documentary
and live on Freeview channel 276
In the new four-part Netflix documentary The Ripper, Christa Ackroyd gave her view working as a budding, young female reporter at the height of the infamous unsolved murders of Yorkshireman Peter Sutcliffe.
It was on April 4, 1979 when Sutcliffe killed his 10th victim Josephine Whitaker, who was killed in Savile Park around midnight aged just 19.
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Hide AdSpeaking on the Netflix documentary, Mrs Ackroyd said: "It was really shocking to see the Ripper Squad in this exclusive area.
"It was the first person I've ever seen dead.
"Murder in such a middle-class area changed everything.
"She was a middle-class clerk who worked at the Halifax Building Society."
Mrs Ackroyd, would go on to work for the BBC and now writes as a columnist for the Yorkshire Post, but gave a mixed review of her time covering the Halifax patch after hearing about Sutcliffe's fourth victim Patricia Atkinson, who was murdered in Bradford in April 1977.
"To hear about Patricia's murder immediately resonated," said Mrs Ackroyd.
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Hide Ad"Patricia's vulnerability really did strike accord with me."
At the time, Ms Atkinson, who was a mum-of-three, was working as a prostitute.
"Suddenly, it started to move closer to me personally," said Mrs Ackroyd.
"To learn that a woman had died under such horrific circumstances made me realise I knew nothing about what was happening.
"I was some naive, closeted, lucky young girl.
"I wanted to be a reporter.
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Hide Ad"When I went to work in newspapers it was such a disappointment, because we [women] were so categorised.
"We [women] did the golden weddings,and the WI [women's institution] meetings, the flower shows.
"The men did the crime. The men told interesting stories."
Mrs Ackroyd then regaled her opinion that because men were covering the murders left by Sutcliffe, along with male police officers, it put 'seeds of doubt' as to how these women were being portrayed.
"The press and police had inferred that this was a man who hated prostitutes," she said.
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Hide Ad"A description that planted in your mind that if you are not that kind of woman, who had many boyfriends, then you were fine."
However, it would later be revealed that many of Sutcliffe's victims were not prostitutes, including some of the victims who were accused of taking part in that activity with a lack of evidence - such as his first victim Wilma McCann, who died aged 28 on October 28, 1975.
The Netflix documentary comes over a month after the death of Sutcliffe, who died of coronavirus on November 13 this year.
In total, he murdered 13 women across Yorkshire and north-west England between 1975 and 1980.
Sutcliffe was convicted of the crimes in 1981.
He spent three decades at Broadmoor Hospital before being moved to HMP Frankland in County Durham in 2016.