Robert Maudsley, who developed the nickname by slaughtering child molesters, has been in jail since 1974 and has been branded too dangerous to mix with other prisoners and guards. Despite all of the trauma that follows him, you can say
He made a request to the British prison system for a pet budgie (a type of parrot) or, if that couldnt be granted, a cyanide capsule so that he could take his own life. With only 1 hour a day for exercise and no contact with other people. In the late 60s, when he was still a teenager, he moved to London and did odd jobs to support himself. In a bizarre turn of events, Maudsley was found competent to stand trial for Franciss murder. Updated: August 31, 2013 . Maudsleys frenzied rampage meant he could no longer be considered an ordinary prisoner. [7] At the age of eight, Maudsley was retrieved by his parents and subjected to routine physical abuse until he was eventually removed from their care by social services. Maudsley and Cheeseman (the other hostage taker) took an inmate hostage and barricaded themselves in a cell. He was born in Liverpool in 1953. He then attempted to lure other prisoners into his cell, but all refused. lost his sense. He is quoted as saying: I am left to stagnate, vegetate, and to regress; left to confront my solitary head-on with people who have eyes but dont see and who have ears but dont hear, who have mouths but dont speak. He was physically and emotionally abused by both of his parents. Maudsley, 68, has been locked up since 1974 for the brutal murder of John Farrell who he claims showed him pictures of children he had abused.. Maudsley stabbed Roberts, eventually smashing his head into the wall and killing him. After having been beaten, raped, and prostituted by older men, Maudsley was picked up for sex at age 21 by a man named John Farrell. IQ, and has made requests to take college courses. Britain's most notorious serial killer Robert Maudsley, 68, (pictured) has vowed to kill again if he is ever released from prison. He was failed, denied, abused, neglected, hurt in every possible way and now his life is limited to a ''glass cage''. (Altogether, the Maudsleys had 12 children, but it is unclear when the others were born. By the time he reached adulthood, his mental condition had deteriorated furthermore, and things began going downhill after that. .' [CDATA[// >