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PostPosted: Mon Jun 28, 2021 5:08 am 
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The taxi driver rapist brought down by his fellow cabbies in city's biggest manhunt

https://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/li ... t-20902992

Merseyside Police's largest manhunt happened in the summer of 1990

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Image: Liverpool Echo

In the summer of 1990 one of the biggest and most extraordinary police operations in Merseyside history was launched in Liverpool.

Over the course of around 15 months, at least 10 women in the city had fallen victim to a taxi driver in a black cab preying on his passengers.

Merseyside Police also believed a sex worker was abducted and raped by the same man in the Sefton Park area, although not while he was driving a taxi.

The case sparked Operation Hackney, an enormous dragnet to flush out one of the most dangerous predators the city has seen - a man eventually identified as 29-year-old Frederick Manssuer of Croxteth Lane, Prescot.

Police used a designated area of the Kings Dock in the city centre to encourage all 6,000 registered cabbies in the region to come in to be interviewed and have their photos taken for "elimination purposes".

The ECHO spoke to retired Detective Superintendent Albert Kirby, then the head of the Serious Crime Squad which handled the investigation, about what happened.

Moustached monster

The attacks were broadly similar, on lone passengers usually in the early hours of the morning.

The suspect, described as of muscular build and with a moustache, would suddenly veer away from the passenger's intended destination before stopping in a secluded area and forcing himself on the terrified women.

In one particularly harrowing 1989 case, a 38-year-old mum of two was dragged from the cab by her hair in the car park of a sports centre in Stanley Park, Anfield, and raped.

Several of the victims managed to fight him off.

As the attacks continued and the evidence pointed to the same offender, trapping the serial rapist become the top priority for Merseyside Police's Serious Crime Squad.

Mr Kirby said: "Manssuer was a horrible, objectionable man who lived up to the type of conduct and behaviour that he had inflicted on those women.

"He really was an absolute slimeball.

"We were never able to say for sure, but I remember one witness had described seeing him clean out his cab in the early hours of the morning.

"The gentleman saw he had a pair of women's underwear in the back of his cab, and Manssuer made some excuse that he had picked up a woman who could not afford the fare so he had his evil way with her instead.

"It is not unusual in these kind of cases that he could have been keeping trophies from his victims."

Taxi drivers in the city were also keen to help root out the predator in their ranks, making women feel unsafe to use their services.

Operation Hackney

Mr Kirby, who also headed the investigation into the murder of James Bulger, told the ECHO: "Frederick Manssuer was subjecting all sorts of women to really obscene behaviour, and to the best of my recollection it was not an easy investigation.

"We had to launch Operation Hackney, and it really was a big operation.

"I distinctly remember, and because my brother-in-law was a taxi driver, I used to hear from him how the taxi drivers were only too happy to come in and help clear it up.

"They were being tarnished with the same brush, and it was difficult for the 99.9% of them who were hard-working, law abiding and generous people. They had this stigma."

The massive task of speaking to every cabbie in the region began on July 17, 1990.

Hundreds of drivers turned up each day to help in the investigation.

Image
Image: Liverpool Echo

'A very strange bloke'

What police did not know in July 1990 was that Manssuer already feared that they were closing in on him.

His business associate and friend Alan Gore, then 43, had a half-share in a black cab with Manssuer, and told the ECHO about a strange conversation the pair had before Operation Hackney began.

The rapes had begun to generate publicity when detectives told reporters on the crime beat that they suspected one or two taxi drivers were responsible for the vicious attacks.

In September 1989, the ECHO front-page carried a photo-fit image of a suspect who had tried to rape a young woman in his cab, one which turned out to be reasonably accurate.

Image
Image: Liverpool Echo

Mr Gore, from Huyton, told reporters how one day Manssuer strode up to their cab grasping a copy of the paper.

He said: "He suddenly came up to me one day and said 'look they've got a photograph of the rapist in the paper'.

"It was a very strange incident; you could see he was in a panic."

He added: "Fred was a very strange bloke indeed."

Fatal mistake

It was a conversation between Mr Gore and his business partner that eventually led to Manssuer's downfall.

Despite his reluctance, Mr Gore was able to persuade Manssuer to head down to King's Dock to be interviewed by police.

Manssuer told detectives he had a licence to drive cabs in Knowsley, but did not mention he had also held a licence with Liverpool City Council for years.

The pair were among around 2,500 drivers who turned up to be interviewed, and their attendance meant the painstaking police operation paid off.

As part of their enquiries, detectives asked a sister of one of the victims, who had also caught a glimpse of the attacker, to look through some photos they had gathered in September 1990.

She had no hesitation in picking out Manssuer.

Net closes

Confident they had their man, detectives began to look into Manssuer's past and made a worrying discovery.

It emerged that two years earlier, Manssuer had tried to kill himself and officers had been called to a house in Knowsley where they found him bleeding from self-inflicted wounds to his neck and wrists.

When police approached him he was reported as muttering that he should be "left to die" before suddenly lunging for the officers, claiming he had Aids.

Manssuer reportedly tried to bite the arresting officers and smear them with blood before he was restrained, leaving them facing an anxious weeks-long wait for test results, which thankfully returned negative.

The ECHO reported how officers planned the arrest of Manssuer on rape charges carefully, with officers donning protective clothing.

In the end Manssuer, who lived with his wife and young son, came quietly.

The case moved rapidly from there, and the relatively new technology of DNA testing quickly linked Manssuer to three rapes - with detectives planning to grill him about many more offences.

Mr Kirby and his team were also able to confirm that Manssuer was indeed HIV positive, meaning more trauma for his victims who required tests.

The results of those tests remained private, although officers at the time told the ECHO it was not believed he had transmitted the virus to his victims.

Satisfied to have got the right man, the officers involved did not know the investigation was about to hit a tragic wall.

Justice denied

On September 28, 1990, Manssuer made his first appearance in court charged with the rapes of three women.

Ahead of what was expected to be a major trial, the suspect was remanded in custody and carted off to Walton prison to await the next hearing.

But a serious mistake was made in processing the prisoner.

An important piece of paperwork, highlighting that Manssuer was a suicide and HIV risk, was not passed to prison officers transporting him to Walton.

The mistake meant he was locked up in solitary confinement rather than the prison's hospital wing, where he would have been under supervision.

Just before midnight that same day, Manssuer was found hanging in his cell and was later pronounced dead.

An inquest jury returned a verdict of suicide.

Mr Kirby told the ECHO: "I felt very, very sorry for the women involved, they were denied the chance to see justice done because he took his own life.

"And my staff worked very hard on the operation. I feel like we only scratched the surface in relation to his perverted sexual activities.

"There would no doubt be further offences that he committed that were not identified."

Another senior officer who worked in Mr Kirby's team, Detective Inspector David Byrom, told the ECHO at the time: "This was a huge inquiry which none of us involved with it will ever forget.

"Obviously it is unsatisfactory that justice was not allowed to run its course.

"Manssuer's death at Walton Jail came as a great shock - it was not the way we wanted things to turn out."

While Manssuer was hauled off the streets before he could hurt anyone else, detectives feared he may have been responsible for attacks going back to 1987.

The full extent of his crimes will likely never be known.

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Image: Liverpool Echo


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PostPosted: Mon Jun 28, 2021 5:09 am 
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Quote:
The case sparked Operation Hackney, an enormous dragnet to flush out one of the most dangerous predators the city has seen - a man eventually identified as 29-year-old Frederick Manssuer of Croxteth Lane, Prescot.

Quite young for an HCD, obviously, but he looks a tad older than 29 in the photograph :-k

Quote:
Police used a designated area of the Kings Dock in the city centre to encourage all 6,000 registered cabbies in the region to come in to be interviewed and have their photos taken for "elimination purposes".

Wasn't there something like that more recently, or at least it was suggested?

Or am I thinking of a broader manhunt rather than something taxi-related? :-k

Quote:
It emerged that two years earlier, Manssuer had tried to kill himself and officers had been called to a house in Knowsley where they found him bleeding from self-inflicted wounds to his neck and wrists.

When police approached him he was reported as muttering that he should be "left to die" before suddenly lunging for the officers, claiming he had Aids.

Manssuer reportedly tried to bite the arresting officers and smear them with blood before he was restrained, leaving them facing an anxious weeks-long wait for test results, which thankfully returned negative.

How precisely were drivers vetted back then? :-k


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PostPosted: Mon Jun 28, 2021 5:13 am 
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they must be short of taxi stories to put this piece in reminding everyone how safe for lone females using a black cab is :wink: :roll:

I wonder if Uber got them to do it :-k

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PostPosted: Mon Jun 28, 2021 6:23 pm 
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Did read that yesterday and I considered putting it up, but thought some kind soul would do it for me.

Was going to headline it as the Liverpool Worboys.

But it's yet more evidence that if you are a dirty perv with a criminal free history, the taxi trade is a good route for someone to do really bad things.

As evidenced by those scumbags abusing girls in the north of England.

Which is why many councils are clamping down on issues that in the past wouldn't have warranted any action.

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PostPosted: Mon Jun 28, 2021 6:25 pm 
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Quote:
How precisely were drivers vetted back then? :-k

Not particularly well it would appear. :sad:

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PostPosted: Mon Jun 28, 2021 8:02 pm 
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Sussex wrote:
Quote:
How precisely were drivers vetted back then? :-k

Not particularly well it would appear. :sad:

Well you would be wrong then.. everyone got a police check and had go to a solicitor and swear that the information you provided was true .they did not know if he was a liverpool or sefton or knowsley driver

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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2021 5:13 am 
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MR T wrote:
Sussex wrote:
Quote:
How precisely were drivers vetted back then? :-k

Not particularly well it would appear. :sad:

Well you would be wrong then.. everyone got a police check and had go to a solicitor and swear that the information you provided was true .they did not know if he was a liverpool or sefton or knowsley driver



you do though don't you ?

I still say this is unnecessary mud raking and cannot be good for the trade at an already difficult time

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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2021 10:47 am 
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Sussex wrote:
Was going to headline it as the Liverpool Worboys.

That was my first thought as well, but decided against it [-(

Funny thing, though, apart from some sources that have used the Echo's piece, couldn't find one mention of this guy online. Compare that to Worboys.

But that's the thing with the internet at times - it's sometimes like there's a whole world that never existed before the internet, at least if you're relying wholly on stuff online rather than thirty-year-old press cuttings and the like.

Some bizarre stuff online, though. For example, this reads like it's a poor English translation of the Echo's piece. But, of course, the Echo's piece was in English. It's as if someone has translated it badly into a foreign language, and someone else has translated it back to English. Won't bother with the whole piece, but the headline indicates that all might not be well with the piece :-s


Taxi driver rape criminal defeated by fellow cabbage in the city’s largest man hunt

https://londonnewstime.com/taxi-driver- ... nt/322173/

Here's an example:

Liverpool Echo wrote:
"The gentleman saw he had a pair of women's underwear in the back of his cab, and Manssuer made some excuse that he had picked up a woman who could not afford the fare so he had his evil way with her instead.

"It is not unusual in these kind of cases that he could have been keeping trophies from his victims."

Taxi drivers in the city were also keen to help root out the predator in their ranks, making women feel unsafe to use their services.


London News Time wrote:
“The gentleman saw him have a woman’s underwear behind his taxi, and Mansour picked up a woman he couldn’t afford to buy, so instead she and his evil path I made an excuse that I had it.

“In such cases, it is not uncommon for him to have protected the trophy from victims.”

Taxi drivers in the city were also keen to help eradicate predators in their class, making women feel dangerous to use their services.

:-s :-s :-s


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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2021 4:12 pm 
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The Police cocked it up. He was one of the fist to be interviewed and they let him go only got him when they DNA tested the whole trade ,,, everyone in the taxi trade volunteered for the test .... well most of them

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PostPosted: Tue Jun 29, 2021 5:57 pm 
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Quote:
"It is not unusual in these kind of cases that he could have been keeping trophies from his victims."

It's pretty unusual for me, as I suspect with the vast vast vast majority of the trade.

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PostPosted: Wed Jun 30, 2021 10:45 am 
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Sussex wrote:
Quote:
"It is not unusual in these kind of cases that he could have been keeping trophies from his victims."

It's pretty unusual for me, as I suspect with the vast vast vast majority of the trade.

You have Victims?

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PostPosted: Wed Jun 30, 2021 2:17 pm 
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{Taxi driver rape criminal defeated by fellow cabbage in the city’s largest man hunt}

Fellow Cabbage ???


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PostPosted: Wed Jun 30, 2021 2:38 pm 
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x-ray wrote:
{Taxi driver rape criminal defeated by fellow cabbage in the city’s largest man hunt}

Fellow Cabbage ???


have you never heard that before it's what police and councils call taxi drivers and PH because we are considered the leftovers of society and cabbage is what most people leave on their plate :wink: :lol:

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PostPosted: Wed Jun 30, 2021 4:32 pm 
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I’ve been called worse! :D


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PostPosted: Fri Oct 28, 2022 10:16 am 
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The Echo has republished this piece on its website. Not sure why, and it's not unusual for the press to rehash stuff like this periodically. But it was just 16 months ago when the article first appeared :-|


Cabbies helped snare taxi rapist in biggest manhunt in Merseyside history

https://www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/li ... t-25371415

Operation Hackney was one of the most extraordinary policing operations of the 1990s


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