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Cries Unheard (Chapter 1)


Why Children Kill: The Story of Mary Bell By GITTA SERENY
Henry Holt and Company

The Court

The age of criminal responsibility in England and Wales is ten years old (eight in
Scotland). Children between ten and thirteen, however, until the passage of the Law
and Disorder Act in 1998, were presumed in law to be doli incapax, incapable of
criminal intent, and this presumption had to be rebutted before a child could be
convicted. The prosecution had to prove that the child not only had carried out the
alleged acts but knew at the time that what he or she was doing was seriously wrong.
The I998 act has abolished even this safeguard, and anyone ten or over is considered
to have the same moral awareness of right and wrong as his or her elders. The trial of
Regina v. Mary Flora Bell and Norma Joyce Bell uniquely highlighted the problems
of doli incapax and of trying young children in adult courts, but there was never any
doubt that it would take place.

Judicial procedure in any country is bound by its own firmly established rules, but
however and wherever a trial finally takes place, it is preceded by a police
investigation and the arrest of a suspect, who, except in cases of murder, in Britain at
least, is either granted bail or held in detention. In Britain the decision as to whether a
case goes to trial has traditionally been made by the Director of Public Prosecutions,
the government's chief legal executive. Cases of murder, however, almost invariably
end up before a judge and jury, and, until 1972, this meant that cases outside London
would be heard at a session of the Assizes— the courts to which High Court judges
made their "circuits" several times a year, traveling across the country in closed-off
railway carriages and living in virtual seclusion in judges' residences in all the major
cities where they dispensed justice.

The purpose of any criminal trial, whether conducted under the accusatorial system
(as in the UK and US, where the prosecution must prove guilt beyond reasonable
doubt) or by the inquisitorial Napoleonic Code (as in most European countries, where
the judge plays a much more active role), is to establish guilt or innocence. In theory,
facts alone determine this end, although judges can affect the outcome both by their
questions and by their interpolations, which more often than not indicate their own
position and without doubt influence juries. Equally, the judge's summing up will
weigh heavily on any juror's mind and, as this case would so classically prove, judges,
too, are only human, are subject to emotion, and can be swayed by appearances.

The circumstances in which a trial is conducted, however, can be predetermined,


and in Newcastle in 1968 provision had been made for frequent breaks in the
proceedings and for the children's relative comfort. The police officers and court staff
on duty had received special instructions to keep the atmosphere quiet and treat both
the children and their families gently. Nonetheless, a jury trial for murder is a fearful
matter, deliberately grave in its procedure and awesome in its effect.
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The Newcastle Assizes were held in the Moot Hall, an early-nineteenth- century stone
building on the south side of the city where, until a new building was recently
constructed, all court proceedings were conducted. The public gallery in the center of
the court, and the two side galleries, reserved on this occasion for the press, were only
full on four days of the nine-day trial: day one, when the prosecutor, Rudolph Lyons,
presented his case; day six, for Mary's examination-in-chief; day eight, for the judge's
summary to the jury; and day nine, for the verdict. On those four days—the next day's
schedule was posted in the press room at the end of each day's proceedings—there
were reporters from all the main papers and many foreign ones, and there were lines
from early morning for the public seats. On the other days, however, much of the
public gallery was almost empty and most of the reporters stayed away.

This obvious aversion to the case, in Newcastle and in the country as a whole,
indicative of the difference in public attitudes between the sixties and the nineties,
was also reflected in the conduct of the trial and the atmosphere in the court
throughout it. The court—the judge and the lawyers—and the psychiatrists, a number
of whom attended in specially assigned seats from which they could observe the
children, were of course intrigued, but the members of the public (who, twenty-five
years later, would line up at dawn on every one of the seventeen days of the so-called
Bulger trial) and the national press backed away from the case: in 1968 troubled
children were not yet in vogue, and "evil" was best ignored lest it might infect.
Although the trial's progress was briefly reported on news programs, and
commentaries appeared in the quality papers after the verdict, the BBC, in
consideration of young viewers, prohibited any mention of it during the six o'clock
news, and, more surprisingly still, the Sunday tabloids, all of which a quarter of a
century later would dwell for weeks on the Bulger case and pay large sums to
members of the Bulger family for their stories, rejected it altogether. During the trial,
one tabloid, the Sun, specifically refused the story of Mary Bell's life as offered for
sale by her parents.

Major trials were usually assigned to Court One, the largest in the Moot Hall, but in
this case the trial had been transferred to Court Two, a comparatively small room
paneled in dark oak. It was considered less forbidding and had an adjacent waiting
room and lavatory, which would make it easier to take care of the two children. It had
no dock and thus allowed them to be seated in a row between their legal advisers in
front and their families behind them, which made them feel and seem less isolated,
and it had excellent acoustics, which would permit them to be heard even when—as
frequently happened—they whispered.

Despite the careful provisions made for the two girls, neither of them had been
prepared for the solemnity of the court proceedings. For nine days two mutually
incomprehensible languages would be spoken in that ancient chamber. One was the
language of adults, and formal language at that; the other was the language of two
highly disturbed children, the workings of whose minds were a mystery to virtually
everybody present. ("Nobody told us anything," Mary would tell me later. "Not about
people coming in to watch, either.") Nor had they expected the crowds who attended
the opening day of the trial, and both girls—Norma reacting just an instant after
Mary—laughed with excitement when three knocks preceded the usher's "Be
upstanding in court!" ("We didn't talk ... hardly at all during the trial even when we
could have," Mary said. "But, yes, I remember: we laughed. I can't think why and
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what about, but whenever we looked at each other, we laughed." And twenty- five
years later, in another courtroom, I noticed the two boys in the Bulger trial doing
exactly the same almost every time their eyes met.)

I was sitting in the gallery above but just across from the two girls and noted how
the difference between them—Norma's terror against Mary's apparent fascination—
showed up almost immediately. As the judge in his red coat entered in slow and
measured steps, the bewigged barristers and court officials bowed deeply, and the
many police officers spread throughout the court stood stiffly to attention, Mary could
hardly contain her pleasure at the spectacle. Norma, however, her whole body
expressing bewilderment, turned round to her parents, her face reflecting the mixture
of nervous smile and incipient tears that would become as familiar to the spectators as
her mother's shake of her head and gentle movement of her hand, which propelled the
child back to face the court.

Norma, too, was a pretty girl, her hair also dark brown and as shiny as Mary's.
Every day both of them wore immaculately clean and ironed cotton dresses, white
socks, and polished shoes. Taller and physically more developed, Norma had a round
face that looked perpetually puzzled and large, soft brown eyes. One felt worried
about Norma almost all the time, sorry for her often visible distress and concerned for
her obviously caring parents and numerous relatives, who, sitting behind her, attended
every session, stroking and petting the desperate child the many times she burst into
tears. Her ten brothers and sisters, ranging in age from her handicapped sixteen-year-
old brother down to a baby in arms, waited outside the court every day of the trial,
waving to her enthusiastically whenever the door opened. And at every recess they
rushed in and down the steps to what Mary, years later, would describe to me as "the
dungeon," the arched vault in the basement of the court building where, until the fifth
day, when the judge ordered the girls to be kept in separate rooms, the two groups
huddled at opposite corners of the huge chamber during breaks in the proceedings.
There was love and determined gaiety around Norma from the beginning to the end of
the trial. And nobody in court could have thought for a single moment that anyone in
her family believed that little girl capable of murder.

Mary, much smaller, with her heart-shaped face and those remarkable bright-blue
eyes, was not alone either, though the members of her extended family who attended
appeared unable to hide their anxiety and distress. Her grandmother Mrs. McC.,
Betty's thin, fine-boned mother, was there every day, with a white, tired face, straight-
backed and silent. And her aunts, Betty's sisters, Cath and Isa, and Billy's sister,
Audrey, came, and so did Audrey's husband, Peter, and Cath's husband, Jack; all of
them respectable and quiet, avoiding contact with anyone around and, during the
breaks, directing (what one Newcastle police- woman described to me as) "forced-like
cheer" and "desperate affection" toward Mary.

The person who was most conspicuous, however, and impossible to ignore, was
Betty. Anything but silent, she exclaimed volubly, sobbed wildly, and time and again,
the straggly blond wig that incompletely covered her jet-black hair askew,
demonstrated her indignation at what was being said about her child by stalking
furiously out of the court on her high clicking heels, only to return, just as
ostentatiously, shortly afterwards.
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Billy Bell, tall and handsome, with black hair and red-blond sideburns, sat hunched
over with his elbows on his knees and his hands supporting his head, for much of the
time hiding his face. I never saw him speak to anybody, though the policewomen who
guarded Mary would tell me that he was gentle with her during breaks and, while so
taciturn in the courtroom, worked quite hard downstairs to make Mary laugh. Except
for an almost obligatory kiss on leaving, her mother never comforted her unless she
noticed someone watching. But Billy hugged and kissed her every time he came and
went, and she, who several of her relatives said had never allowed herself to be kissed
by any of them and "always turned her head away" when they tried, clung to him.

Mary told me later she was very frightened of her mother during the trial. "She
became more and more..." More what? I asked. "... Angry with me," she said.

It was a long time after the trial that three social workers told me about their first
experience with Betty Bell. Before the case finally arrived at the Assizes, the two
children had appeared in court four times for the extension of their detention. Billy
Bell and Audrey, with Mary's grandmother, had attended the first remand hearing in
Juvenile Court on August 8, the day after the arrest. But to the fury of the Newcastle
Children's Department, Betty was absent. The social workers were disgusted, they
said, and on the late afternoon of the day before the second remand hearing on August
14, three of them, signing themselves out on a half-day holiday for the purpose, drove
up to Glasgow. "Officially, of course, we weren't allowed to do this. But it was bad
enough that we knew so little about that child, we weren't going to have her be
unsupported by her mother for one more day." They found out Betty's pub and her
"stand," as they put it, in a Glasgow street. "We just went and grabbed ahold of her
and bundled her into the car and drove back to Newcastle in the night. She screamed
and yelled, effing us, the department, and the court, but she was going to be there to
support that child in the morning if it was the last thing we did."

It was an interesting act, less of compassion than of principle, for all three admitted
to me at the time that they didn't "like" Mary and that in fact she gave them "the
willies." (And all these years later, Mary, searching her memory, would add what she
remembered about seeing her mother the first time after her arrest. "She came to see
me, I think it was in the cells at West End police, and she went totally hysterical,
shouting at me, what had I done to her this time, having people track her down... It
was my fault and what a shameful thing I was in her life.")

As the two children sat through the proceedings in court, Norma's attention span, we
would see very quickly, was short: she would listen carefully for a few minutes, then
begin to squirm, look around the court, and turn to speak to her mother, who
invariably turned her head back to face the judge. One would then see her obvious
effort to listen until, seconds rather than minutes later, her eyes would again begin to
swivel up and down the room and the galleries and yet again she would turn her head
back to her mother, who, with infinite though one felt weary patience, repeated the
process of directing Norma's attention to whoever was speaking.

Mary, on the contrary, was astonishingly attentive. She hardly appeared to notice
her mother's dramatics, nor did she seem puzzled or particularly distressed. The
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general impression she gave was one of intense interest. Her face, intellectually alive
when she spoke either in whispers to her solicitor, David Bryson, who sat next to her,
or later when she testified, had a perpetual listening quality though it was, except in
anger, emotionally blank. Mary's body was almost completely still; her nerves were in
her hands. Disproportionately broad, they moved constantly, as if a separate part of
her. Apparently absentmindedly she stroked her dress, her hair, herself, and constantly
had a finger, though never a thumb, in her mouth. Every few minutes she took it out,
wiped her lips with the back of her hand, and then rubbed first the back of the hand,
then the finger lengthwise dry on her skirt only to immediately put it, or another one,
back in her mouth. (And twenty-five years later, under almost identical
circumstances, I would see a repetition of this extraordinary manifestation of
disturbance, when one of the two ten-year-olds who murdered James Bulger
demonstrated similar, sometimes identical mannerisms. He too sat much of the time
of the trial with a finger, or in his case usually his thumb, in his mouth or in his ear,
and he too, off and on, absentmindedly wiped it dry on his trousers only to
immediately reinsert and move it around or to and fro in his mouth.)

Mary appeared to listen to every word, even when she quite clearly could not
comprehend the formal language. But in marked contrast to the other child, she
seemed isolated from her surroundings. Except for her young solicitor, who three or
four times during the nine days responded to questions from her, no one talked to her.
And except for the few times when, obviously tired, she fidgeted and received a sharp
tap on the back of the head from her mother, and for the day of the verdict, when she
began to cry and David Bryson for a moment held her, no one touched her.

By the time of the trial, the two children had been in custody for four months. Court-
appointed solicitors prepared the case for each child and instructed barristers who
would represent them at the trial, all paid by legal aid. Norma was represented from
the start by a highly reputed barrister, R. P. Smith, QC, one of the youngest and (so I
was told) brightest silks in the country, who within days of her arrest had persuaded a
judge in chambers in London that she should spend the period of the remand as a
patient at a nearby mental hospital being "observed" by nurses and doctors.

Mary was represented by a distinguished older barrister, Mr. Harvey Robson,


whose long legal career had included several terms as Attorney General in the
Southern Cameroons, and after that many criminal cases in the northeast of England,
though none for murder. Mr. Harvey Robson, I was later reliably told, had not tried to
obtain a hospital order for Mary's remand. (Her solicitor would later tell me that was
because he considered it a hopeless endeavor.) She was sent first to an assessment
center in Croydon, near London, and then to a local remand home in Seaham, closer
to home in County Durham, run by the prison department for girls between fourteen
and eighteen, among whom, because of both her age and her alleged offense, she
immediately figured as a star.

In cases of children accused of serious crime in Britain, it is very unusual for


psychiatrists to be involved before a trial except to establish that the accused minor is
capable of distinguishing right from serious wrong and that the child was mentally
responsible for his or her acts at the time they were committed. To this day, any other
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kind of psychiatric attention before a trial is held to risk adulterating the evidence. It
was astonishing, therefore, that permission was given for Norma to spend the months
of remand in the children's wing of Prudhoe Monkton hospital under the supervision
of a psychiatrist, Dr. Ian Frazer.

While both Norma's hospital and Mary's remand home were benign places, and
neither of the children appeared unhappy, the difference in the arrangements that had
been made for them—a medical environment for Norma, a quasi-punitive one for
Mary—became known very soon.

It is almost impossible nowadays for people, however disciplined or determined,


not to be affected by what they read in our aggressively intrusive press or see on the
ever-present screen. Considering the amount of public interest cases such as this are
bound to attract, there is a measure of hypocrisy in continuing to rely on the
objectivity of juries or even of the courts. And thirty years ago, too, the inevitable
publicity—at the death of the two toddlers, the arrest of two (at that point unnamed)
little girls on suspicion of murder, the conditions of their remand (first rumored but
then disclosed at the trial), and finally on the occasion of the trial itself—all no doubt
considerably influenced the eventual attitude of the court and, arguably, the outcome
of the trial.

It was before the jury was seated and the children were brought into court that the
judge, Sir Ralph Cusack, asked the defense lawyers whether they wished him to
prohibit the girls' names from being published. Both barristers replied they had no
objection to the publication of the names. Their reason, unconvincing to me at the
time, was that the identity of the children was already known in Scotswood and that,
unless the two girls were named, a slur could conceivably remain on other children
whose names would come up in the course of the trial. Twenty-five years later, it was
the precedent set by the Mary Bell case that persuaded the court in Preston to allow
publication of the names of the two ten-year-old boys accused of killing James
Bulger. That decision has caused the same damage to the boys' families and will
reverberate in their own lives as has the one taken by Mr. Justice Cusack in 1968 in
Mary's and in Norma's lives.

(C) 1998 Gitta Sereny All rights reserved. ISBN: 0-8050-6067-7

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