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The most dangerous prisoner! The British "Hannibal" rumored that he would kill people and eat brains, and would die alone in an underground glass cage

author:Anecdotes
The most dangerous prisoner! The British "Hannibal" rumored that he would kill people and eat brains, and would die alone in an underground glass cage

British serial killer Mozley, who also killed 3 people while incarcerated, was called the most dangerous prisoner.

Robert Maudsley, a 68-year-old British "most dangerous prisoner" and serial killer, has been held in solitary confinement for more than four decades. He took a total of 4 lives, 3 of which were committed while in prison, and the means were brutal, known as the British version of "Hannibal". Because of the risks he posed to the physical safety of other prisoners, he was held in solitary confinement for many years in an underground glass cage. His last appeal to be imprisoned with others has been rejected by the prison authorities, meaning he will die alone in a glass cage.

As a teenager, Mozley became addicted to drugs and made a living as a prostitute, committing his first homicide in 1974, when he was only 21 years old. His first victim was a prostitute, and because the other party showed him photos of sexual abuse of children, he was killed for a while. He turned himself in to the police after committing the crime and was subsequently sentenced to life in prison and sent to Broadmoor Psychiatric Hospital.

Unexpectedly, in the hospital, together with another cellmate, he locked up a prisoner who had molested children in a cell and tortured him for 9 hours. He pierced the spoon through the opponent's ear and went straight to the brain, and there are rumors that he also ate the other's brain, so he was named the British version of "Hannibal", but the cannibalistic part was not confirmed.

He was subsequently transferred to Wakefield Prison, a highly vigilante in Yorkshire, where he committed two more murders in one day in 1978. He first invited a wife-killer to his single cell, strangled him to death, and then hid the body under the bed. He then tried to invite other inmates to his cell to "visit", and after being rejected by many, he sneaked into the cell where another child was sexually assaulted, broke the skull of the other party with a makeshift weapon, and slammed the other person's head against the wall, and then calmly walked to the prison office, put the weapon on the table, and told the prison staff that there would be two fewer people in the next roll call.

The prison authorities considered him too dangerous to be detained with other prisoners and built a special cell for him. In 1983 he was admitted to a 5.5 m x 4.5 m cell surrounded by bulletproof glass. It is also known as a "glass cage" because it is very similar to the glass cage in which the fictional serial killer Hannibal was imprisoned in the 1991 movie "The Silence of the Lambs".

According to the British newspaper The Guardian, there was only one bed, a table and a chair in the cell, as well as a toilet and sink bolted to the floor. There is also a sturdy steel door with a small opening at the bottom for guards to pass food and other items. Mozli was confined to his cell 23 hours a day, and another hour was escorted to the courtyard by six guards, but no contact with other prisoners was allowed.

He asked the court in 2000 to let him die, saying in a letter, "What's the point of locking me up 23 hours a day?" Why give me food and let me be active for 1 hour? Who exactly am I risking? Mozli has continued to demand for years not to be held in solitary confinement, but was told last month that he could not. He appealed, hoping to see others at Christmas, but he had been told for the last time not to do so," "because the prison authorities can't take the risk."

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