Advocate fears Brady
may have dementia

Moors murderer Ian Brady could be showing early signs of dementia, a close confidante has claimed.

Jackie Powell, Brady’s mental health advocate, said his behaviour had become increasingly bizarre and medical experts believed he was now seriously ill.

The revelation has prompted fears he may become unable to remember where he buried Keith Bennett, the only one of his five young victims whose remains have never been found.

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Brady, 76, was jailed for life in 1966 along with his girlfriend Myra Hindley for abducting, abusing, torturing and killing five youngsters in Manchester before burying them on nearby Saddleworth Moor.

He has been held at Ashworth high-security psychiatric hospital in Liverpool since 1985.

Ms Powell, who was visited Brady regularly since 1999, told the Daily Mirror that during a recent meeting with him she saw signs of dementia, and believed he was nearing the end of his life.

But she said that Brady would not accept that there was anything wrong and refused to undergo tests that could confirm whether he has Alzheimer’s disease.

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She told the newspaper: “Brady has to be in control and getting dementia is his worst nightmare.

“He never wants to expose his feelings so he is terrified of losing his self-control. Everything he does has always been very calculated and he could not imagine anything worse than his own mind slipping away from him. He’d never admit it, but I believe he is frightened about what is happening to him.”

Ms Powell said that Brady had withdrawn into himself, and that he now seems to be “waiting to die”.

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