Hungerford massacre

The Hungerford massacre was a spree shooting in Wiltshire and Berkshire, United Kingdom, which occurred on 19 August 1987 when 27-year-old Michael Ryan shot and killed sixteen people, including an unarmed police officer and his own mother, before shooting himself. No firm motive for the killings has ever been established.

Hungerford massacre
Michael Ryan in 1986
LocationSavernake Forest, Wiltshire, UK
Hungerford, Berkshire, UK
Date19 August 1987 (1987-08-19)
c.12:30 – 18:52 (BST)
Attack type
Spree shooting, mass shooting, murder-suicide, matricide
WeaponsM1 Carbine, Beretta 9mm pistol, Type 56
Deaths17 (including the perpetrator)
Injured15+
PerpetratorMichael Ryan
MotiveUnknown

A report on the massacre, commissioned by Home Secretary Douglas Hurd, found that understaffing and telecommunication problems may have hampered the police response to the developing incident. The killings were committed using legally owned handguns and semi-automatic rifles, and the report stated that existing firearms legislation should be stricter, and consequently the Firearms (Amendment) Act 1988 was passed in the wake of the massacre. The Act banned the ownership of semi-automatic centre-fire rifles and restricted the use of shotguns with a capacity of more than three cartridges.

The shootings have been compared to those in Dunblane in 1996, and in Cumbria in 2010, and the Hungerford massacre remains one of the deadliest firearms incidents in British history.

Shootings

Wiltshire

The Golden Arrow petrol station near Froxfield, Wiltshire, where Ryan attempted to shoot the cashier (pictured in 2010)

On the morning of 19 August 1987, 27-year-old Michael Ryan drove his silver Vauxhall Astra GTE to Savernake Forest, Wiltshire, seven miles (11 km) to the west of his hometown of Hungerford.[1]:5[2]:166 In his car were his Beretta pistol, M1 carbine rifle, and Type 56 semi-automatic rifle.[2]:166 That day, 35-year-old Susan Godfrey and her two pre-school children had travelled from Burghfield Common near Reading and were picnicking in the forest.[2]:168–169 At 12:30 BST, Ryan, openly armed, approached the family and Susan placed the children in her car. After abducting her at gunpoint, Ryan walked Godfrey 75–100 yards (70–90 m) into the forest and shot her 13 times with the Beretta.[1]:5[3] A woman walking in the woods found Godfrey's children,[2]:168–169 who introduced themselves to the woman and said "[a] man in black killed my mummy".[4]:02:50

Ryan left the forest and drove east on the A4, stopping to fill both his car and a petrol can at the Golden Arrow petrol station near Froxfield at approximately 12:35. After another customer at the station left, Ryan shot at the cashier from the forecourt using the M1 carbine.[1]:5 He entered the store and attempted to shoot her at point-blank range; his gun had either jammed[2]:168–169 or the magazine had inadvertently detached.[4]:02:38 He left the petrol station, driving east into Berkshire. The cashier telephoned 999; this call had been preceded by another emergency call from the previous customer who believed they saw an armed robbery.[2]:170[4]:27:55 Thames Valley Police (TVP) sent two patrol cars to the A4 to investigate. They were at that point unaware of the murder in Savernake Forest,[1]:6 which had been responded to by officers from Wiltshire Police, and there were initially two manhunts underway.[4]:29:05

Hungerford

Streets and locations in Hungerford where the fatal shootings occurred
1
South View
2
Hungerford Common footpath
3
Fairview Road
4
Memorial Gardens
5
Bulpit Lane
6
Priory Avenue
7
Priory Road
8
John O'Gaunt School

South View and Fairview Road

After leaving Froxfield, Ryan returned to the home he shared with his mother on South View in Hungerford.[1]:2[1]:5 Arriving there at approximately 12:45,[1]:5 he was seen by neighbours who described him as looking upset. Soon after entering his house, one of the witnesses heard gunshots; Ryan had shot the two family dogs.[2]:170 He exited the house with equipment such as ammunition, survival equipment, and a flak jacket. He failed to start his car, and instead returned to the house and set the living room alight using the petrol he purchased from Froxfield;[2]:170 Leaving the house, he headed east on South View towards school playing fields. En route he shot and killed two of his neighbours, Roland and Sheila Mason,[5] with the Type 56 and Beretta respectively.[1]:5 A fourteen-year-old girl, who also lived nearby, heard the noise and went to see what it was; Ryan shot her four times in the legs.[2]:170 She sought first aid from her mother and another nearby resident and survived.[6] Ryan was chastised by a 77-year-old neighbour for "scaring everybody to death" for making noise, although he did not shoot her.[2]:172 Ryan then wounded Marjorie Jackson, one of the people who had seen him arrive home, in her back. She telephoned her friend George White for help, and asked him to collect her husband Ivor from work in Newbury.[2]:172

Past the playing fields, Ryan walked along a footpath towards the town's common. He shot and killed 51-year-old Kenneth Clements with the Type 56.[1]:5 Clements had been walking his dog with his family; the family escaped without injury.[2]:172 At this time, approximately 12:50, police had linked the incident in Froxfield to the many calls they received in Hungerford and instead focused on South View.[2]:172 Ryan returned to South View from the common, and the first police officers to arrive aimed to close both ends of the road to contain a possible gunman. These officers were unarmed, and when Ryan saw the police response he shot one of the officers, PC Roger Brereton, in the chest with the Beretta.[1]:5[2]:172[7] Brereton, who was in his patrol car, crashed into a telegraph pole. At 12:58, Ryan shot and killed him with the Type 56 while he was using his radio to report an active shooter.[1]:5[2]:172[8]

Still on South View, Ryan next shot at a mother and daughter who had just turned onto the lane in their Volvo. Both were struck, although the mother was able to reverse the car out of the road.[1]:6[2]:172 Ryan next fired at the two-person crew of an ambulance that was responding to 999 calls on South View; both escaped without major injury.[2]:172 After this, two of Brereton's colleagues securing the east end of South View came upon Kenneth Clements's son, who informed them that the shooter had continued west on South View.[2]:172 Heading to investigate, Ryan shot at the constables; one took shelter in a house and the other – with Clements's son – drove across the common to safety. At 13:12, this officer radioed to request support from TVP's Tactical Firearms Unit (TFU) having seen the firearms Ryan was using. The TFU was on a training exercise in Otmoor, Oxfordshire[4]:18:32 (approximately 40 miles (60 km) from Hungerford) and would not have all its members in attendance until 14:20.[2]:173 The officer, PC Jeremy Wood, set up a makeshift command post on the common, approximately 500 yards (460 m) from South View.[2]:177

Ryan next shot at George White, who was returning from Newbury with Ivor Jackson. White was driving his Toyota into South View when Ryan shot him with the Type 56;[1]:6 he was killed instantly. Jackson sustained severe injuries and feigned death, but survived his injuries.[2]:173 Ryan then walked to the junction of South View and Fairview Road, where he used the Type 56 to shoot and kill 84-year-old Abdur[lower-alpha 1] Khan who was tending his garden.[1]:6[2]:173[2]:174 After firing at and injuring a pedestrian on Fairview Road, Ryan headed back towards the common. One of the police officers in attendance made another 999 call but by this point the telephone network had reached its capacity.[2]:174 On South View, Ryan's mother Dorothy – who had been out shopping and running errands[1]:5[2]:166 – returned in her car to see Michael armed; she shouted for him to stop before he shot her four times, twice at point-blank range.[lower-alpha 2][2]:174[10]:7 On heading towards the common, a resident of a parallel street shouted at Ryan to "kindly stop that racket"; he responded by shooting her in the groin.[2]:174 At 13:18 PC Wood was joined by two armed police officers at the command post on the common. Two minutes later, they saw Ryan at the War Memorial Recreation Grounds on the edge of the common.[2]:177

Hungerford Common and town centre

After shooting dead Marcus Barnard, Ryan headed north on Priory Avenue (away from the camera)

Near the War Memorial Recreation Grounds, Ryan shot 26-year-old Francis Butler with the Type 56 as he walked his dog.[1]:6 A witness gave Butler first aid, but he died before an ambulance arrived.[5] At this point, Ryan discarded the carbine, it having been inoperable since the shooting in Froxfield.[2]:177 He also temporarily discarded the Type 56, possibly because of spent ammunition, before recovering it.[1]:6 From this point, all the murders used the Beretta.[1]:6

Ryan next shot at, but missed, a teenager on a bicycle.[5] On reaching Bulpit Lane, Ryan shot and killed taxi driver Marcus Barnard, who was in his cab.[2]:177 Ryan headed north on Priory Avenue, where he shot and injured the occupant of a parked van.[2]:178 By this time, police had set up road diversions and some of Ryan's victims were drivers affected by these change of routes.[2]:178 Douglas and Kathleen Wainwright, visiting their son on Priory Avenue, were forced to approach from the south, where Ryan was. Approximately 100 yards (90 m) from their destination, Ryan shot Douglas dead and injured Kathleen before non-fatally shooting at two other drivers.[2]:179 Standing near Priory Avenue's junction with Tarrants Hill, Ryan shot at a van, killing Eric Vardy.[1]:6[2]:179

At 13:30, Ryan headed via Orchard Park Close to Priory Road, shooting at houses as he passed them.[2]:179 He then shot at a passing car on Priory Road and fatally injured the driver, 22-year-old Sandra Hill.[1]:6[2]:180

After shooting Hill, Ryan forced his way into a house further down Priory Road and shot the occupants, 66-year-old Jack Gibbs and his 62-year-old wife Myrtle. Jack was killed instantly, and Myrtle died two days later at the Princess Margaret Hospital in Swindon.[2]:180[11] From the house, Ryan shot at neighbouring houses and caused injury to the occupants.[5] Ryan continued south on Priory Road where he shot once at a car driven by 34-year-old Ian Playle, who was fatally struck in the neck. His wife and their two children escaped injury; Playle died at the Radcliffe Infirmary in Oxford two days later.[2]:180[11]

At 13:45 the police helicopter arrived and broadcast warnings to the public.[2]:182 At this time, Ryan shot and injured a male outside a property on Priory Road.[1]:7

Suicide

Ryan shot at helicopters from the classroom at the top-right of the three-storey building[9]

Ryan was next seen further along Priory Road approaching John O'Gaunt School, which was closed for the summer holidays.[12]:200 The school's caretaker reported seeing a man enter one of the school buildings at 13:52,[13]:221 and the TFU secured gardens and houses in the area before surrounding the school at approximately 16:00.[2]:184 At 16:40 they heard gunshots in the vicinity of the school and more officers went to the scene. [1]:11 At least one further shot from a school building was heard at 17:15; these may have been aimed at the police and press helicopters.[1]:11 Ryan's precise location after the shooting at 13:45 had been unknown as there had been no confirmed sightings,[1]:7 but at approximately 17:26 police first saw him at the school shortly after he had thrown his Type 56 out of a third-floor window.[1]:11[2]:184 Once containment of Ryan was confirmed, fire and ambulance crews were able to access the previously locked-down parts of the town, including the fire in South View,[1]:11 which had spread and destroyed the Ryans' home as well as the three other properties in the terrace.[14][15][9]

Ryan fired at both police and helicopters that were circling above the school.[9] He became engaged in conversation with a sergeant within the TFU and informed them of his arsenal and ammunition, claiming that he had a grenade as well as the Beretta.[2]:184 He said that he would not exit the building until the police informed him of the welfare of his mother, and stated that "Hungerford must be a bit of a mess".[2]:184 The sergeant said he understood Ryan when he claimed that his mother's death was "a mistake"; Ryan reportedly replied, "How can you understand? I wish I had stayed in bed."[2]:184 He later shouted, "It's funny. I killed all those people, but I haven't the guts to blow my own brains out." At 18:52, after a few minutes of silence, a shot was heard from the school building and Ryan no longer responded to police.[1]:11 Without knowing the full extent of Ryan's arsenal and ammunition, and with the possibility of booby traps or more perpetrators, the police stayed at their positions and devised an operation to enter the building.[1]:11 At 20:00 the plan was enacted, and at 20:10 armed police entered a barricaded room to find Ryan having shot himself dead through the right temple.[1]:11[2]:184

Aftermath

The shootings were declared a major incident and in the immediate aftermath, TVP locked-down many areas to secure evidence and exclude press activity. A CID headquarters was established at the force's premises in Sulhamstead, approximately 18 miles (30 km) east of Hungerford. They conducted a sweep search of the town, identifying 78 bullet holes in 15 vehicles. Investigations were supported by the force's Autoindex system; the HOLMES platform not yet implemented.[1]:12

Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher visited Hungerford on the day after the massacre.[16] She stated that "if [gun control laws] need to be tightened up [to] prevent more events like this, of course, that will be considered."[17]

Funerals for the dead were conducted in the weeks after the tragedy,[1]:12 beginning with Eric Vardy's in Great Shefford on 26 August.[5][18][19]:37 Roger Brereton's funeral, held the following day at St Mary's Church in Shaw, Berkshire, was attended by Home Secretary Douglas Hurd.[20] Dorothy Ryan was buried in Calne, Wiltshire on 29 August.[21] Michael Ryan was cremated at Reading Crematorium on 3 September;[22][23]:258 the location of his ashes known to only one member of his family.[24]

Inquest and report

The inquest into the massacre concluded on 29 September. The coroner for West Berkshire, Charles Hoile, recognised the dichotomy of the nation wanting rapid police response to such events while also insisting on a routinely unarmed police force.[1]:12 The jury in the inquest recommended to the coroner that "semi-automatic weapons should not generally be available [and] an individual should not be allowed to own an unlimited quantity of arms and ammunition."[1]:14

Hurd commissioned TVP's Chief Constable, Colin Smith, to prepare a report on the incident. The Hungerford Report found that on the day of the massacre, the town – which was usually policed by two sergeants and twelve constables – was policed by one sergeant, two patrol constables, and one station duty officer.[1]:1 It reported that such restrictions in personnel that day "could certainly have become a relevant factor had Ryan not been traced and contained rapidly."[1]:14

Communication – both internally within the force as well as handling communications with the public – was criticised. Telephone exchanges could not handle the number of 999 calls made by witnesses; the Newbury exchange normally handled 300,000 calls per day but this increased to 800,000 on 19 August.[1]:8 Some witnesses' reports were significantly delayed which resulted in out-of-date or duplicate information being passed to emergency services. The public telephone network, as well as lines to the emergency services, were saturated. As a result, British Telecom implemented measures to relieve stress on the telecommunications network on the evening of 19 August, freeing up communications for the police. The force also used 13 mobile telephones; as with the landline network, Racal blocked the public from using the cellular network to allow the police's mobile phones to work.[1]:10

The report suggested that although the police force helicopter was undergoing repairs and did not arrive at Hungerford until 13:45, it was likely a catalyst for Ryan to seek refuge in the school. Smith said that the presence of helicopters other than the police's aircraft hampered operations; at least four private helicopters – most (if not all) from the press – were a distraction for the police pilot and made ground units unable to hear radio transmissions.[1]:15

Regarding Ryan's firearms, the report determined that his weapon collection had been legally licensed.[1]:3 Smith concluded that "the public [...] will demand that this tragic event is used as a catalyst for changes in both the law and administrative procedures [of gun licencing]", and that neither "legitimate sporting [nor] leisure interests" would be seriously damaged nor significantly impeded if semi-automatic firearms were prohibited from general sale.[1]:16

The report led to the Firearms (Amendment) Act 1988, which banned the ownership of semi-automatic centre-fire rifles and restricted the use of shotguns with a capacity of more than three cartridges (in magazine plus the breech).[25] An amnesty held following the passing of the Act amassed 48,000 firearms.[26]

In June 1988, PC Brereton was posthumously awarded the Queen's Commendation for Brave Conduct.[27]

Perpetrator

Michael Robert Ryan was born on 18 May 1960 at Savernake Hospital in Marlborough, Wiltshire,[5] the only child of Alfred and Dorothy Ryan.[2]:161 His father, Alfred Henry Ryan (born 1904 or 1905) had worked for a local government agency as a building inspector and died from cancer in 1985 at the age of 80.[2]:161[2]:163[28]:228 Ryan's mother, Dorothy (born 1925 or 1926) was 19 years Alfred's junior and worked as a school dinner lady and later as a waitress at Elcot Park Hotel.[2]:161–162

Ryan attended Hungerford Primary School and John O'Gaunt School before studying at Newbury College from the age of 16.[23]:252[14] He dropped out of college before working for short periods as a handyman and labourer at Downe House School and Littlecote House before claiming unemployment benefits in early 1986.[5] Some sources state that Ryan was at one point employed as an antique dealer,[29]:60 although this is not corroborated by the official report into the shootings.[1]:2 On 7 April 1987, he began employment as a labourer on a Manpower Services Commission scheme with Newbury District Council, working on footpaths and fences including at the River Thames in Reading.[2]:164[1]:2[5] He left the job on 9 July,[1]:2 and returned to claiming benefits.[2]:164

As well as firearms, combat uniform, and militaria, Ryan was interested in motor vehicles; at various times he had owned a moped, an off-road motorcycle, and a Ford Escort XR3i, as well as the Vauxhall Astra GTE he drove at the time of the massacre.[5]

Firearms ownership

Ryan was issued a shotgun certificate on 2 February 1978, and on 11 December 1986 he was granted a firearms certificate covering the ownership of two pistols.[1]:3 The licence only permitted Ryan to use the weapons at approved ranges; his application stated that he would use them at the Dunmore Shooting Centre Club in Abingdon[1]:3 and he was also a member of the Wiltshire Shooting Centre rifle club in Devizes.[2]:167 He later applied to have the certificate amended to cover a third pistol, as he intended to sell one of the two he had acquired since the granting of the certificate (a Smith & Wesson .38-caliber revolver) and to buy two more. This was approved on 30 April 1987. On 14 July, he applied for another variation, to cover two semi-automatic rifles, which was approved on 30 July. At the time of the massacre, he was licensed to possess eight firearms, which he purchased between 17 December 1986 and 8 August 1987:[1]:3[30]

Ryan used the Beretta, the Type 56, and the M1 carbine in the massacre. The CZ pistol was being repaired by a dealer at the time, and he had sold the Bernardelli shortly before the shootings.[1]:3 The Norinco was purchased from firearms dealer Mick Ranger.[31]

Ryan showed some of his firearms – as well as improvised explosive devices – to his colleagues at his labouring job. As well as his target practice at legitimate venues, Ryan used a large road sign at the junction of the M4 and the A338.[2]:164

Health and motive

In the hours following the massacre, newspapers speculated that Ryan was inspired by viewing "video nasties" despite there having been no opportunity to investigate such causes.[32]:35–57 The British tabloid press was filled with stories about Ryan's life; biographies stated that as well as watching violent videos he had a near-obsessive fascination with firearms and possessed magazines about survival skills and firearms, including Soldier of Fortune.[33]:314[34]:209 The Rambo films were later speciously suggested as inspiring Ryan, although there is no evidential link between fictional video violence and the subsequent enactment of actual physical violence.[35]:79

Ryan had neither previous criminal convictions nor a record of medical problems.[1]:2 Following his death, Ryan's mental health came under analysis. John Hamilton, the medical director of Broadmoor Hospital,[36]:116 stated that "Ryan was most likely to be suffering from acute schizophrenia. He might have had a reason for doing what he did, but it was likely to be bizarre and peculiar to him."[5] Jim Higgins, a consultant forensic psychiatrist, suspected that Ryan was psychotic, describing how "matricide is the schizophrenic crime."[5][37] A psychologist in BBC One's The Hungerford Massacre documentary described how Ryan had "anger and contempt for ordinary life".[38]

Although no motive for the massacre has been determined,[1]:1 psychologist Craig Jackson of Birmingham City University has suggested that Ryan may have been sexually motivated in his attack on Godfrey in Savernake Forest; the presence of a groundsheet 10 yards (10 m) from where her body was found may have meant that Ryan had laid it down to contain DNA evidence.[1]:5[9] Jackson believes that the shootings that followed were not planned as Ryan had no manifesto, but may have been borne out of a desire to control. He may have been influenced, however, by the Hoddle Street massacre in Melbourne, Australia, 10 days previously.[9]

Investigative psychologist Keith Ashcroft likened the massacre to the shootings at Dunblane in 1996 and Cumbria in 2010, stating that "the killers [were] subject to gossip and sometimes quite serious victimisation. Their rage at perceived injustice is way beyond that of a normal person, but they have not lost touch with reality."[3] Ashcroft differed from Higgins on the possibility of psychosis, stating that "[spree killers] are not psychotic. Isolation, emptiness, is solved by taking control. And the ultimate control is that exercised over life and death. Finally, they externalise their rage, targeting family and society."[3]

Legacy

The massacre remains, along with the 1996 Dunblane school massacre and the 2010 Cumbria shootings, one of the deadliest mass shootings in the UK[39][40]:194 and the name "Hungerford" has become synonymous with the massacre.[41]:02:12

The Hungerford Tragedy Gardens, adjacent to the town's war memorial, were established to memorialise the victims of the massacre.[42] Most residents of Hungerford refer to the events as "the tragedy".[9] One local stated that "[someone] called it the 'massacre' [...] that is so offensive to people in Hungerford – it was the Hungerford Tragedy – we've always called it the Hungerford Tragedy".[41]:09:05 Conversely, Marjorie Jackson – who was injured on South View – does not view the events as a tragedy, stating "It was a massacre [...] there's no two ways about it."[9]

In books

In music

  • "Sulk", the penultimate track on Radiohead's album The Bends, was written as a response to the massacre[47]:119
  • Radical Dance Faction vocalist Chris Bowsher, who witnessed the massacre, wrote the band's songs "Hot on the Wire" and "Hungerford Poem" about the killings[48]

In television and radio

  • In December 2004, BBC Two aired a documentary on the massacre[49][50]
  • The massacre was the subject of a 2017 episode of the BBC Radio 4 documentary series Aftermath[41]

See also

Footnotes

  1. or Abdul[9]
  2. Sources differ as to whether Ryan used the Type 56[1]:6 or the Beretta[2]:174 to kill his mother
  3. The Type 56 was described as a Kalashnikov AK-47 copy, and was identified as a Kalashnikov in the report from Thames Valley Police to the Home Secretary[1]:3

References

  1. Smith, Colin (c. 1988). "Shooting Incidents at Hungerford on 19 August 1987; Report of Mr Colin Smith CVO QPM" (PDF). JESIP. Home Department. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 August 2023. Retrieved 2 August 2023.
  2. Mass Murderers. Alexandria, Va.: Time-Life Books. 1993. ISBN 9780783500041.
  3. Tweedie, Neil (28 August 2012). "Hungerford: 'Forget? We can't. It's never going away'". www.telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 2 August 2023.
  4. Teresa Hunt (prod.) (2004). The Hungerford Massacre (Video). BBC.
  5. Josephs, Jeremy. "Hungerford: One Man's Massacre". Archived from the original on 4 January 2006. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  6. Parry, Gareth (20 August 1987). "Gunman in combat gear kills himself after 14 die in shooting spree". The Guardian. London.
  7. "Michael Ryan, the Hungerford UK Mass Murderer – Whatever Moves – Crime Library on". Trutv.com. Archived from the original on 22 April 2012. Retrieved 17 January 2011.
  8. Grice, Elizabeth (7 December 2004). "Ryan shot at me, then at my mother". London: The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 1 May 2005.
  9. "Massacre". BBC. Archived from the original on 11 March 2021. Retrieved 5 July 2021.
  10. Ramsland, Katherine. "Terror in Hungerford". Crime Library: Criminal Minds and Methods. TruTV. Archived from the original on 15 June 2008. Retrieved 30 June 2021.
  11. "The Glasgow Herald – Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
  12. Turnbull, Gordon (2012). Trauma: From Lockerbie to 7/7: How Trauma Affects Our Minds and How We Fight Back. Random House. ISBN 9780552158398.
  13. Cawthorne, Nigel (2007). Serial Killers & Mass Murderers: Profiles of the World's Most Barbaric Criminals. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781569759394.
  14. "The Hungerford Massacre". Crime + Investigation UK. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
  15. Pantziarka, Pan (2014). Lone Wolf: True Stories of Spree. Random House. ISBN 9780753551325. for the next four hours fire crews were held back while the fire at 4 South View spread to the neighbouring houses.
  16. Morl, Lily (20 August 2022). "35 years on since the Hungerford massacre that shook the nation". BerkshireLive. Retrieved 1 August 2023.
  17. "Thatcher: English language can't express horror of Hungerford - UPI Archives". UPI. Retrieved 1 August 2023. if (the gun control laws) need to be tightened up or we find this could prevent more events like this, of course, that will be considered.
  18. Press Association (26 August 1987). "Mourners gather at the graveside of Hungerford massacre victim Eric Vardy during the funeral service at Great Shefford, near Hungerford Stock Photo - Alamy". www.alamy.com. Alamy. Retrieved 5 August 2023.
  19. "First funeral held". African Concord. No. 147–159. 1987. Eric Vary has been buried in a small graveyard on a windswept West Berkshire hillside
  20. Press Association (27 August 1987). "Crime - Hungerford Massacre - Shaw, Newbury Stock Photo - Alamy". www.alamy.com. Alamy. Retrieved 3 August 2023.
  21. "Dorothy Ryan, Victim of Son In English Killings, Is Buried (Published 1987)". New York Times. 29 August 1987. Retrieved 3 August 2023.
  22. Press Association (3 September 1987). "PA NEWS PHOTO 3/9/87 THE COFFIN CARRYING HUNGERFORD KILLER MICHAEL RYAN AT READING CREMATORIUM Stock Photo - Alamy". www.alamy.com. Alamy. Retrieved 3 August 2023.
  23. Smart, Sue (1 January 2011). Great British Suicides. John Blake. ISBN 9781844545360.
  24. Carter, Claire (16 September 2017). "The lonely little boy with a lavish upbringing who went on to be a mass murderer". mirror. Retrieved 3 August 2023.
  25. "Firearms (Amendment) Act 1988". Act of 15 November 1988. Retrieved 1 August 2023.
  26. Travis, Alan (11 January 2003). "Firearms amnesty to be called". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 August 2023.
  27. Hudson, Nick (19 August 2017). "30 years on policing remembers 'The Tragedy' that was Hungerford". Police Professional. Retrieved 2 September 2023.
  28. Haines, Max (1994). Multiple murderers. Toronto: Toronto Sun. ISBN 9781895735062.
  29. Roycroft, Mark; Brine, Lindsey (2021). Modern Police Leadership: Operational Effectiveness at Every Level. Springer. ISBN 9783030639303.
  30. Cheston, Paul (20 July 2012). "Arms dealer who sold rifle used in Hungerford massacre jailed for". www.standard.co.uk. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
  31. Barnett, Antony (27 April 2003). "Exposed: Global dealer in death". The Guardian. London.
  32. Petley, Julian (30 June 2012). ""Are We Insane?". The "Video Nasty" Moral Panic". Recherches Sociologiques et Anthropologiques. 43 (1): 35–57. doi:10.4000/rsa.839. within hours, literally, of the massacres at Hungerford in 1987 and Dunblane in 1996, and of the conclusion of the trial of the two boys who murdered James Bulger in 1993, the papers were once again awash with stories blaming horror videos for these crimes
  33. Ballard, J. G. (2005). Conversations. San Francisco, CA: RE/Search. ISBN 9781889307138.
  34. Mason, Errol (1993). "Critical Factors in Firearms Control" (PDF). Australian Institute of Criminology. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 October 2005.
  35. Critcher, Chas (2003). Moral panics and the media. Buckingham Philadelphia: Open University Press. ISBN 9780335209088.
  36. "OBITUARY: J R Hamilton". British Medical Journal. 301. 14 July 1990. doi:10.1136/bmj.301.6743.116. S2CID 220192073. Retrieved 23 September 2019.
  37. Thorson, Larry (20 August 1987). "Britain's Worst Mass Murderer a Polite Loner With AM-Britain-Shooting Bjt". AP NEWS. Associated Press. Retrieved 30 June 2021.
  38. Smith, Rupert (8 December 2004). "TV review". The Guardian. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  39. "BBC: On this Day". 19 August 2005. Retrieved 1 April 2017.
  40. Crews, Gordon A (2020). Handbook of research on mass shootings and multiple victim violence. Hershey, PA: IGI. ISBN 9781799801146.
  41. Aftermath - Series 1 - Hungerford - BBC Sounds (Radio broadcast). BBC Radio 4. 23 January 2017. Retrieved 2 August 2023.
  42. "Crimes". www.hungerfordvirtualmuseum.co.uk. Hungerford Virtual Museum. Retrieved 2 August 2023.
  43. Grossberg, Lawrence, ed. (1992). Cultural studies. New York. ISBN 0415903459.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  44. Platt, Charles (2017). Dream Makers. SF Gateway. ISBN 9781473219687.
  45. Shepherd, Richard (2019). Unnatural Causes. London: Penguin. ISBN 9781405923538.
  46. Smith, PD (3 May 2019). "Unnatural Causes by Richard Shepherd review – pathology under the microscope". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 September 2022.
  47. Randall, Mac (2004). Exit music : the Radiohead story. London: Omnibus. ISBN 1-84449-183-8.
  48. "Maximum Rocknroll". Maximum Rocknroll. 92. 1991. I saw people killed but I kept behind [Ryan] where he couldn't see me [...] The first [piece about the massacre] I wrote was 'Hungerford Poem' and 'Hot on the Wire' is the follow-up. Originally it was going to be called 'And Then the Circus Came' because after the shooting the media descended on Hungerford like a circus.
  49. "BBC Documentaries 2004x37 "The Hungerford Massacre"". Trakt. Retrieved 1 June 2022.
  50. Syal, Rajeev (8 February 2004). "Hungerford outrage at TV documentary". www.telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 12 April 2021.

Further reading

  • Barker, Martin; Petley, Julian, eds. (2001). Ill Effects: The Media/Violence Debate (2nd ed.). London: Routledge. pp. 63–77. ISBN 978-0-415-22513-7.
  • Webster, Duncan (May 1989). "'Whodunnit? America did': Rambo and Post-Hungerford Rhetoric". Cultural Studies. Routledge. 3 (2): 173–193. doi:10.1080/09502388900490121.
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