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I was wrongly jailed for murder like Beast of Birkenhead & saw horrific sight that could break any man… how I kept sane

Published on May 15, 2025 at 07:06 AM

WHEN the man dubbed the ‘Beast of Birkenhead’ comes blinking into the sunlight after almost 40 years of being wrongly imprisoned, he will find the world a very different place.

was jailed for the murder of in 1987, when the Bee Gees were top of the charts, was Prime Minister and only city yuppies owned mobile phones.

Courtroom sketch of Peter Sullivan at his Court of Appeal hearing.
Peter Sullivan, known as the ‘Beast of Birkenhead’, was wrongfully convicted and spent 38 years in prison
Black and white mugshot of Peter Sullivan.
Peter when he was arrested nearly four decades ago
Two men speaking to reporters after their murder convictions were overturned.
Raphael Rowe (left) was cleared after being imprisoned for life

As his , a statement from Peter’s lawyer said he was “not angry...not bitter”;; but eager to “make the most of what is left of the existence I am granted in this world”;;.

Now 68, he described being “stripped”;; of his youth, mobility, sight and hearing, and the cruelty suffered as one of the few men jailed for decades for a he didn’t commit.

It is a living nightmare few of us can comprehend, but one man who knows such horrors only too well is .

Like Peter, the 57-year-old was wrongly sentenced to life imprisonment for murder, as well as robbery, as part of the in 1990.

It took 12 tireless years of fighting before his convictions were quashed, during which time he went on hunger strike, witnessed the brutality of first hand and spent long stints in solitary confinement for refusing to accept his guilt.

“When Peter Sullivan’s lawyer reflected his words about no longer being bitter and twisted because now the nightmare was over, it resonated with me,”;; Raphael tells The Sun.

“You spend so many years consumed by anger while inside that when you get out, you can’t allow it to dictate your life from then onward. You need to finally live your life.

“You don’t ever stop being angry, but you don’t allow it to consume you or dictate your life from then onwards.

“I chose to move on. I was never going to let myself be consumed by anger, the brutality in prison and the psychological experiences I had to overcome.”;;

Raphael still remembers the moment armed stormed the bedsit he was sleeping in dressed in balaclavas, pointing guns at him and yelling loudly in 1990.

“It was a terrifying, terrifying experience to have guns pointed at me, frogmarched down the stairwell and into the streets. Moreso because I didn’t know what it was about,”;; he says.

“The whole experience was horrible, made worse by the fact that police didn’t believe me from the offset. I wonder now why their minds were so set on trying to achieve convictions.

“Did those responsible for my prosecution – police, CPS, witness and everyone else involved – know I would spend 12 years in prison for a crime I didn’t commit, the same way that Peter served 38 years?”;;

Despite having an alibi – he was at home in bed with his girlfriend at the time the attack took place – they believed the South East Londoner, then 19, was guilty of a heinous attack two years prior.

Raphael, alongside Michael Davis and Randolph Johnson – dubbed the ‘M25 Three’ – were suspected of targeting two male lovers in a car park, in December 1988.

Peter Hurbugh and Alan Eley were forced out of their vehicle at gunpoint, stripped, beaten and robbed by the gang, who then poured a line of petrol around them and threatened to ignite it by lighting a cigarette.

The ordeal caused Alan to pass out and when he awoke Peter, who sustained five fractured ribs and a fractured sternum, was dead having suffered a fatal heart attack.

Photo of Diane Sindall.
Diane Sindall, 21, was raped and murdered in 1986
Black and white photo of Peter Hurburgh, the first victim of the M25 murders.
Peter Hurburgh, whose tragic death saw Raphael and two others wrongly convicted

All three maintained their innocence and police pressed on despite discrepancies in eye-witness statements – including Alan insisting only one of the assailants was black, when all three of the charged men were black.

In 2000, it would emerge that perjured evidence had been used in the case, including a police informant offered £300 at the conclusion of the case.

Another witness, Joanne Ceasar, then 21 and six months pregnant, claimed police pressured her, put words into her mouth and scared her into believing she would be jailed.

“’They did threaten me, saying that if I didn’t turn up in I would go to prison, they pumped me,”;; she told the .

Joanne claimed cops “kept on and on at me”;; for up to eight hours at a time and claimed the stress led to her child being born five weeks premature.

‘Uncomfortable memories’

It was only Raphael’s tireless work that would lead to his freedom – with him spending much of his sentence in solitary confinement studying the law and finding holes in the police’s case.

“There was never a moment in all of those years that I thought I was going to give up or accept the wrongs done to me... I had time on my hands to fight every line of the document that led to my conviction,”;; he says.

“I knew I would never stop. They lit a fire deep inside of me, set something off that wouldn’t allow me to accept what had happened.”;;

But unsurprisingly, the battle did take its toll and has left “scars”;; and haunting memories that still affect Raphael to this day.

Evidence was being ignored, people knew that were innocent standing in the dock yet were still prepared to watch us go to prison for life for crimes we didn’t commit

Raphael Rowe

“There were moments when I couldn’t get out of bed to function because I was so depressed by my experiences and having to challenge and convince people of my innocence in there,”;; he says.

“There are scars mentally and physically. It’s harrowing and those life memories are extremely uncomfortable memories.

“Not only did I see people take their lives but I witnessed extreme violence – a prisoner throwing boiling sugared water on to a prisoner and the skin peeling from his face.

“At one point, as a cry for help I went on hunger strike in pure desperation to bring attention to my plight and I was hospitalised.”;;

Towards the end of the Nineties, he argued he did not get a fair trial based on undisclosed evidence – including the police informant’s financial reward being an incentive upon the conclusion of the case.

A man stands outside a prison, looking off to the side.
Raphael carved out a successful career as a journalist after leaving prison
Photo of Raphael Rowe, a member of the M25 gang, appealing his prison sentence in 1997.
He says there wasn’t a moment that he didn’t stop fighting for his freedom

In February 2000, 21 judges unanimously ruled in his favour, which – alongside concerns from the Criminal Cases Review Commission – led to Raphael’s case being referred to the Court of Appeal.

Five months later, three judges found there had been a “profoundly disturbing”;; conspiracy between police and their informant and ruled all the convictions unsafe.

Raphael was finally free in 2000 and while he has forged a successful career as a journalist, including reporting on others wrongly convicted, questions still haunt him.

“Evidence was being ignored, people knew that we were innocent standing in the dock yet were still prepared to watch us go to prison for life for crimes we didn’t commit,”;; he says.

“Even the witnesses and victim of the crime must have had reservations about our convictions, they saw two white men and all three of us were black, two with dreadlocks.

“If they had seen what they saw they must have known we couldn’t be the perpetrators, to say they were ‘mistaken’ was an easy way to answer for agreeing to something untrue.

“The judge in my case said it was misleading and for obvious reasons, for the jury to ignore this was a mystery – either they did or didn’t do it.”;;

In the case of Peter Sullivan, now 68, whose conviction was quashed this week, it was DNA evidence that led to him being freed – fresh analysis of semen samples found at the crime scene pointed towards an unknown attacker.

For years, the 68-year-old argued bite marks found on victim Diane Sindall’s body were not credible evidence to assist his conviction because the expert, who matched his dental impressions with the imprints, had only seen photographs of the wounds.

Additionally, Peter’s confession to the crimes were believed to have been coerced due to his admission being preceded by strong denials and afterward a retraction of his confession.

In both his and Raphael’s cases, the real perpetrators are still on the loose and according to DNA expert Rebecca Helm it’s “going to be really tough”;; to catch the criminals now.

Yesterday Peter made it clear he longed to see “the right thing done for this horrible crime”;; – the true killer being jailed – so that Diane’s family can finally “find peace”;;.

Rebecca isn’t so hopeful, telling us: “The person who actually committed the crime has been evading justice for 40 years. The chances of finding the person who did it aren’t great now.”;;

But for others who have been wrongfully convicted, Peter’s exoneration could serve as a beacon of hope.

Rebecca says: “This signals that the CCRC are becoming more proactive and alive to the power of DNA and how it can help people. It is a promising sign.”;;

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