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Gregory Davis
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Gregory Davis (born 1979)[1] is an English spree killer and former art student who was convicted of the double manslaughter of Dorothy Rogers and her son Michael Rogers in 2003. He was released in 2011 from Littlemore Hospital.
Key Information
Early life
[edit]Gregory Davis was born to a family residing in Great Linford, Buckinghamshire, England as the son of a civil engineer and a care assistant. He attended secondary school at The Radcliffe School.
Art studies
[edit]Davis first studied art during his sixth form,[2] and later at Northampton University.[3] One of his works of art made during this period consisted of a trophy plaque bearing the names of his favourite serial killers.[1][2]
Murders
[edit]Davis himself planned to be a serial killer and used his diary to plot to murder. Progressing on a diary entry that spoke of a desire to kill ad infinitum "all over the world,"[1] he eventually went on a murder spree on 28 January 2003.[4] Working his way through a compiled hit list, he first visited Stewart Johnson who escaped as kitchen fitters were working in his home.[5] Davis then continued down the list to Stantonbury, to the home of Dorothy Rogers.
Victims
[edit]- Dorothy Rogers, a 48-year-old divorcee, was stabbed 31 times at her home in Stantonbury.
- Michael Rogers, aged 19, was stabbed, bludgeoned and disembowelled at a children's playground.
- Mick Cowles was attacked with a hammer and seriously wounded.
Trial and imprisonment
[edit]On 15 December 2003, Davis stood trial at Luton Crown Court and pleaded guilty to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility.[4] Mr Justice Richard Aikens accepted the plea after a team of five psychiatrists diagnosed him with major depressive disorder, social anxiety disorder, alcohol dependence and to be suffering from a psychotic episode at the time of the crime.[4] He was given an indefinite sentence to be served at Broadmoor Hospital.[1] In 2009, he was transferred to Littlemore Hospital where he was allowed out on short release.[1]
A Mental Health Review Tribunal decided he would be released in July 2011.[6][7]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e "'Psycho' killer set to return to city - Local - Milton Keynes Citizen". Archived from the original on 6 March 2011. Retrieved 6 March 2011.
- ^ a b "Too dangerous to be let loose say school pals - Milton Keynes Citizen". Miltonkeynes.co.uk. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
- ^ "Sick 'serial killer' fan sent to Broadmoor - Milton Keynes Citizen". Miltonkeynes.co.uk. 18 December 2003. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
- ^ a b c "UK | England | Beds/Bucks/Herts | Mother and son killed by 'psychotic'". BBC News. 15 December 2003. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
- ^ "Killer's letters reveal 'hit list' - Milton Keynes Citizen". Miltonkeynes.co.uk. 18 March 2011. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
- ^ "Milton Keynes Citizen - 24/3/2011 digital edition". Edition.pagesuite-professional.co.uk. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
- ^ "Plan to free 'psychotic' double killer Gregory Davis". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 24 August 2011. Retrieved 1 August 2014.
https://theywalkamonguspodcast.com/new-episodes/2019/3/27/season-3-episode-38
Gregory Davis
View on GrokipediaEarly Life and Background
Childhood and Family
Gregory Davis was born in 1979 in Great Linford, Buckinghamshire, England.[8][9] He was raised by his father, a civil engineer, and his mother, a care assistant, in a stable family environment described as respectable and typical for the area.[8][9][10] No siblings are documented in available records, and the family's socioeconomic status aligned with middle-class norms, supported by the parents' professional occupations.[9] Davis attended The Radcliffe School during his early education, though specific details on family dynamics or early childhood incidents remain limited in public accounts.[8]Early Influences and Behavior
Davis grew up in Great Linford, Buckinghamshire, in a stable household with his father, a civil engineer, and his mother, a care assistant, within what has been described as a respectable family setting.[11] No reports indicate significant familial dysfunction or abuse during his childhood, though he attended Radcliffe School locally before pursuing art studies in sixth form around ages 16 to 18. Empirical observations from later psychological evaluations highlight diagnoses of major depressive disorder and social anxiety disorder emerging in adolescence, potentially fostering patterns of withdrawal, though these were not linked to overt trauma in available records. In his teenage years, Davis exhibited behaviors centered on an intense preoccupation with serial killers and mass murderers, influenced by media portrayals and literature on such figures, as evidenced by artifacts like a self-made trophy plaque enumerating his "favorites" during art-related projects.[12] He also documented ambitions to emulate them in personal writings, reflecting deliberate engagement with violent ideologies rather than passive exposure. Alcohol dependence surfaced as a factor by young adulthood, with court-linked assessments noting its role in exacerbating isolation, yet no minor legal infractions or institutional interventions from youth are documented, underscoring individual choices in cultivating these interests amid an otherwise unremarkable early environment. These adolescent patterns, including voluntary immersion in homicide-themed content, demonstrate personal agency in prioritizing destructive fascinations over normative pursuits, absent compelling external causal drivers like poverty or violence in the home.[13] Witness and diagnostic accounts from proceedings emphasize that such behaviors predated acute psychosis, positioning them as volitional rather than purely symptomatic.Education and Artistic Pursuits
Formal Art Training
Gregory Davis pursued formal art education at the University of Northampton in the early 2000s, where he was enrolled as an art student during the period leading up to 2003.[14] The institution offered programs in fine arts and related disciplines, emphasizing practical projects and creative techniques such as engraving and material-based work. No specific enrollment dates or duration of study beyond this timeframe are documented in available records, though his student status provided context for his activities at the time.[14] One documented aspect of his coursework involved a student project focused on engraving names onto silver plaques, reflecting an academic exercise in thematic artistic expression rather than broader curriculum details like specific instructors or peer evaluations.[14] Public records do not indicate formal assessments of his academic performance or standing within the program.[15]Artistic Works and Interests
Davis pursued formal art studies during his sixth form at Radcliffe School in Buckinghamshire.[12] He subsequently enrolled at the University of Northampton to advance his artistic training, focusing on creative expression through various mediums.[12] Among his known works from this period is a trophy-style plaque inscribed with the names of serial killers he admired, produced as part of his academic projects.[12] This piece exemplifies recurring motifs of violence and homicide in his output, intertwined with personal documentation such as diary entries cataloging mass murderers and related figures.[12] [15] Davis maintained a documented fixation on serial killers, which permeated his artistic interests without evidence of public exhibitions, sales, or professional accolades prior to 2003.[12] No surviving catalog of additional specific drawings, paintings, or sculptures has been publicly detailed, though his student-era creations centered on thematic explorations of criminal pathology rather than conventional artistic genres.[12]Criminal Offenses
Motives and Psychological Factors
Davis documented his fascination with serial killers and mass murderers in personal diaries, which included detailed plans for committing what he described as the "perfect murder" as a stepping stone to becoming a serial killer himself.[16] These entries progressed from abstract desires to kill to specific plotting, demonstrating premeditation and volitional intent prior to the attacks on January 28, 2003.[15] Prosecutors presented diary excerpts at trial highlighting his ambitions in this regard, underscoring that the killings were not impulsive but aligned with his self-professed goals.[16] Psychiatric evaluations during the legal proceedings diagnosed Davis with psychosis, likely schizophrenia, which formed the basis for his successful plea of diminished responsibility, resulting in manslaughter convictions rather than murder.[15] Expert testimony accepted that his mental state impaired his ability to fully comprehend the wrongfulness of his actions at the time, yet countered by evidence of planning—such as selecting targets and preparing weapons—that indicated retained capacity for deliberate choice amid the disorder.[16] This assessment rejected full insanity defenses, affirming criminal liability while acknowledging psychological impairment, consistent with empirical indicators of premeditation like diary documentation over purely reactive psychosis.[15] No external societal or environmental factors were cited in court as primary drivers; instead, the focus remained on Davis's internal obsessions and personal agency, as evidenced by his autonomous documentation of murderous aspirations without coercion or acute provocation.[16] While the psychosis diagnosis explained diminished control, forensic review of his writings emphasized that such conditions do not preclude accountability where intent is demonstrably formed through repeated, self-directed planning.[15]The Incidents
On January 28, 2003, Gregory Davis, acting alone, entered a residence in Great Linford, a district of Milton Keynes in Buckinghamshire, England, where he stabbed a woman 31 times while her son was present.[15] He then chased the son from the house to a nearby playground, inflicting stab wounds that disembowelled the victim.[15] Davis had known the occupants through prior interactions at a local pub called the Pilgrim's Bottle.[15] Earlier or concurrently in the spree on the same date, Davis assaulted a man in his 60s at another location in the Stantonbury area of Milton Keynes, fracturing the victim's skull.[17] The attacks involved stabbing as the primary method for the fatal incidents, with no accomplices involved.[15][17] Police responded to reports at a housing estate in Milton Keynes following the events, leading to Davis's prompt detention.[17] He resided nearby at Wood Lane in Great Linford at the time.[17]Victims and Impact
Dorothy Rogers, aged 48 and a divorcee residing in Great Linford, Milton Keynes, was the primary target of the initial assault on 28 January 2003. She and her family, including partner Michael Cowles, had encountered Davis casually at the local Pilgrim's Bottle pub. Davis forced entry into the Rogers family home, where he bludgeoned Dorothy with a claw hammer before stabbing her 31 times with a carving knife, causing fatal injuries including massive blood loss and organ damage.[15][14] Her son, Michael Rogers, aged 19, hid in his bedroom during the initial attack on his mother but was pursued after barricading the door. Davis broke through and chased Michael to a nearby children's playground, where he stabbed and bludgeoned the young man, inflicting wounds severe enough to disembowel him and cause rapid death from trauma and hemorrhage. The Rogers family had no deep prior connection to Davis beyond superficial local acquaintance, making the home invasion a sudden and unprovoked encounter.[15][14] The deaths compounded trauma for surviving relatives, including Michael's father and Cowles, who suffered hammer blows to the head but survived with lasting injuries. The brutality—evidenced by the extensive stab wounds, blunt force trauma, and dismemberment-like disembowelment—underscored the irreversible physical devastation, leaving the family without Dorothy's caregiving role and Michael's youthful potential. Community repercussions included heightened local unease in the quiet Stantonbury area, with parliamentary references to the case highlighting constituent grief and demands for victim-centered justice reforms.[18]Legal Process
Investigation and Arrest
The double murders of Dorothy Rogers, aged 48, and her son Michael Rogers, aged 19, occurred on January 28, 2003, at their home in Great Linford, Milton Keynes. Thames Valley Police responded promptly to the scene, where Dorothy had been stabbed 31 times and Michael pursued to a nearby children's playground before being fatally attacked. The investigation immediately incorporated an related attempted murder of James Cowell, Rogers' boyfriend, who survived the assault and provided critical details linking the incidents.[17][19] Local knowledge of the suspect, combined with physical evidence from the bloodied trail between the home and playground, enabled rapid identification of Gregory Davis, a 23-year-old former art student residing in the area. No prolonged evasion occurred; Davis was arrested within hours of the crimes, reflecting the contained geographic scope and immediate witness cooperation. Procedural focus included securing the sites for forensic analysis of weapons and biological traces, though mental health evaluations began concurrently due to emerging reports of Davis' preoccupations.[17][15] Davis first appeared in Milton Keynes Magistrates' Court on January 30, 2003, formally charged with the murders and attempted murder, and was remanded in custody pending further inquiries. The swift timeline underscored effective initial response protocols, avoiding broader public alerts or manhunts typical in fugitive cases.[17]Trial Proceedings
The trial of Gregory Davis took place at Luton Crown Court, commencing on 15 December 2003, before Mr Justice Goldring. Davis, aged 24, entered a guilty plea to two counts of manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility, which the prosecution accepted following review of psychiatric evidence indicating an abnormality of mental functioning substantially impairing his ability to understand the nature and quality of his actions or form rational judgments.[16] The proceedings focused on establishing the factual basis of the offenses and assessing Davis's mental state at the time, rather than contesting guilt through a full jury trial, as the plea obviated the need for deliberations on intent or premeditation.[9] Prosecutors presented evidence detailing the sequence of events on 30 January 2003, wherein Davis armed himself with a carving knife and claw hammer, entered the victims' home in Bletchley, battered Dorothy Rogers with the hammer, and pursued and stabbed her son Michael Rogers after he fled to a neighbor's residence; forensic reports confirmed the weapons' use and the extent of injuries, underscoring the violent execution despite Davis's claims of auditory hallucinations commanding the acts. Defense arguments centered on Davis's diagnosed paranoid psychosis, supported by psychiatric testimonies asserting he was actively hallucinating voices urging violence and posed a high risk of recidivism due to untreated delusional states, though experts noted his prior history of mental health episodes without prior violence. No counter-expert testimony challenging the diminished responsibility diagnosis was introduced, as the plea agreement hinged on consensus regarding his impaired mental functioning rather than outright insanity precluding criminal responsibility. In sentencing, Mr Justice Goldring emphasized the gravity of the offenses while acknowledging the medical consensus on Davis's psychotic condition, ordering his indefinite detention under the Mental Health Act in a high-security facility, with release contingent on clinical assessments of non-risk; the judge rejected arguments for lesser security, citing the psychiatrists' evaluations of ongoing danger.[16] The brevity of the hearing, resolved in a single day, reflected the uncontested plea, though public and victim family concerns later highlighted debates over the balance between psychiatric mitigation and public safety in such cases.[15]Conviction and Sentencing
Davis pleaded guilty at Luton Crown Court to two counts of manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility for the deaths of Dorothy Rogers and Michael Rogers on January 28, 2003, as well as one count of causing grievous bodily harm with intent to another victim.[21][22] The manslaughter classification stemmed from psychiatric evidence establishing that Davis suffered from a severe abnormality of mental functioning—specifically, schizophrenia-like psychosis—that substantially impaired his ability to understand the nature of his actions or form the intent required for murder.[15] This plea avoided a murder trial, reflecting judicial acceptance of expert testimony on his mental state at the time, though the court noted his prior fixation on serial killers and mass murders as contextual factors without altering the diminished responsibility finding.[15] The judge imposed a hospital order under Section 37 of the Mental Health Act 1983, committing Davis to indefinite detention in a high-security psychiatric facility, initially Broadmoor Hospital, with restrictions under Section 41 preventing discharge without Ministry of Justice approval.[22][23] No fixed tariff was set, emphasizing treatment over punitive incarceration, though the sentencing highlighted aggravating elements such as the "brutal and frenzied" nature of the stabbings—31 wounds to Dorothy Rogers and multiple to her son—and the premeditated elements tied to Davis's delusional beliefs.[15] This outcome prioritized mental health intervention, limiting full criminal accountability compared to a murder conviction, which would have mandated life imprisonment.[21] No appeals against the conviction or sentence were filed or succeeded, as the guilty plea streamlined proceedings and judicial records upheld the manslaughter verdicts based on uncontested forensic and psychiatric evidence.[23] The classification underscored causal links between Davis's untreated psychosis and the offenses, influencing the indeterminate term focused on public safety and potential recovery rather than retribution.[15]Post-Conviction Developments
Imprisonment
Davis was subject to an indefinite hospital order following his December 15, 2003, conviction at Luton Crown Court, resulting in detention at Broadmoor Hospital, a high-security psychiatric facility managed by the West London NHS Trust for individuals presenting severe mental disorders and risks of violence.[15] Broadmoor, established in 1863, houses patients under the Criminal Procedure (Insanity) Act 1964, with maximum-security measures including perimeter walls, electronic surveillance, and restricted patient movements to mitigate escape risks and internal threats.[24] His assignment to this facility reflected assessments of ongoing psychosis linked to the offenses, prioritizing containment over standard penal incarceration.[12] During his approximately seven-year tenure at Broadmoor commencing in 2003, no public records detail specific in-patient incidents, disciplinary actions, or participation in rehabilitative programs such as therapy or vocational training.[19] Official reports emphasize the institution's focus on psychiatric stabilization through medication and observation for high-risk patients, though individual conduct evaluations remain confidential under UK mental health protocols.[15] Health assessments consistently noted persistent psychotic features, informing the stringent security level maintained post-2003 without evidence of de-escalation to lower-risk units during this period.[25]Parole Attempts and Public Response
In 2011, a Mental Health Review Tribunal reviewed Gregory Davis's indefinite hospital order, approximately eight years after his 2003 detention at Broadmoor Hospital for manslaughter on grounds of diminished responsibility. The tribunal, informed by evaluations from five psychiatrists, attributed the killings to a one-off psychotic episode triggered by severe alcoholism and an adverse reaction to prescribed medication, concluding that Davis posed a manageable risk under supervised conditions.[15] The proposed release involved conditional discharge to supported accommodation with mandatory reporting to healthcare professionals and involvement of police and social services in monitoring.[15] The decision elicited strong opposition from victims' relatives, who argued that the supervised release undervalued the premeditated brutality of the attacks and failed to account for Davis's documented fixation on serial killers and mass murderers, as evidenced by his personal writings expressing ambitions to perpetrate further violence.[14] A public petition submitted to the UK Parliament in August 2011 called for the denial of release, amassing signatures from concerned citizens who emphasized the need for extended detention to prioritize public safety, retribution for the loss of life, and deterrence against similar offenses, warning that early freedom could endanger lives.[26] Media outlets, including the BBC and The Times, reported extensively on the controversy, highlighting tensions between psychiatric risk assessments favoring rehabilitation and public demands for stricter accountability, with coverage underscoring Davis's prior transfer to a lower-security facility in Oxford as a step toward reintegration despite unresolved concerns over recidivism.[15][14] Critics, including victim advocates, contended that expert opinions downplayed causal factors like Davis's deliberate planning and psychological profile, potentially influenced by institutional preferences for treatment over punishment.[26] Ultimately, the tribunal approved the conditional discharge in July 2011, leading to Davis's phased release into community supervision, though no subsequent parole reviews or revocations have been publicly documented as of available records.[24] The episode fueled broader debates on balancing mental health dispositions with societal protections, with conservative voices advocating for life sentences without routine release eligibility in cases involving multiple fatalities to affirm deterrence and justice principles.[26]References
- http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/[england](/page/England)/beds/bucks/herts/3322525.stm
