Previously unpublished letters show Moors murderer Ian Brady claimed to have killed four more people.
Brady writes that he had murdered others (Pictures: The Daily Telegraph)The letters, which emerged as his bid to be transferred from a maximum security hospital to prison failed, show that he confessed to killing two men in his native Glasgow and a man and woman in Manchester.
Brady described the four additional murders as "happenings" and says his male victim in Manchester was killed "on the waste ground behind the station" and the other was a "woman in the canal".
One of his Glasgow victims was killed "above" Loch Long, at the mouth of the Clyde, Brady wrote.
The letters, which have been published in The Daily Telegraph, were written to journalist Brendan Pittaway in the 1980s.
On Friday Brady lost his £250,000 legal bid to be transferred to a jail after a week-long public hearing, meaning the child killer will remain at Ashworth Hospital on Merseyside on the grounds that he is mentally insane.
The tribunal was the first time Brady has been seen in public since the 1980s, when he was taken back to Saddleworth Moor in the search for the bodies of two of his victims.
Brady says his other killings were 'happenings'The hearing was also the first time he had spoken in public since being jailed for life at Chester Assizes in 1966.
But families of the victims have criticised the mental health tribunal, saying it gave Brady the opportunity to "grandstand".
Brady and his partner, Myra Hindley, were convicted of luring children and teenagers to their deaths, with their victims sexually tortured before being buried on Saddleworth Moor.
Hindley died in hospital, still a prisoner, in November 2002 at the age of 60.
The brother of victim Keith Bennett, whose body was never found, has said Brady was "nothing more than a serial killer of children, a paedophile, a coward and a self-pitying liar".
Alan Bennett said the only people that mattered to Brady was Brady himself and those he manipulates.
He wrote: "I have to say now that I am glad Brady did have his say, he tied his own defence team in knots, never gave a definitive answer under cross-examination and went on to show anybody interested that he is nothing more than a self-pitying liar."
Here Brady asks journalist Brendan Pittaway to keep letters confidentialIn Brady's letters he says Bennett's body was buried in Yorkshire, rather than the Moors as originally thought.
Martin Bottomley, head of Greater Manchester Police's Cold Case Review Unit, said: "In the 1980s, Brady 'confessed' to a number of other unrelated murders. All these claims were thoroughly investigated at that time and found to be completely unsubstantiated.
"GMP has been investigating Brady's horrendous crimes and their aftermath for over 40 years now.
"A week hardly goes by when we do not receive some information which purports to lead us to Keith's burial site.
"All of these claims are investigated and it remains our aim to find Keith for the sake of his surviving family members.
"Only one person knows where Keith is buried and he refuses to disclose that information, preferring to taunt Keith's loved ones, assisted by those who seek to profit from his manipulative scheming."
The decision on Brady's appeal was given by the three-man panel headed by Judge Robert Atherton, who heard the tribunal at Ashworth Hospital.
Reasons for the decision will be given at a later date because of the length of the material the panel needs to consider.
Brady told the tribunal his killings were 'recreational'After the ruling, Dr David Fearnley, medical director at Ashworth, said the judgement was "consistent with the expert opinions of our clinicians".
"Mr Brady suffers from a severe personality disorder and a mental illness which still require high quality care," he said.
"It is a testament to the staff of Ashworth Hospital that we have been able to stabilise his schizophrenia to the degree we have."
Terry Kilbride, whose brother John was one of Brady's victims, said he had "good reaction" to the decision.
"It means that they're going to keep him alive," Mr Kilbride said.
Brady - who claims to have been on a hunger strike since 1999 - told the hearing he was merely "a petty criminal".
Brady, pictured in 1966He described his crimes as "recreational killings" which were part of an "existential experience".
His legal application challenged the order made under the Mental Health Act when he was transferred from prison to Ashworth in 1985, when he was diagnosed as being a paranoid schizophrenic.
Brady's legal team argued that, despite his severe personality disorder, he is not mentally ill and therefore no longer fulfils the legal criteria for detention in hospital.
He suggested that, if he is allowed to go back to a jail, he would be "free to end his own life" by starving himself to death.
Brady has the right to challenge the decision, which would require a further hearing at an Upper Tribunal.
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