October 20, 2025

A British court on Tuesday gave a life sentence to a 92-year-old man for a crime committed in 1967, in one of the country’s oldest cold cases.

A jury had found the man, Ryland Headley, guilty on Monday of the murder and rape of a 75-year-old British woman, nearly six decades after a neighbor found her body in her home outside Bristol, England, according to Avon and Somerset Police.

The judge, Derek Sweeting, said during the sentencing that Mr. Headley had shown a “complete disregard for human life and dignity,” according to a statement from the police after the sentencing hearing on Tuesday.

He said that Mr. Headley “met her screams and struggles with force sufficient to kill.”

Mr. Headley’s sentence includes a minimum of 20 years in prison before consideration for parole. Given his age, Judge Sweeting told him, “you will never be released, you will die in prison.”

Ms. Dunne was a vulnerable, elderly woman living alone, the judge said. She did not have many possessions in her home, Judge Sweeting continued, and she led a simple life. When Ms. Dunne’s window was left open on the morning of June 28, 1967, and she had not been seen by anybody, her neighbors grew concerned, Judge Sweeting said.

ImagePhotos of Louisa Dunne over the years. Credit…Avon and Somerset Police

The police reopened the case in 2023. In May 2024, they sent items — including a blue skirt Ms. Dunne was wearing at the time of her attack — for forensic analysis, the police said. Police obtained DNA that they were able to match with Mr. Headley. Semen was found on the skirt, according to the police.

Mr. Headley’s DNA was “placed onto the system in 2012 following an unconnected and unrelated incident,” according to the police, who did not give further details.

The police also matched a palm print that was left on Ms. Dunne’s bedroom window to one taken from Mr. Headley after he was in custody, they said. Avon and Somerset Police arrested Mr. Headley on Nov. 19, and he has been in custody since, the police said.

ImageLouisa Dunne was found dead in her home in 1967.Credit…Avon and Somerset Police

In a video released by the police, Mr. Headley can be seen answering “no comment” to a police officer’s questions about Ms. Dunne’s death.

In the initial investigation into Ms. Dunne’s murder, the authorities fingerprinted more than 19,000 men and took 1,300 statements. Mr. Headley had not been part of that investigation because he lived outside of the area, according to a statement by Dave Marchant, a detective with the Bristol police.

In 1977, Mr. Headley was found guilty on two counts of rape elsewhere in England. “He attacked elderly women in Ipswich by breaking into their homes overnight and threatening them with violence,” according to the police. He received a life sentence that was later reduced, the police said.

“I thought he would never be caught,” said Mary Dainton, Ms. Dunne’s granddaughter, in a video shared by the police, adding that she had given up hope that her grandmother’s murder would ever be solved. Hearing the news that the police had found Mr. Headley was “quite a shock,” Ms. Dainton said.

ImageLouisa Dunne’s skirt, which she was wearing at the time she was attacked, in an undated handout photo from Avon and Somerset Police.Credit…Avon and Somerset Police

Ms. Dainton was 20 at the time of her grandmother’s death, which deeply affected her and the rest of her family, she told reporters outside of the court on Monday.

“I don’t think my mother ever recovered from it,” she said. “The anxiety clouded the rest of her life.”

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