Two Brothers Sentenced for 1984 Murder of Anthony Littler in London
1-Minute Brief
The sentencing closes a decades-old case and highlights renewed efforts to address historic hate crimes.
Key Facts
- Anthony Littler was ambushed and left for dead as he walked home from East Finchley Tube station.
- Police cracked the case 40 years after the murder, identifying it as a homophobic attack.
- The attack was part of a series of crimes targeting men perceived as gay.
- An undercover police operation played a key role in solving the case.
- Two brothers have now been jailed for Littler's murder.
What Happened
Two brothers have been sentenced for the 1984 murder of civil servant Anthony Littler, who was attacked while walking home in London. The case was solved decades later through an undercover police operation.
Why It Matters
The resolution of this cold case demonstrates advances in investigative techniques and renewed attention to historic hate crimes. It also brings closure to a case that had remained unsolved for decades.
What's Next
Authorities may review other unsolved cases from the same period for potential links or similar investigative breakthroughs. The outcome could influence future approaches to historic hate crime investigations.
Sources
Confirmed by 2 independent sources
- The IndependentLeft20h agoBrothers jailed for murder in 1984 hate crime spree against men they thought were gay
- BBC NewsCenter20h agoThe undercover police sting that solved a 1984 murder and sent two brothers to jail
- The IndependentLeft20h agoHow police cracked cold case 40 years on from homophobic murder in London street
