
A former detective has claimed Scotland Yard covered up allegations a killer had pushed 18 people to their deaths on the London Underground in the 1970s.
Geoff Platt said that convicted murderer Kiernan Kelly told police in 1984 that he had pushed 18 people onto the tube tracks, but police played down the claims fearing a backlash from the public.
The Daily Star quoted Mr Platt, who was present as a policeman during the interview with Kelly, as saying: "It was a cover-up. Think about it, the police don't want it getting out – there would be mass panic.
"They didn't want people knowing a serial killer got away with pushing innocent people on to the tracks – they’d be afraid it could happen again."
In 1984 Kelly, a violent drifter, was taken into custody over a robbery.
While in his cell he attacked and killed William Boyd, who was sharing a cell with him, stamping on his head and strangling him with a pair of socks.
He was taken to be questioned and Mr Platt said that Kelly, "loaded with adrenaline" after killing Boyd, then confessed to killing 18 people by pushing them on to the tracks in the London Underground, mainly on the Northern Line, in the 1970s.
Mr Platt says police kept the claims quiet for fear of sparking a panic on the Underground (Getty)
Mr Platt originally thought that Kelly had fabricated the killings, but his subsequent investigation showed that Kelly was at the scene of a number of reported suicides that had taken place on the Underground.
"What immediately came to notice was that there were a number of people who jumped off the platform into the Northern Line." he said.
"But what especially smacked you in the face was every time someone jumped on the track ... Kelly was next to him."
However, Mr Platt says senior officers refused to make the claims public.
Kelly was convicted of killing Boyd. He was also convicted of killing Hector Fisher, who was found dead in a Clapham Common graveyard in 1975, and Maurice Weighly, who was found murdered in Soho, his face and genitals mutilated, in 1977.
In a separate incident he was also charged with attempted murder in 1984 when he was accused of pushing an elderly man in front of a train in Kensington Station.
The elderly man survived the attack and Kelly was acquitted at trial.
Mr Platt makes his claims in his book 'The London Underground Serial Killer'.
The London Underground Serial Killer, by Geoff Platt, as seen in Telegraph, Metro and Mail On Sunday http://t.co/SOiZRJqu4L #Sale #TrueCrime
— Pen and Sword Books (@penswordbooks) July 27, 2015
Scotland Yard passed enquiries from the Independent to the British Transport Police.
A British Transport Police spokesman said: "We are aware of the claims included in this book but given the passage of time since they are alleged to have been committed these would prove difficult to substantiate without further evidence.
"We would invite Mr Platt to submit any information he has on these matters to us."