DEATH RIDE My uncle was garroted with a cheese wire by a passenger in his taxi… now chilling picture may expose killer 40 years on

DEATH RIDE

My uncle was garroted with a cheese wire by a passenger in his taxi… now chilling picture may expose killer 40 years on.

A snapshot taken in a pub and new DNA evidence could finally catch up with the violent killer of a taxi driver murdered in his cab.

When Alex McKay’s phone rang at quarter to ten p.m., he knew it wasn’t good news. “It was my mother, telling me my uncle Dod had been murdered,” Alex remembers.

Photo of George Murdoch.

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George Murdoch, known as Dod, was strangled to death in 1983Credit: PA
Replica of cheesewire used in a 1983 murder.

Alec McKay, nephew of murdered taxi driver George Murdoch, sits outdoors.

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George’s nephew Alex is fighting for justiceCredit: Newsline Media

On the evening of September 29, 1983, 57-year-old Dod, real name George Murdoch, was working in Aberdeen’s West End when he picked up a passenger who, little did he know, would be his last.

Down a quiet street in the tree-lined suburb of Cults on the outskirts of the city, two teenage cyclists noticed George and another man fighting outside the taxi and raised the alarm.

However, when the police arrived, it was too late. George was dead, surrounded by a pool of blood and garroted with a cheese wire. “My father went down with my other uncle, Dod’s brother, to identify the body,” recalls Alex, then 26.

“He never told us himself – but I heard it wasn’t a pretty sight.” Both his money and wallet had been stolen. Despite police launching a manhunt across the city, the killer, described by two witnesses as a man in his 20s-30s, appeared to have vanished into thin air.

George’s murderer has evaded justice for over four decades. But that could all change soon, thanks to recent breakthroughs in DNA technology, which could mean the case is closed at any time. Tens of thousands of pounds are on offer to anyone who can assist.

The hunt for the so-called “cheese wire killer” will now be featured in the brand new two-part Channel 5 documentary Forensics: Murder Case, which will air at 9 p.m. on Monday and Tuesday, July 21 and 22.

Decades-long hope

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