A DETECTIVE who interviewed one of the UK's most dangerous killers eerily claimed he "made him smile" during their chat.
Serial killer Robert Maudsley has been stuck in an underground box, measuring 18ft by 14ft, for 23 hours a day for more than 16,400 consecutive days.
Maudsley was because he was wrongly accused of eating the brain of one of his murder victims.
He is set to spend his 50th consecutive Christmas behind bars.
Ex-detective Paul Harrison interviewed the dangerous killer.
Maudsley told : "You’ve got the image of a monster... an evil man. I’d got all these preconceived ideas.
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"If you didn’t know him and what he’d done, and you saw him in the bar... he’s a really intelligent guy, who made you smile.
"He’d talk about everyday things. A lot of serial killers are intense and narcissistic and talk about themselves.
"I didn’t find him like that at all. I thought, ‘Wow, this is something different to any serial killer'."
In January 2023, Maudsley broke the world record for solitary confinement - in a perspex box thought to have inspired Hannibal Lecter’s glass case in Silence of the Lambs.
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Maudsley, from Toxeth in Liverpool, carried out his first murder in 1974 when a builder called John Farrell picked him up and took him back to his flat in North London for sex while the killer was working as a rent boy.
When Farrell showed him photos of a young girl he had abused, Maudsley, then 20, flew into a rage and slowly garrotted him, turning the builder’s face blue.
He handed himself into police and was sent to Broadmoor hospital — where he soon earned his first nickname, “Blue”, after the colour of his victim’s face.
But soon after in 1977, Maudsley was given the new moniker of "Spoons" after his first gruesome prison murder.
He and another psychopath took an inmate hostage in his cell and tortured him to death for nine hours.
The man was discovered with his head "cracked open like a boiled egg" with a spoon hanging out.
A guard then claimed Maudsley had eaten part of the victim's brain, which led to the monster being marked with a "cannibal" tag - despite the grim information being false.
Maudsley was convicted of manslaughter and sent to Wakefield prison - known as Monster Mansion because of the large number of notorious prisoners held there.
It was here that the fiend went on another bloody rampage - slaughtering two fellow lags in one day in 1978.
The first was Salney Darwood, 46, who he lured into his cell before strangling and stabbing him with a knife made from a soup spoon and hiding his body under a bunk.
He then crept into the cell of William Roberts, who was lying on his bed, and smashed his head against a wall before using the homemade weapon to prise open his skull.
The brute then calmly walked into the wing office and told guards: “There’ll be two short on the roll call.”
Maudsley now spends 23 hours a day in "the cage" - a bulletproof glass cell built specifically for him in 1983 after he was officially classed Britain's most dangerous prisoner.
While languishing alone in the cell, Maudsley writes letters and poems to his nephew Gavin, who regularly visits him in jail.
The psycho has a genius level IQ and enjoys fine art, poetry and classical music - as well as documentaries about animals.
In a documentary, The Killer In My Family, Gavin told the show: "He likes to write us letters and tell me what he's been watching on TV.
"He really loves the wildlife programmes as well, the Attenborough ones, things like that."
During his early days in solitary, Maudsley is said to have befriended cockroaches and went without a haircut for 12 years because no prison barber would touch him.
He still signs his handwritten letters "Wolfie" when his appearance led to another moniker - the Wolf Man of Wakefield.
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Maudsley is serving four life sentences - spending every day in solitary confinement with just an hour's exercise a day while being flanked by six guards.
His record means he can't have contact with any other prisoners - although he is said to have had run-ins with infamous prisoner Charles Bronson.