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BRUSH WITH DEATH

Gardener, 66, escaped serial killer Dennis Nilsen after murderer invited him back to his flat when he missed train home

A SPOOKED man has revealed his lucky escape after monster Dennis Nilsen invited him to his house of horrors after missing the last train.

Nick Barrit was just 24 when he bumped into one of the UK's most prolific serial killers in March 1979 in Waterloo station.

Nick Barrit has revealed how he escaped evil Dennis Nilsen's clutches
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Nick Barrit has revealed how he escaped evil Dennis Nilsen's clutchesCredit: SWNS:South West News Service
Dennis Nilsen was caged for life in 1983
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Dennis Nilsen was caged for life in 1983

The former gardener, now 66, had just missed his last train home to Christchurch, Dorset, when Nilsen approached him.

With his 36p in his pocket, trusting Nick took the mass-murderer up on his offer of dinner at a nearby cafe.

But Nick says Nilsen soon turned "aggressive" after he turned down the fiend's offer of a sofa for the night at the home in Muswell Hill where the killer buried some of his victims.

It was only decades later when Nick watched a show about Nilsen's five-year bloody rampage that he realised how lucky he was to escape.

Nick was 24 when he ate burgers at a cafe with the murderer
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Nick was 24 when he ate burgers at a cafe with the murderer Credit: SWNS:South West News Service

Nick said: "I was in a bit of a pickle and he sort of came out of nowhere.

"I remember him speaking in a soft Scottish accent. He kept staring at me and didn't say much.

"He seemed a bit agitated. He kept getting a cigarette out to light and then putting it back - hesitating.

"As soon as I went to go he got quite stroppy about it - bordering aggressive.

"He told me 'that's no reason, I bought you dinner. I expect you to come back, it's not going to cost you anything'.

"He told me he had all the booze - whisky and the like - that I could want. But I thanked him, shook his hand and started walking back to Waterloo.

"Now I dread to think what might have happened if I'd gone with him."

Rampage of the Kindly Killer

The Muswell Hill murderer was also dubbed the Kindly Killer because of his belief that his methods were humane.

Seven victims have not been identified.

December 30, 1978: Irish lad Stephen Holmes, 14, was lured to Nilsen's home in Melrose Avenue. The fiend strangled him with a tie and drowned him in a bucket, and kept his body for eight months.

December 3, 1979: Canadian tourist Kenneth Ockenden, 23, was strangled with a headphones cord while listening to music. Nilsen poured himself a drink and put on the headphones himself. He was one of few victims reported missing.

May 17, 1980: Nilsen found runaway Martyn Duffey, 16, sleeping rough at Euston station and offered him a bed. He drowned him in the kitchen sink and defiled the body.

August 1980: male prostitute Billy Sutherland, 26, met Nilsen in a pub near Piccadilly Circus. The killer later claimed he didn't remember the murder but woke up to find "another dead body".

September 1980: An unidentified victim Nilsen described as an Irish labourer with rough hands.

October 1980: Another unidentified man. Nilsen met him in the Salisbury Arms and described him as a slim male prostitute who was either Mexican or Filipino.

November 1980: A vagrant Nilsen found sleeping in a doorway on Charing Cross Road. The victim span his legs in a cycling motion as he was strangled.

November or December 1980: An English "long-haired hippy" Nilsen met after pubs closed in the West End. He kept the body under floorboards for a year.

January 4, 1981: Nilsen met an "18-year-old blue-eyed Scot" in the Golden Lion pub in Soho and lured him home for a drinking contest. He chopped up the body eight days later along with the previous month's victim.

February 1981:  A Northern Irish victim in his early 20s who Nilsen nicknamed Belfast Boy because he could not remember his name.

April 1981: A muscular English skinhead Nilsen said he met in Leicester Square. The killer recalled his victim has a tattoo round his neck reading "cut here".

September 18, 1981: Malcolm Barlow, 23, was the last victim at Melrose Avenue. Nilsen found him slumped outside the house and called an ambulance. He killed Malcolm when he returned to thank him the next day.

March 1982: John Howlett, 23, nicknamed John The Guardsman by Nilsen who invited him back to his flat in Cranley Gardens, Muswell Hill, and strangled him in bed.

September 1982: Graham Allen, 27, accepted Nilsen's offer of a meal. He strangled his guest and later claimed he choked to death on an omelette.

January 26, 1983: Nilsen's final victim Stephen Sinclair, 20, fell asleep drunk at the Cranley Gardens attic. Nilsen strangled him with a tie and a rope and fell asleep beside the body.

Nilsen became known as one of Britain's most infamous serial killers when he murdered at least a dozen boys and young men in his two North London houses of horror.

The ex-soldier put his sick fantasies into action between 1978 and 1983 when he went on a murderous rampage.

Nilsen targeted homeless or gay men and lured them back to his two homes with the promise of alcohol or a place to stay.

Once inside, the monster would strangle his victims or drown them in the bath before carrying out a chilling ritual of carefully clothing their bodies and keeping them in his home for weeks.

The fiend would sometimes lie next to the bodies in bed for hours on end - leading to the haunting nickname the Kindly Killer because he believed his ritualistic killing was humane.

Nilsen would then dismember his victims and often performed sex acts over their corpses.

His grisly killing spree has just been explored in ITV's three-part series Des, starring David Tennant as the fiend.

Nick says the release of the show has brought all the memories flooding back.

He recalled how he had driven from Dorset to Derby to watch the Rams play Everton but the game was called off when the floodlights failed.

Nilsen stowed his dismembered victims beneath the floorboards for months on end
Nilsen stowed his dismembered victims beneath the floorboards for months on end

As the streetlights were also plunged into darkness over the fault, stranded Nick couldn't find his car so made his way to the station where he missed the train.

It was then he spent the evening eating burgers with Nilsen after the killer told him he was in the same predicament.

Nick said: "I didn't suspect a thing.

"He was a smartly-dressed, well-spoken man - and there was me with long hair.

"I just thought he was being kind."

After butchering young men, Nilsen would either dispose of their bodies on a bonfire or buried them under his floorboards - flushing their flesh and smaller bones down the toilet.

This eventually led to his arrest after a plumber was called to one of the homes due to complaints from the killer and his neighbours.

They noticed rats feasting on human flesh inside a pipe - leading Nilsen to remark: "It looks to me like someone has been flushing down their Kentucky Fried Chicken."

But with his suspicions aroused, the plumber returned the next day with his supervisor and police were alerted - bringing an end to Nilsen's reign of terror.

Police found more than 1,000 teeth and bone fragments when they dug up the garden and a field behind his house in Cranley Gardens in February 1983.

It was searched after Nilsen's three murders at another flat in Muswell Hill came to light.

He later confessed to cops he killed "15 or 16" victims, including around a dozen in Cricklewood, putting him second only to Harold Shipman as the UK’s most prolific murderer.

Around half of the victims were never identified.

Recalling the evening, Nick said: "Now I dread to think what would have happened if I had gone back.

"I keep getting flashbacks. "It makes me feel terrible now, but obviously at the time I never suspected a thing.

"It wasn't until I saw a four-part Channel 4 documentary in 2006 that I realised who he was.

"I noticed that Elvis Costello lookalike, I'd sat and shared dinner with all those years ago.

"It gives me the creeps."

Nilsen went on trial at the Old Bailey in October 1983 and was found guilty of six murders and two attempted murders.

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His minimum 25-year jail term was later changed to a whole-life tariff.

Nilsen died in agony in Full Sutton jail in East Yorkshire in 2018 after being left lying in his own faeces for two hours as his condition deteriorated.

From top left to bottom right his victims - Billy Sutherland, Kenneth Ockendon, Stephen Sinclair, Stephen Holmes, Malcolm Barlow, Graham Allen
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From top left to bottom right his victims - Billy Sutherland, Kenneth Ockendon, Stephen Sinclair, Stephen Holmes, Malcolm Barlow, Graham Allen
A few victims escaped when Nilsen tried to kill them: from left to right, Douglas Stewart, Carl Stotter and Paul Nobbs
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A few victims escaped when Nilsen tried to kill them: from left to right, Douglas Stewart, Carl Stotter and Paul Nobbs
This Morning's Eamonn horrified as cop who arrested Dennis Nilsen reveals moment he opened cupboard full of body parts
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