ROSE WEST CLAIMS SHE WILL BE FORGIVEN BY GOD IN PRISON DESPITE HER HORRIFIC CRIMES
The notorious murderer Rose West, known as Britain’s worst female serial murderer, has been publicly revealing her beliefs and behaviors in prison.She reportedly told fellow inmates that she believes she will be forgiven by God in the afterlife, despite her heinous crimes.
Rose, who helped her husband Fred West in raping and murdering their daughter Heather, has been attending weekly chapel services while incarcerated, asserting she will find peace in the afterlife.
A former inmate, Catherine Jones, 52, detailed Rose’s religious convictions, saying: “She really believes she’ll be forgiven when she dies.” Rose has expressed that she blames her late husband Fred for her actions, claiming he forced her into doing terrible things.
Rose’s conviction of ten murders, including her own daughter, is a stark reality.
She received a whole life tariff in 1995 after being found guilty.
Fred West, who committed similar crimes with Rose, hanged himself in jail in 1995 while awaiting trial for multiple murders.
Catherine also described her observations of Rose in prison, noting her manipulative nature, her weekly chapel attendance, and her attempts to seek redemption through religion.
Despite her religious expressions, family members have voiced their disbelief, stating, “There is nothing she can do that would put right what happened,” and criticizing her for disrespecting the victims’ families.
Fred and Rose’s crimes involved dismembering and burying young women and children at their residence, 25 Cromwell Street, Gloucester.
Recent investigations suggest there may be more victims buried in Glasgow, where Fred West lived before moving to Gloucester.
Fred, working as an ice-cream man, killed a three-year-old boy in 1965, with claims from researcher Paul Pender that suggests he deliberately hit the child and may have used his skills in butchery learned while working in an abattoir to dismember victims.
Rose West’s criminal legacy continues to haunt the nation, and her religious claims are met with suspicion by her family and the public.
The Ministry of Justice has declined to comment further on the case.