Zoe Louise Parker, age 24, lived in and around London and sometimes used the name, Cathy Dennis. She often stayed in hostels or a friend’s flat.
Zoe’s aunt, Pauline Knott, said Zoe was “very naive and “very gullible.” She also had learning difficulties and no job qualifications.
The last time Knott saw Zoe was in early September 2000, when staff at a local hostel kicked her out for breaking the rules, and she needed a place to stay. However, Knott was headed to see one of her grandchildren and told Zoe to contact her parents or social services.
Knott never saw Zoe alive again.
On Dec. 17, 2000, a London resident found a human torso in the River Thames near Church Road in Battersea.
The torso contained a distinctive tattoo of a red rose with the name “Zoe.” The victim wore a light-colored top with an attached chain around the waist, sold by a market trader who had worked in a few areas in and around London and the English counties of Hertfordshire, Kent, and Surrey, in August and September 2000.
The killer had cut the victim’s body in half with a sharp instrument such as a samurai sword, a post-mortem showed. showed. However, officials could not determine whether the victim was alive when dismembered. The torso bore no apparent injuries consistent with murder. It was not weighed down or wrapped when police recovered it. The body had been in the water for seven to 21 days.
Two weeks later, Zoe’s family identified the torso victim as the missing young woman. More than 30 police officers worked the case.
CCTV footage captured Zoe on Dec. 6, 2000, in the company of two unidentified white males in Hounslow, West London.
Zoe had links to people in central London’s West End and Charing Cross areas. She also knew several acquaintances throughout England.
Detective Inspector Ian Mill said in February 2001, “She looked for attention and somewhere to sleep. She’d go up to men she liked in the pub sometimes and offer sex in return for a bed for the night.”
Authorities renewed the search for Zoe’s lower body in May 2001 in the river at Battersea but never found it. The family and the police made several pleas to the public for information regarding Zoe’s killing.
In March 2001, police investigated whether Zoe’s murder was related to the murders of two other women. One was Paula Fields. Police found ten body parts belonging to Fields in the Regent’s Canal near King’s Cross on Feb. 19, 2001. Her remains were in at least six bags containing bricks and tiles to weigh them down.
Fields had a previous relationship with a man from Liverpool, John Sweeney. He was convicted of her murder in April 2011.
Sweeney also killed his former girlfriend Melissa Halstead, 33, a former model and freelance photographer from Ohio. Halstead vanished from her Amsterdam apartment in 1990. Her body – minus the head and hands – was found in the Westersingel canal in Rotterdam. However, police did not identify her until 2008 through familial DNA.
Fields was also originally from Liverpool. She met Sweeney in 2000 and vanished three months later.
Police found more than 300 violent and lurid paintings and poems at his home, with one, entitled the Scalp Hunter, depicting a female victim and a bloody ax.
He wrote a poem on the back of a scratchcard: “Poor old Melissa, chopped her up in bits, food to feed the fish, Am*dam was the pits.”
The Guardian
Police also found a calendar on the back of a minicab receipt with “Dec. 16, 2000” circled and then “9 ½ weeks” and the letter “P” written beneath it. Nine and a half weeks following Dec. 16, 2000, fell within three days of police finding Fields’ body on Feb. 19, 2001.
When police became interested in Sweeney for the Fields and Halstead murders, he was already in prison for the 2001 brutal attack on his former girlfriend, Delia Balmer, who later wrote a book about the attack called “Living With a Serial Killer.” (affiliate link)
Police looked into the disappearances of three additional women Sweeney may have killed.
- Sue, a nurse trainee from Derbyshire, left for Switzerland in the late 1970s or early 80s.
- Two former girlfriends of Sweeney – a Brazilian known as Irani and a Columbian called Maria — have not been seen since the late 1990s when they had known Sweeney in north London. Police believe those women have been murdered.
As far as I can tell, investigators found no evidence tying Zoe’s murder to Sweeney’s crimes. Her case remains unsolved.
True Crime Diva’s Thoughts
Even though we do not know of an affiliation between Zoe and Sweeney, it does not mean there wasn’t one.
Here’s what I find interesting about the “Dec. 16, 2000” and “9 ½ weeks” Sweeny had written down. Zoe’s body was found on Dec. 17, 2000, and Fields’ body was found a little over 9 ½ weeks after hers. Could the “P” have stood for Parker and not Paula? Maybe Sweeney incorrectly wrote 16 instead of 17.
Now, there is also the Camden Ripper, Anthony Hardy. His Wikipedia entry states that he was linked to Zoe’s murder. But the original source in the footnotes is a French book, so I cannot read it. However, I did find another source on a news site that says he is only suspected of her murder. I think he’s a good suspect in Zoe’s killing, but I’m skeptical.
London is huge, so there could be all kinds of sick killers who police never arrested.
I think those two white males seen with Zoe on CCTV are responsible, or at the very least, know what happened to her. I believe she was killed on that same day, Dec. 6, 2000.