IPSWICH, England - One of five prostitutes feared killed by a possible serial
murderer in Ipswich had voiced deep concerns for her safety in a TV interview
given just days before she vanished, it has emerged.
 A prostitute stands on a nearly deserted street in Ipswich.
One of the five prostitutes feared killed by a serial murderer in eastern
England said she was afraid of going out on the streets days before she
vanished, but said she needed the money, it has emerged.
[AFP]

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Paula Clennell, 24, told ITV
Anglia that she knew she was taking a chance by continuing to work the streets,
but that the need to earn outweighed her fears.
Clennell gave the interview last Tuesday, after the first killing had been
confirmed and four days before she disappeared.
"The girls are probably wary about coming out now," she said.
Viewed only from behind, apparently for fear of being identified by police
who might pursue her for prostitution offences, she said she was "a bit wary
about getting into cars" after the first killings.
She admitted that in the past she had had "a couple of nasty experiences,"
including being beaten up once.
But she added: "I need the money".
Clennell has not been seen since Saturday, and her body was feared to be one
of two corpses found Tuesday south of Ipswich, bringing the death total at the
hands of the so-called "Ipswich Ripper" to five.
The corpses of the first two murdered prostitutes, Gemma Adams, 25, and
19-year-old Tania Nicol, who both went missing from Ipswich's red light
district, were found on December 2 and 9 respectively.
The strangled body of a third woman, 24-year-old Anneli Alderton, was found
on December 10.
On the same day police said they were worried about Clennell, and Annette
Nicholls, 29, not seen since December 4, and warned all other prostitutes to
stay off streets.
Clennell's anguished father, Brian Clennell, said Wednesday he had no idea
his daughter had turned to prostitution to fund a drug habit.
"I'm going through hell," he told the BBC, struggling to control his
emotions, adding that his daughter had been "led up the wrong path at the wrong
time".