David Wilson is a Scottish professor of criminology at Birmingham City University. A former prison governor, he is known for his work as a criminologist specialising in serial killers through his work with various British police forces, academic publications, books, and media appearances.
Recruited directly from Cambridge, he joined Her Majesty's Prison Service as an Assistant Governor at HMP Wormwood Scrubs in 1984. It is said by some that at the age of 29 he became the youngest governor in the country. In fact he was the Assistant Governor in charge of Finnamore Wood camp, a small annexe to HM YOI Huntercombe. He then worked at HMP Grendon where he ran the sex offenders' treatment programme, HMP Woodhill, and HMYOI Finnamore Wood. While at HMP Woodhill, Wilson helped design and managed the two units for the 12 most disruptive prisoners in the country. This experience brought him into contact with some of the most notorious offenders of the last 30 years, including Charles Bronson and Dennis Nilsen. Latterly he was Head of Prison Officer and Operational Training in the Prison Service, on whose behalf he made official visits to Northern Ireland and the United States. It was after he returned from a trip to advise on penal reform in Albania on behalf of the Council of Europe, and how much better the prisons were there, that he resigned from Her Majesty's Prison Service in protest at prison conditions. In 2001 he completed a report of the 4,200 Muslim prisoners in British jails and his review concluded there were no examples of extremist recruiting. Wilson has recently written about these experiences in his professional memoir, , which was longlisted for the Gold Dagger Award 2019.
Emeritus Professor of Criminology
After a short time with the Prison Reform Trust, he joined University of Central England in Birmingham, and was given a professorship in 2000 and made Emeritus Professor in 2017. A member of the British Society of Criminology, his research covers aspects of prisons and imprisonment, murder and serial murder. Wilson has advised various police forces as a criminologist, and in 2006 was also involved in the Ipswich serial murder case, as an advisor to Sky News. Subsequently, Steve Wright was arrested and prosecuted for this series of murders. Wilson co-authored a book with the former Sky broadcast journalist Paul Harrison about their experiences on this case. Wilson also approached convicted murderer Peter Tobin to discuss the Bible John killings, but has not yet secured a meeting with Tobin. He was named top public criminologist by the Times Higher Education Supplement in 2008 and 2009. Wilson was profiled by the Times Higher Education in 2019. Wilson acted as: Vice-Chair of the Howard League for Penal Reform ; Vice-President of New Bridge; former Chair of the Forum on Prisoner Education ; former Chair of the Commission on English Prisons Today, whose president was Cherie Blair; and is Chair of the Friends of Grendon Prison. In 2012, he was made a National Teaching Fellow of England and Wales. In 2017, he acted as Moderator on the Dean Strang and Jerry Buting Making a Murderer Tour in London, Bristol, Birmingham and Newcastle. In 2019, he interviewed the FBI profiler, John E. Douglas on stage at The London Apollo.
Wilson appears regularly on television and radio, both as a commentator about the criminal justice system and as a presenter. He is a regular contributor to the press and writes mostly for The Guardian and the Daily Mail. On television he presented four series of The Crime Squad for BBC1, and also Leave No Trace and Too Young to Die? about the plight of young people on death row in the USA. On BBC2 he presented Who Killed Ivan the Terrible? and was an expert on the game show Identity. On Channel 5 he co-presented Banged Up, which was nominated for a Royal Television Society award. Wilson developed and presented two series of ', which was developed initially from the stand point of an academic look at criminal profiling to counter that shown in fictional series such as '. In 2016, he presented the critically acclaimed on Channel 4, about the murder of Carl Bridgewater. This documentary won the and the Royal Television Society Award in 2017. In 2019, Wilson presented the David Wilson's Crime Files, a series of 10 episodes, each an hour long, broadcast on BBC Scotland. Wilson gives public lectures which he announces via his Twitter account, and delivers lectures for schools through the company CrimiKnowledge. In 2016 the TV drama Dark Angel attributed his book Mary Ann Cotton: Britain's First Female Serial Killer as its inspiration.
Personal life
Wilson is married to Anne, a practising lawyer. The couple live in Buckinghamshire with their two children, Hugo and Fleur. Wilson supports the Northampton Saints and Glasgow Warriors rugby teams.
Publications (Books)
– This co-author is the Sky broadcast journalist and not the former Police Officer of the same name.
– This co-author is the Sky broadcast journalist and not the former Police Officer of the same name.