Handley was fixing a chain on his bicycle in Beckton, London, on 2 October 1994, when he was approached by two men in a Peugeot 405. The men had been cruising the area looking for a young, pre-teen, fair haired boy to make real their fantasy of abducting such a boy, sexually abusing him and then killing him. The driver of the car claimed to be lost, and asked Handley to show him directions on a map. The map was placed across the back seat of the car and, when Daniel leaned inside to look at it, one of the men pushed him into the car and the other drove them off. They drove Handley to a flat, where each man sexually abused him in turn while the other videoed the activity with a camcorder. Afterwards, they took Handley to a layby near Hungerford in Berkshire, where he was again sexually abused before being strangled to death with a car tow rope. His killers dumped his body in a shallow grave near a golf course close to Morss' home in Bradley Stoke, Bristol before returning later to bury it deeper. His skull was found in March 1995, after it had been disturbed by foxes – five months after he was last seen alive.
Trial
The pair were found guilty of Handley's murder at the Old Bailey on 17 May 1996. They were sentenced to life imprisonment by the trial judge, who condemned them as "vultures" and recommended that they should never be set free. After their trial, it was revealed that the pair were serial child sex offenders who had also abused children in the Philippines. The pair had met whilst incarcerated at Wormwood Scrubs Prison during the early 1990s for child sex offences. Morss was convicted of raping two young boys in 1986, and had his seven-year sentence cut to five on 2 November 1986. Tyler had been arrested for indecency with young boys and sentenced to four years in prison. Morss lived in Bradley Stoke on the outskirts of Bristol where he co-owned and ran a minicab firm. Morss and Tyler fled to the Philippines after Handley's death, but when Morss returned to England, the child's body had been found and he was quickly arrested on suspicion of murder. Tyler had to be extradited back to England to stand trial. One of the killers later recalled "the feeling of sexual excitement when I grabbed his body and pushed him into the car, the fear of being caught and the excitement that we might get away with it. It was like a fantasy."
Sentencing changes
On 24 November 2002, the pair were two of four child murderers who received 50-year tariffs imposed by Home Secretary David Blunkett, effectively meaning that they will remain in prison until at least 2045 and the ages of 82 and 80 respectively. However, this system was declared illegal within 24 hours by the European Court of Human Rights as well as the High Court for England and Wales, following a legal challenge by convicted double murderer Anthony Anderson. The final decision on a life sentence prisoner's minimum term now rests with the High Court following a recommendation by the trial judge.