Until recently, Hindley had been petitioning for release, but following then Home Secretary Jack Straw's 1997 ruling that she should remain incarcerated, and the demise of her sympathiser Lord Longford, she appears to have given up on this misguided crusade. It seems she and Ian Brady are now resigned to dying in prison. They may not have long to wait, either: Brady is on constant hunger strike and under suicide watch (ironically, many who originally argued for Brady's execution now want to see his life prolonged), while Hindley has a terminal illness.

Update: Hindley did, indeed, spend the rest of her life in prison. She popped her clogs on Friday, November 15, 2002, at the age of 60, apparently from pneumonia. She takes the knowledge of the location of Keith Bennett's grave to her own - along with the details of further victims, if any existed.