Boxer Freddie Mills 'was murdered by the Mob', BBC documentary claims

Freddie Mills, winner of the 1948 World Light Heavyweight title, at his London gym - Hulton Archive
Freddie Mills, winner of the 1948 World Light Heavyweight title, at his London gym - Hulton Archive

It is a mystery that has endured for more than 50 years: who killed Freddie Mills?

The British former light heavyweight champion of the world, who went on to become a showbusiness star and Soho nightclub owner, was found dead in the back seat of his car in 1965, with a bullet through his eye.

The official verdict was suicide but his family always maintained he was murdered, and there were rumours that the Kray twins were involved.

Now the son of a London casino boss has come forward to the BBC to claim that his father masterminded the killing, in collusion with the notorious American mobster, Meyer Lansky.

The claim is made in a BBC Four documentary, to be shown on Wednesday.

Benny Huntman - Credit: JA Hampton/Hulton Archive
Benny Huntman (left) in the rung with Italian heavyweight boxer Primo Carnera in 1937 Credit: JA Hampton/Hulton Archive
Meyer Lansky - Credit: AP Photo
Meyer Lansky (left) was known as 'the Mob's accountant' Credit: AP Photo

Roger Huntman says his father, Benny Huntman, was responsible for the murder. Huntman senior was a boxing manager who helped to arrange Mills’s 1948 title fight against Gus Lesnevich, and later moved into the casino business.

When Mills’ nightclub began running up debts in 1965, he became desperate and attempted to blackmail his old associate, the programme will claim.

Roger Huntman said: “Freddie came to Benny’s flat and said his nightspot was going skint. He said, ‘I need £2,500, Benny, or I’m going under. I know who these guys are you’re associating with. If you don’t give me the money, I’m going to Fleet Street.’

“Freddie tried to blackmail my father, not thinking of the consequences.” Huntman was involved with Lansky, who was known as ‘the Mob’s accountant’ and was taking a stake in the London casino business.

Mr Huntman said he was instructed by his father to take a message to Mills, arranging a meeting to hand over the money on July 25.

Roger Huntman - Credit: BBC
Roger Huntman claims his father, Benny Huntman, was involved in the killing Credit: BBC

In the early hours of July 26, Mr Huntman said he was working in his father’s casino. “At four in the morning, my father walked in with this old guy, an Italian-American. I didn’t think anything of it. It didn’t cross my mind that anything could happen to Freddie. All of a sudden this massive guy has come over to my father and whispered in his ear, then turned around and told the table, ‘Mills is dead. He’s gone. He’s finished.’

“The old guy had a smirk on his face. Later I found out it was Meyer Lansky. Coincidence? I don’t think so. He was there on the night Mills was shot.”

Mr Huntman said he was coming forward because all involved were now dead, and he wanted Mills’s three children to know the truth. The boxer’s stepson and two daughters appear in the documentary.

Freddie Mills - Credit: Terry Fincher/Hulton Archive
Freddie Mills became an actor after retiring from the ring, appearing with Pat O'Brien in Kill Me Tomorrow Credit: Terry Fincher/Hulton Archive

The programme also features an interview with Prof David Wingate who, as a young doctor, examined Mills on the night of his death. He recalled that Mills’ eyes had been open when he was shot, rendering the suicide verdict highly unlikely.

“At the moment you squeezed the trigger, you would [reflexively] shut your eyes,” Prof Wingate said. “I think he was looking down the barrel of the gun but somebody else was holding it.”

:: Murder In Soho: Who Killed Freddie Mills? is on BBC Four, Wednesday August 1