A PROLIFIC former burglar who has turned his life around is now teaching criminology and police students his old tricks to help prevent future crimes.

Darryl Kennedy started breaking and entering aged just nine, and he has been locked up four times, after raiding around 20,000 homes.

The 61-year-old reformed character says he is now on the straight and narrow after 41 years of targeting the rich and famous – swiping diamonds and jewels before leaving without a trace.

The former crook served five years in prison for a string of 140 high-value robberies in Cheshire, before his release in 2019.

The court heard at the time that the notorious ‘cat burglar’ spread ‘fear like a disease’ through the £250,000-burglary spree.

The professional crook raided homes across Warrington, including Grappenhall and Lymm, as well as Northwich, Cuddington, Barnton, Knutsford, Holmes Chapel, Frodsham and Chester.

Some of the break-ins occurred on Christmas Eve and involved the theft of an engagement ring from a couple just two weeks before their wedding day, as well as the burglary of the home of a family visiting a dying relative in hospital a week before Christmas.

Now, he has been enlisted by several universities to deliver lectures to the next generation of coppers on how to catch cat burglars like him.

He teaches students his golden rules from his past – such as how he would avoid open-plan houses, look out for low-quality window frames and make a beeline for the master bedroom where the jewellery would always be.

The Salfordian said he cannot take back his criminal past, but hopes he can prevent future crimes.

The father-of-four said: "I decided I needed to change when I realised I wasted 41 years of my life committing crimes. Now I want to prevent other people from being burgled.

"So many of the 'security experts' out there miss lots of details – they don't seem to have a clue.

"But I do, and I'll tell the whole truth. I'll admit what I've done. I don't mind if people don't like me."

Darryl says he began when his dad would take him out in the car and teach him how to burgle homes.

He developed a global reputation as a notorious cat burglar and even headed up a professional burglary gang targeting up to 15 homes a day.

Convicted burglar Darryl Kennedy is now teaching the next generation of police officers how to catch people like him. Picture: SWNS

Convicted burglar Darryl Kennedy is now teaching the next generation of police officers how to catch people like him. Picture: SWNS

He was jailed three times before his final stint in prison, and he has lived a crime-free life ever since.

In 2023, he was recruited by a lecturer at the University of Central Lancashire to deliver lectures on deterring and catching crooks, and has now spoken on the subject at four other universities too.

So far, he has taught more than 1,000 trainee police officers and criminology students in the north of England.

He said: "I tell them the aspects of what I did in that period of time, on areas that are vulnerable and the kind of targets I used to go for and houses I would be attracted to.

"Things like, I would be attracted to houses at the ends of streets, and ones with tree-lined fences.

"My lectures get good feedback and they ask loads of questions.”

He also goes into prisons and speaks to offenders through social enterprise Entrepreneurs Unlocked, for which he is an ambassador.

He said: "I got to a point where I realised I needed to turn my life around, and now I want to help other people do that."

Darryl has been working with security companies like DeterTech to promote products that would have deterred him, like advertising if their home has been tagged with SmartWater, a traceable liquid applied to valuables which can identify the thief after being stolen.

He plans to begin visiting primary and secondary schools to encourage youngsters to pick the right path in life.

Reflecting on his journey, he said: "I still think about my victims all the time. A life of crime leaves a trail of a lot of devastated people, and you have to live with that.

"People always ask me if I have one last job left in me, but the answer is no, never ever. I wouldn't dream of going back to that.

"When I was an active criminal, I never used to sleep well because I feared a knock on the door. Now I've changed, it's the best feeling in the world."

Darryl received no money or financial benefit for participating in this article.