Who were the Kray twins’ victims?

RONNIE and Reggie Kray were identical twins who ran one of the most notorious gangs in London.
The Krays were jailed in the 60s for a number of crimes - though it's thought they had actually committed a lot more.
Who were the Kray twins' victims?
The Kray twins were both sentenced to life in prison in 1969, after one of the most famous criminal trials in UK history.
The twins, both 35 at the time, were given a minimum of 30 years after being convicted of murder.
Though they were sentenced for a murder each, it is believed that the twins carried out other crimes such as armed robbery and arson throughout their reign.
George Cornell
George Cornell was shot and killed by Ronnie Kray on March 9, 1966.
Read More on Gangsters
He is believed to be Ronnie's first victim.
Cornell, a member of a rival Richardson gang in London, had once been part of the Kray gang but turned against them and joined Charlie and Eddie Richardson's crowd.
On the night of his death, Cornell visited the Blind Beggar pub just a mile from the Krays' home.
Ronnie entered the pub and shot George with a 9mm Luger.
Cornell was rushed to a nearby hospital but he died in the early hours of the next morning.
At the 1969 trial, Ronnie was unanimously found guilty by a jury of Cornell's murder.
Most read in The Sun
Jack "the Hat" McVitie
Jack McVitie died aged 35 in October 1967.
He was killed by Reggie Kray at a party in Stoke Newington, after failing to follow through on a contract to kill financial advisor Leslie Payne but keeping the money anyway.
Reggie pointed a gun at McVitie's head, but the gun failed to fire.
Instead, he grabbed a carving knife and stabbed him in the face, neck, and stomach.
Following Jack's death, the Kray twins were arrested by the Scotland Yard police.
This arrest led to their eventual imprisonment, with Reggie being convicted of McVitie's murder.
How long did the Kray twins spend in prison?
In 1969 the twins were sentenced to life with a 30-year non-parole period.
In March 1995 Ronnie died at the age of 61 at Wexham Park Hospital in Slough, Berkshire.
He had suffered heart attack at Broadmoor Hospital two days earlier.
Ronnie had been transferred to Broadmoor Hospital from HMP Long Lartin in 1979 when he was certified insane due to paranoid schizophrenia.
In August 2000, Reggie was freed from prison on compassionate grounds.
Read More on The Sun
Home Secretary Jack Straw had called for Reggie's release following his diagnosis of cancer.
Reggie then died in his sleep in October 2000 at the age of 66.