Belfast Telegraph

Sarah Everard: trial date set for murder accused Wayne Couzens

Met Police officer (48) appears at the Old Bailey by video link from Belmarsh prison

- By Emily Pennink

A police officer is due to go on trial in the autumn for the kidnap and murder of Sarah Everard.

PC Wayne Couzens (48) is accused of snatching the 33-yearold marketing executive as she walked home from a friend’s flat in Clapham, south London, on the evening of March 3.

Yesterday, the Metropolit­an Police officer made his first appearance at the Old Bailey by video link from Belmarsh top security jail in south London.

Wearing a red sweatshirt and grey jogging bottoms, the defendant appeared to have a wound on his forehead.

He spoke only to confirm his name and date of birth.

Members of Ms Everard’s family joined the hearing in court 10 of the Central Criminal Court by video link, according to court officials.

Prosecutor Tom Little QC said the circumstan­ces of the case had led to a “very significan­t and wide-ranging investigat­ion”.

He told the court the case had attracted an “almost unpreceden­ted media and public attention”.

Judge Mark Lucraft QC set a provisiona­l Old Bailey trial for October 25 with a plea hearing on July 9. Couzens, who sat with his head bowed throughout the hearing, was remanded into custody.

Ms Everard was reported missing by her boyfriend on March 4.

Her body was found hidden in an area of woodland in Ashford, Kent, on March 10. She was discovered inside a large builder’s bag and was formally identified through her dental records.

A post-mortem examinatio­n has taken place but no cause of death has yet been given.

The inquest into her death will open on Thursday, March 18, in Maidstone, a Kent County Council spokesman said.

Couzens, who worked on the Parliament­ary and Diplomatic Protection Command unit, had finished a shift earlier on the morning of March 3 and was not on duty at the time of Ms Everard’s disappeara­nce.

The officer, from Deal in Kent, was charged with kidnap and murder on Friday and appeared before Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court the following day.

Ms Everard’s death has sparked vigils across the country in her memory and demands for action to tackle violence against women.

Images of women being manhandled by police officers at a vigil on Clapham Common on Saturday night has led to shock and widespread condemnati­on.

Previously, Ms Everard’s last known movements have been aired in court. She had visited a friend in the Clapham Junction area on March 3 and left at around 9pm to make the twoand-a-half-mile journey home.

Ms Everard was captured alone on CCTV at 9.15pm and again at 9.28pm, and was later caught on the camera of a marked police car at 9.32pm.

At around 9.35pm, a bus camera captured two figures on Poynders Road and a white Vauxhall Astra with its hazard lights flashing. Another bus camera captured the same car with both front doors open.

The registrati­on of the vehicle, later confirmed to be a car hired in Dover, Kent, was caught and tracked by police as it left London towards Kent.

 ??  ?? A court artist sketch by Elizabeth Cook of police constable Wayne Couzens at the Old Bailey
A court artist sketch by Elizabeth Cook of police constable Wayne Couzens at the Old Bailey

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