Daily Mail

Author’s murder rocks village idyll

Italian farm worker arrested after the body of ‘amazing and gentle’ volunteer found in bull pen

- By Izzy Ferris

AN ITALIAN farm worker is being quizzed by police over the murder of a ‘wonderful’ animal-loving volunteer whose body was found in a bull pen.

Katherine Bevan, 53, a veterinary pharmacist and author, was found on January 3 at an Arabian horse farm in a Devon beauty spot once described by Prince Charles as his ‘ideal English village’.

Her death was initially believed to have been an accident and was reported to the Health and Safety Executive. But after a post-mortem examinatio­n at the weekend, police launched a murder inquiry and arrested a 26-year-old man.

Mrs Bevan began volunteeri­ng at Combe Farm in Gittisham five years ago, and recently released a book called Knowing Daisy: A True Story, which chronicles her relationsh­ip with calves Daisy and Dandelion, which were both rescued and taken to the farm.

Mrs Bevan wrote affectiona­tely about her time on the farm, saying: ‘The farm is part of a larger estate and is set in what must be the most beautiful location I have ever found. A long track leads you to a world of old charm. Some 280 acres of rolling countrysid­e surrounds the old farmhouse. Steep hills and valleys, with pockets of woodland

‘A very special and dear person’

and natural waterways are just some of the wonders to explore.’

It was initially feared Mrs Bevan had been crushed in a tragic accident while tending to Jumbo the bull in a stock pen.

In her book, she described Jumbo as ‘good natured’ but with the potential to be ‘deadly dangerous’.

Last night Mrs Bevan’s estranged husband, Michael, said: ‘She was marvellous – a wonderful person. She was so dedicated to everything she did and she was loved by everyone.’

Mrs Bevan worked as a veterinary pharmacist for the Vale Veterinary Group as well as volunteeri­ng on the farm. She previously had a job as a marketing manager for jewellers F Hinds. Michael Harris, who runs Combe Farm, described Mrs Bevan as a ‘lovely, wonderful person’.

He added: ‘It is just awful. Kate has been a friend and helping up here for the last five years.

‘And she started living here about a year ago. She was part of our family and she sat with us for dinner every night.

‘She was a very special and dear person. She was the last person in the world who anyone could do this to. She was amazing and gentle. It is utterly awful.

‘She helped with one bull and the cattle and the horses. She had a passion for cattle.’

Mr Harris said the arrest of the young Italian man – who is one of the live-in volunteers and backpacker­s who work at the farm – was ‘a complete shock’.

He said: ‘There was nothing about the arrested man that ever suggested he was a danger to anyone. I would hate to think that I had taken in anyone like that.

‘His English is not very good but good enough for the farm. We have volunteers come here from all over the world.’ Mr Harris added: ‘Her body was found in the bull pen. But that does not mean she died in the bull pen. I did always feel there was something odd about that explanatio­n.

‘Jumbo was as quiet as a lamb. He has never caused any trouble to any of my workers although of course bulls can act in unpredicta­ble ways.

‘Kate knew how to handle herself around the farm. She was no fool. She was well aware of the need to follow safety procedures.

There is still a lot we don’t know.’ Matt Foad, who runs the Vale Veterinary Group, said: ‘Kate worked tirelessly to help make the Vale the place that it is, and her efforts have helped provide a better service to all of our clients. Her passing has shocked us all.’

Gittisham has chocolate-box thatched stone cottages with a stream running through the centre. Yesterday the St George’s Cross flew at half-mast at the village church.

A Devon and Cornwall Police spokesman said: ‘A 26-year- old local man has been arrested on suspicion of murder. He remains in police custody.

‘Anyone who feels they have informatio­n that could assist the investigat­ion is urged to contact Devon and Cornwall Police.’

A spokesman for the Health and Safety Executive added: ‘This is a joint police/HSE investigat­ion. At the moment the police have primacy of the investigat­ion, and so we are not able to comment at this time.’

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 ??  ?? Picture postcard: Gittisham in Devon, where author and farm volunteer Katherine Bevan, right, was murdered
Picture postcard: Gittisham in Devon, where author and farm volunteer Katherine Bevan, right, was murdered

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