Kentish Express Ashford & District

Twenty years of seeing justice, done

- By Paul Hooper

From the quarter sessions in Carmarthen to to Old Bailey in London, Adele Williams has seen many courtroom changes throughout her distinguis­hed career.

But the judge, who once imagined life as a barrister, never dreamed she would be sentencing villains from her own kitchen near Ashford.

The Covid-19 pandemic has forced courts to re-think how cases are organised and how trials and sentences are dealt with.

And that has meant many of Kent’s judges having to turn their homes into courtrooms with barristers and defendants appearing by video link.

Judge Williams, who grew up in Wales, has just retired after 20 years as a Kent judge - eight of them as resident judge at Canterbury Crown Court.

And by her side during her career has been husband Andrew - who was resident judge at Maidstone Crown Court for many years until his retirement.

The couple first met at the Old Bailey when the two were co-defending - and Adele was a trainee barrister.

The two also successful­ly defended two defendants charged with looting during the Broadwater Farm estate riots in Tottenham, in 1985.

In October that year, four policemen burst into the home of resident Cynthia Jarrett looking for stolen property.

They did not find any, but Ms Jarrett had a heart attack and died.

In the ensuing violence police were pelted with bricks, bottles and petrol bombs and PC Keith Blakelock was stabbed to death.

Three people were jailed for his murder in the late 1980s, but their conviction­s were overturned and another murder trial in 2014 ended with a not guilty verdict.

After marrying, Adele and Andrew moved to Kent where they became one of only a handful of married couples to become resident judges at the same time.

She recalls: “I didn’t know of Kent in any real sense until I started coming here to do work and just loved it.”

It was in Kent they raised their family, daughter Louise, who now lives in Australia and son David, who followed his parents into law and is now a well respected barrister.

Among a plethora of of trials of bizarre cases she has presided the one which stands out was the attempted murder of Ray Weatherall describing it at the time as “cold, calculated and chilling cruelty”.

The case had involved Mr Weatherall’s cheating wife, Hayley her lover Glenn Pollard and his daughter Heather Pollard.

In 2018, the three plotted to shoot him, with the shot being fired while he was working at Sandwich Marina, after a number of bizarre failed attempts to kill him which included giving him an insulin overdose and pushing him overboard while on a fishing trip.

All three will spend life sentences in prison.

Judge Williams also presided over the case of a notorious sex offender called Dale Bolinger, dubbed the ‘Canterbury Cannibal.’

Bolinger, a nurse, was 62 when he was convicted in 2014 of plotting to rape, decapitate and eat a 14-year-old girl and had even bought an axe for his meeting with the girl - but she did not show.

He photograph­ed himself holding the weapon in front of a mirror.

He was jailed for nine years in September 2014, with Judge Williams telling him “You have shown no remorse and indeed cannot understand why anyone should find your behaviour in any way abnormal or perverted, let alone criminal.”

Bolinger, an American citizen, was released early and tried to set up home in the small backwater of Blair, Nebraska.

The judge has also had a link with a case which still continues to cause debate today in Kent, following an horrific murder 24 years ago.

She tried Damian Daley, the man who helped convict Michael Stone of the killing of Lin and Megan Russell in Chillenden in 1996, for the murder of a drug dealer. Daley must serve at least 20 years of a life sentence.

Fourteen years ago Stone was found guilty of killing Lin and Megan Russell in Chillenden – after Damian Daley gave evidence for the prosecutio­n.

Daley told the court that Stone had confessed to him in Canterbury prison that he had carried out the dreadful attacks on the 40-year-old mother and her six year old daughter.

No DNA linked Stone to the scene and he was largely convicted on Daley’s evidence.

Stone has always maintained his innocence and in 2017 a legal team assembled for a TV documentar­y backed Stone’s attempt for a third appeal and cast doubt on Daley’s evidence, saying much of it had already been published in press reports.

In 2014 a jury convicted Daley of helping in the murder of drug dealer Gus Allman in Folkstone.

Judge Williams described Daley as a violent and manipulati­ve man.

She added: “You armed yourself and joined in the attack on Mr Allman, even to the extent of following him out into the street.

“This was a drug-related argument during which each of you used a knife. This was a brutal murder.”

And one of the most dreadful cases she recalls was the killing of University of Kent student Molly McLaren.

Her ex, Joshua Stimpson, slit her throat while she sat in her car at the Dockside Outlet shopping centre in summer 2017.

Stimpson was jailed for life with the trial hearing how he had embarked on a terrifying stalking campaign of the 23-year-old student. He’d followed her to her gym, moments before killing her.

“That was just horrible, “Judge Williams recalls. She had told Stimpson in court: “This was an act of wickedness. You took away Molly’s life quite deliberate­ly in the most vicious fashion to punish her for finishing the relationsh­ip with you.”

Judge Williams has also wit

nessed close up vast changes in how evidence is given in court and the extra protection now given to children who are witnesses.

“I recall having to call a child who would have been between six and seven years old who had been the victim of an abduction. She had screamed as the man tried to drive away and her brothers managed to get a partial number plate of the vehicle.

“She came into the court and was so small we had to sit her on a number of cushions just so the jury could see her.”

Today, evidence from young or vulnerable victims is pre-recorded and the video shown to juries and if there is a need to ask questions, the witness is in another room away from the gaze of jurors and defendants.

“That’s a huge improvemen­t into ensuring the quality of evidence and it will continue to evolve, the Covid-19 restrictio­ns has forced us all to look at ways we can improve dealing with cases.”

Now husband and wife are planning to pool their vast knowledge of cases and write a book, in between taking part in her village’s amateur dramatics.

When she was at Canterbury, Adele organised Open Days where she co-opted barristers, staff, the press and even her husband into taking part in mock trials - all of them penned by the judge - involving Goldilocks, Cinderella and others.

She will continue her work as one of Kent’s deputy Lieutenant­s and will see her daughter in Australia.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Ray Weatherall
Ray Weatherall
 ??  ?? Judge Adele Williams
Judge Adele Williams
 ??  ?? Andrew Patience QC and Adele Williams married in 1975
Andrew Patience QC and Adele Williams married in 1975
 ??  ?? Judge Adele Williams at a court open day
Judge Adele Williams at a court open day

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