Scottish Daily Mail

Mother tried to have her ex killed 3 times after losing custody battle

- By Andrew Levy

A MOTHER tried to persuade three separate men to murder her former husband after he won sole custody of their child.

Victoria Breeden, 39, made ‘concerted and persistent’ efforts over five years to have Rob Parkes killed, offering one man £5,000 for his death.

Breeden , who was recorded trying to arrange one ‘hit’, claimed she had never been serious about wanting him dead. But she was convicted by a jury yesterday of three counts of soliciting to murder.

Mr Parkes, who was in court throughout the trial, had tears in his eyes as his former wife was found guilty. The court was told he escaped being murdered only by good fortune.

Setting out the prosecutio­n’s case, Christophe­r Paxton, QC, said: ‘The defendant was in a relationsh­ip with some of the men who she sought to help her with this deadly plan. Others were just friends. These were not empty words – she spoke in a pique of temper. She had the means to fund her plan.

‘Each of the solicitati­ons to murder had, or concerned, one target – and that was her ex-husband.’

Breeden, who sat in a wheelchair during the trial and gave no evidence, met her former husband at university in the 1990s. The couple, who lived in Milton Keynes, married in 2004 but the relationsh­ip had failed by 2008. In 2013 a family court granted Mr Parkes temporary custody of the couple’s daughter, who is now a teenager. The order was made final in February 2015.

Breeden, who has two more children from other relationsh­ips, was consumed with ‘bitterness and anger’ following the rulings, Mr Paxton said. ‘This drove her, or drove her in part, to seek retributio­n.’

Breeden from Littleport, near Ely in Cambridges­hire, approached her friend Hamish Martin in 2014 to ‘sort out her ex’. Mr Paxton told Chelmsford Crown Court: ‘She said she could get together £5,000 if he knew someone who could do it.’

Breeden was acquitted of also asking her handyman lover Daniel Proctor to kill Mr Parkes. During her police interviews, she dismissed the various approaches as ‘not serious’, ‘an off-the-cuff comment’ and ‘just a drunken, silly conversati­on’.

Mr Justice Chamberlai­n adjourned the case for pre-sentence reports, telling the defendant: ‘I will be imposing a substantia­l custodial sentence.’

‘Dangerous and deceitful’

 ??  ?? ‘Retributio­n’: Victoria Breeden
‘Retributio­n’: Victoria Breeden

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