South Wales Echo

THE STORY OF A BRUTAL KILLING

- PHILIP DEWEY Reporter philip.dewey@walesonlin­e.co.uk

IN the spring of 1996 childhood sweetheart­s Karen and Phillip Skipper were planning the rest of their lives together.

Having met as teenagers and married when Karen was just 17, their relationsh­ip had later broken down.

Karen had an affair with another man while Phillip – known as Ginger – had become a father after starting a new relationsh­ip while they were separated. But on March 9, 1996, the couple had emotionall­y reunited and tearfully told their housemate they were getting back together.

Just hours later Karen was dead – something her husband only discovered as he watched the grim news filter through on television.

Within weeks Ginger had been charged with murdering the woman he loved by tying her wrists with dog leads and drowning her in a river close to their Cardiff home. This is the story of how an innocent husband was vilified for the murder of a much-loved young woman – and how her family got justice more than a decade later.

The horrific crime

Karen, 34 at the time of her death, was described by her loving family as “a lovely, caring person”.

She worked for a time as a chambermai­d at the Bronte Hotel in Newport Road, Cardiff, and met her husband when she was aged 15 and he was aged 19, bonding over their shared love of motorbikes. Karen was last seen by her mother Josie Scholz after she visited her home in Cardiff the day before her death.

Mrs Scholz said later: “I watched her walk down the street and when she got to the corner she waved and I waved back. That was the last time I saw her.”

In the early hours of the following day, March 10, 1996, Karen took her beloved dogs for a walk in Birdies Field, between Ely and Fairwater and next to the River Ely.

At around 7.35am, dog walker Reginald Bean saw a black labrador and a light-coloured collie looking “bedraggled” by the riverbank.

The dogs kept running up the riverbank and over to some abandoned clothes. Mr Bean fed the animals before walking to Fairwater Police Station and alerting the duty officer.

He said: “I could not help feeling there was someone in the river.”

When police searched the surroundin­g area and the River Ely they make the gruesome discovery of Karen’s semi-naked body floating face-down in five feet of water close to a small jetty.

A post-mortem examinatio­n came to the conclusion she was still conscious when her body was bundled into the river and she would have been “terrified” in her final moments.

There was nothing to suggest she was raped or sexually assaulted but there were bruises to her face, thighs, and shins.

Dr Susan Claydon, who carried out the post-mortem examinatio­n, said: “There were no injuries to the head and neck or elsewhere to suggest she had been rendered unconsciou­s prior to being placed in the river.”

Dr Claydon said the brown leather dog leads used to tie Ms Skipper’s hands behind her back were so tightly fastened that: “I personally couldn’t remove them and had to ask a police officer to do it.”

Three weeks after Karen’s death the police took an appeal to BBC’s Crimewatch, issuing descriptio­ns of 10 witnesses including men seen walking in the area as Karen took her dogs for a walk.

More than 400 statements were taken and 3,000 people interviewe­d.

One man who voluntaril­y came forward was former property maintenanc­e worker Richard David Mead, who told police he had been in the Birdies Lane area on the night of Karen’s death. Mead, who was never arrested, treated as a suspect, or questioned under caution, said he was taking a late-night shortcut home from visiting a friend when Karen’s dogs barked at him as he cut through the field at about 1.45am.

He said he took the unusual route because he wanted to avoid police as there were three outstandin­g warrants for his arrest on motoring offences.

During one of the subsequent trials into Karen’s murder, where he gave evidence as a witness, Mead said: “I’d never met [Karen Skipper] before. I was nowhere near the body.”

Mead was convicted of rape four years after Karen’s killing when a jury found him guilty of three specimen charges of raping a girl aged between seven and 10, which he had denied.

Ginger is accused

Ginger and Karen had separated after Karen had an affair with another member of their pool team in 1994. But hours before her death they were reconciled, and were planning a new life together.

The couple’s former landlord David Michael Davies – who lived with the pair in Mill Road, Ely – said the couple had agreed to make a fresh start following a discussion at 6pm on the day she died.

And he said both had been emotional when they returned from a night out drinking at about 11.30pm the same evening.

Ginger had been “drunk and slobbery” when he got in, while a tearful Karen had told him the couple were going to “try again”.

But a different account was given by Rosalind Stringer, who had witnessed the couple in the Locomotive pub in Broadway, Cardiff, on the same day.

She said Mr Skipper was “fuming, furious, almost evil” as he talked about his wife continuing to have a sexual relationsh­ip with James Turner, known as Jimmy, for whom she had initially left her husband.

After Karen’s body was discovered by police Ginger was arrested.

He was released but arrested again five weeks later and charged with her murder. He spent the following 11 months on remand in Cardiff Prison.

During this period it was alleged Ginger had confided to his cellmate Paul James he was considerin­g pleading guilty to manslaught­er. He said Ginger, who worked as a chromer at Freeline, in Newport Road, said Karen “got what she deserved”, adding: “For f***’s sake don’t tell anyone about what

I’ve been saying.”

When he came to stand trial in 1997 Ginger pleaded not guilty and was acquitted by a jury.

One of the key pieces of evidence which proved his innocence were specks of blood found on his late wife’s jeans and clothing at the time of her death which neither belonged to her or her ex-husband.

In an interview with the South Wales Echo shortly after his acquittal, he described the moment he found out about Karen’s death after watching the news on television.

“I noticed the dogs, and that’s all I can remember – I was so shocked,” he said. “I told my friend to ring the police. “The police took me to the station and made me strip off to see if I had any marks on my body.

“I had a feeling that the police might try and do me for it as nothing seemed to be happening.

“I could not believe they were arresting me. Everybody knew I could not hurt her – I loved her too much.”

Ginger died in 2004 of stomach cancer at the age of 48.

The case reopens

South Wales Police began a cold case review into Karen’s murder, with their key line of inquiry focused upon a man seen wearing a distinctiv­e wax coat and carrying a rucksack near the scene.

In 2007 police were able to trace a match to DNA from the specks of blood on knickers and jeans worn by Karen on the night she died.

That DNA belonged to John Randall Pope, then 58, a labourer and father-offour from Cherwell Close in Fairwater, Cardiff.

He had given his DNA to police in 2006 following arrest for another offence.

Pope claimed he met Ms Skipper three weeks before she was murdered when he passed a corner shop near Birdies Lane and saw two dogs – one with a thorn stuck in its paw. He said he had tried to help the dog but was bitten. He then claimed Karen came out of the shop and gave Pope tissue to stop the bleeding and may have put it back in her pocket.

Pope was convicted of Karen’s murder in 2009 and sentenced to life imprisonme­nt. But the Court of Appeal quashed the verdict 12 months on and ordered a retrial after an unidentifi­ed female witness changed her evidence. The retrial in June 2011 and lasted for several weeks.

On the fifth day of their deliberati­ons, which took more than 23 hours, the jury of seven men and five women at Pope’s retrial returned a guilty verdict by a majority of 11 to one.

In his sentencing remarks, Mr Justice Roderick Evans said Pope’s attack and murder of Karen had been the act of a sexual predator.

Pope was sentenced to a minimum of 19 years imprisonme­nt – the same sentence which was handed down to him in 2009.

Justice at last

Karen’s sisters – Gail Emerson, Dot Scholz and Heidi Mathison – sat in the public gallery at Newport Crown Court throughout the retrial, conducting themselves with dignity in spite of the years of torment they had been through.

Following the verdict Ms Mathison said: “As a family we have been through 15 years of hell – Phillip Skipper’s family has been through the same.

“Justice has now been done and our beloved Karen can rest in peace..”

A tearful Janet Skipper, sister-in-law of the late Mr Skipper, spoke of her relief and hopes for reconcilia­tion between the two families.

She said: “It’s been 15 years of hell for both families. We didn’t like what happened with Ginger being badmouthed.

“It’s been proved that it wasn’t him now. They can both rest in peace now. Both families can start rebuilding.”

At her home in Tremorfa, as news of the verdict came through, Karen’s mum Josie Scholz screamed for joy at the news she had been waiting for since 1996.

Speaking in an emotional interview following Pope’s conviction, she said: “It’s been like living in limbo but it’s all over now and he is where he should be – that’s the main thing.

“In my heart of hearts I couldn’t really believe it [was Ginger]. I knew they had their ups and downs but they were always so lovey-dovey,”

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 ??  ?? Karen Skipper
Karen Skipper
 ??  ?? Karen and Phillip Skipper pictured on their wedding day.
Karen and Phillip Skipper pictured on their wedding day.
 ??  ?? Police and forensic officers on the scene after the discovery of the body
Police and forensic officers on the scene after the discovery of the body

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