The Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Brothers’ abuse campaign

Brothers whose father murdered their mother and sister five years ago campaign to tackle domestic abuse and highlight dangerous signs that can lead to violent conclusion

- By Joel Lamy joel.lamy@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @PTJoelLamy

Life in lockdown has been tough for so many people, but for Luke Hart it has given him and his brother Ryan time to reflect.

How, for instance, can they move onto the next stage of their recovery process five years after their mother and sister were murdered by their father?

How can they encourage other men to challenge the behaviours which entitle men such as their father to believe killing women is a justifiabl­e act?

And how can they raise awareness of coercive control, something they never realised their mother was suffering from before it was too late?

The death of Sarah Everard has raised awareness of the struggles and fears which accompany women on a daily basis, but those issues were firmly on the minds of both Luke and Ryan long before this.

“It feels like people have had enough and they’re calling out these behaviours which contribute to those kinds of events,” Luke said in a one-toone interview with the Peterborou­gh Telegraph.

“All these things women have put up with for a long time, they are not just harmless, mundane or trivial, they are a pattern, and that pattern is deeply dangerous.

“It feels like there’s been a turning point which is deeply positive.

“The challenge now is for men to understand it. We need to understand women’s experience­s which I don’t think we do really well. This is an opportunit­y for men to do that.”

It was on July 19, 2016, that Morrisons worker Claire Hart (48) and horse-loving daughter Charlotte (19) were killed by their father outside Castle Sports Complex in Spalding – five days after escaping the family home in Moulton.

Mum and daughter had gone for a swim and were returning to their parked Toyota Aygo when their father crawled out from underneath it holding a single-barrel shotgun.

He fired the weapon at Claire and Charlotte before turning it on himself.

At the time engineers Luke and Ryan were working abroad, and both reacted in different ways to what became internatio­nal news.

“They were absolutely our role models.

“After the murders I shut down emotionall­y completely while Ryan became emotionall­y overwhelme­d,” Luke recalled.

What came next was a powerful memoir (Remembered Forever), and a dedication to campaignin­g on domestic abuse, with 130 talks delivered across the globe and workshops held in the UK with a number of public sector services, including police and the NHS.

The aim is to make sure other families do not suffer in the same way while raising awareness of the different forms domestic abuse take, how abusive behaviours can be challenged, and why it is not so simple for women to leave an abusive relationsh­ip, with two murdered each week by a current or former partner .

“The thing we never realised is leaving is the most dangerous point. The vast majority of women are killed after they’ve left.”

That journey began with a realisatio­n that mum had been living in an abusive relationsh­ip all this time, something they had not appreciate­d as their father was not a violent man.

It is a common misconcept­ion, as Luke explains.

“I grew up with coercive control for 30 years and never really understood the impact of it even though I was living with it. I was quite ignorant.

“We thought that a dangerous man would be violent. But if you look at a lot of domestic homicides in the UK, a significan­t minority of them have no history of violence, but all of them have a history of coercive control. That shows our father wasn’t an anomaly.

“It’s the sheer level of intention behind it which makes it so dangerous, because they control everything about your lives. We weren’t allowed to touch the light switches or the heating.

“He controlled the minutest parts of our lives – it seemed trivial, but it was relentless.

“People like our father won’t use violence because, if they do, their game is up. These people will plan your murder over months, but there won’t be any warning signs.

“When our father got the sense that mum was preparing to leave, he began to lock away her passport, her driving licence – all those kinds of things – into a safe in the garage, and he chained it down.

“He hid all the car keys and house keys so he had to drive mum everywhere. In the week before she left, our home essentiall­y became a prison.

“He was also trying all sorts of strange tactics. He never took any interest in us at all, but in the week before the murders he was being excessivel­y friendly then very threatenin­g. He was trying all of his techniques to charm us into staying or threatenin­g us into staying. Until he knew it had failed and it turned into murder.

“That’s what people need to understand about these behaviours – they won’t be preceded by violence necessaril­y but an escalation of control.”

It was only after the murders that Luke and Ryan began to realise that their mother had been in an abusive relationsh­ip.

When the brothers had left the family home to go to University they had to call their dad and ask to be put through to their mother.

Their father would also gamble away the family’s savings or take holidays abroad then say there was not enough money for Claire to have coffee with friends.

He also banned her from meeting people outside the house, and when she invited people over he would follow them around and: “make them so miserable it wasn’t worth it. So mum had no option but to stay at home”.

Despite this, it was only after the murders that Luke and Ryan realised their mother had been in an abusive relationsh­ip.

“We never saw our father as an abuser at the time. We just thought mum was going through a difficult divorce,” Luke said.

“There were many times where if we’d been more informed, or those helping us were, it would have made a difference.

“Then we would have had to have taken drastic action as our father was a very highrisk man based on his coercive control.”

With women holding vigils and the new Domestic Abuse Bill going through Parliament, there is an impetus which Luke and Ryan hope to channel by making it clear

that men have a crucial role to play to make sure women do not continue to suffer.

“It’s important we feel confident calling out small behaviours because that is how a lot of these men get control over their partners,” Luke explained.

“It’s about men understand­ing that these smaller harms can lead to a culture of entitlemen­t that can lead to really, really, dangerous behaviours, and eventually murders and rapes.”

Luke and Ryan are now based just outside London, and nearly five years later they continue to be inspired by their mother and sister, who were such pillars of support during a challengin­g childhood.

“They were our role models growing up. They were incredibly strong people. They were really kind-hearted and stoical,” Luke added.

“Theywerede­eplycompas­sionate and cared about each other, us and animals deeply, and were able to be rocks at home. They inspired us and helped us believe in ourselves.

“Mum made us believe we could do anything, despite our father trying to stop us succeeding because he saw us as a threat, mum was always trying to inspire us.

“Charlotte was incredibly mature. She was so compassion­ate.

“She made us try to connect as much as a family and bring out the best in us.”

For more on Luke and

Ryan’s work tackling domestic abuse, visit: https://www. cocoawaren­ess.co.uk/.

Help and support for

anyone experienci­ng domestic abuse can be found by visiting: https://www.cambsdasv. org.uk/website/home.

This article has not mentioned • Luke and Ryan’s father, Lance, during the main copy as the brothers want to focus on rememberin­g Claire and Charlotte and to encourage people to understand women’s stories rather than putting men at the centre.

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 ??  ?? Claire and Charlotte Hart
Claire and Charlotte Hart
 ??  ?? Ryan, Luke and Charlotte Hart
Ryan, Luke and Charlotte Hart
 ??  ?? Campaigner­s Ryan and Luke Hart.
Campaigner­s Ryan and Luke Hart.
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