Coventry Telegraph

Burglar left blood spot that led to his capture

- By ENDA MULLEN News Reporter enda.mullen@trinitymir­ror.com

A COVENTRY woman was away celebratin­g her father’s 90th birthday when the family occasion was ruined by a call telling her that her home had been broken into.

Burglar James Beard had cut through part of a back door surroundin­g a cat flap to crawl in before taking 15 bottles of alcohol worth around £300 and a holdall.

But he was arrested after a spot of his blood was found on the door, and at Warwick Crown Court he pleaded guilty to the burglary of the house in Earlsdon Avenue South, Coventry.

Beard, aged 46, of Barnstaple Court, Milton Keynes, who said he was staying with friends in Coventry at the time, was jailed for 41 weeks.

Prosecutor Ian Windridge said in September last year the householde­rs went away to Yorkshire for a family celebratio­n to mark the wife’s father’s 90th birthday.

They had arranged for friends to pop in twice a day to feed their cats –and everything was in order on the morning of September 6.

But when the friends returned that afternoon they found a section of the back door around a cat flap had been enlarged, there was a broken bottle of wine on the kitchen floor, and the house had been searched.

In all 15 bottles of alcohol had been stolen, together with a canvas holdall.

A spot of blood on the cat flap and a fingerprin­t on the wine bottle led to Beard being identified, but when he was arrested he declined to be interviewe­d.

He then pleaded not guilty, but changed his plea on the day of his trial.

In a victim statement, the woman said the burglary had ruined what might have been the family’s last such holiday because her father’s dementia was getting worse.

Beard said he had been ‘laying low’ with friends in Coventry because he was in trouble in Aylesbury, and had been on his way to the station when he went round the back of the house and broke in.

He denied having gone equipped to carry out the break-in, and said he had used a pair of secateurs he had found in the garden to cut the hole in the door.

But that was rejected by Deputy Judge Richard Griffith-Jones, who said: “I don’t believe that. I am sure it is not true. He was out looking for something to get to buy drugs.”

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