Yorkshire Post

Wife who killed husband walks free from court

Jailed woman walks free after manslaught­er plea

- LUCY LEESON CRIME CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: lucy.leeson@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @LucyLeeson­Live

A WOMAN who killed her coercive and controllin­g husband has spoken of her “long road” at the end of an almost nine-year landmark legal battle.

Sally Challen, 65, was jailed for life for bludgeonin­g 61-year-old Richard Challen to death with a hammer in August 2010.

Yesterday, she walked free from the Old Bailey after the Crown accepted her plea to manslaught­er by diminished responsibi­lity.

There were cheers outside court as a tearful Mrs Challen emerged alongside her sons David and James, who have campaigned for her release.

Thanking her legal team and family, she said: “It’s been a long road.

“They have served my sentence with me. Their visits and phone calls have kept me going throughout what has been a long and terrible nine years.

“I’m just so happy I can now live my life again.”

But she added: “Many other women who are victims of abuse as I was are in prison today serving life sentences. I know because I have met them.”

A WOMAN who spent nearly a decade behind bars for killing her husband in a hammer attack said she still loved and missed him as she walked free from court.

Sally Challen, 65, killed 61-yearold Richard Challen at their home in Surrey in August 2010, the Old Bailey was told.

The mother-of-two, also known as Georgina, had been jailed for life for the murder of the former car dealer following a trial at Guildford Crown Court in 2011.

But her conviction was quashed and a new trial ordered at the Court of Appeal in London in February, in light of new evidence about her mental state at the time.

Mrs Challen, of Claygate, Surrey, admitted manslaught­er but pleaded not guilty to murdering her husband on August 14 2010 and was due to face a fresh trial on July 1.

But at a hearing before Mr Justice Edis at the Old Bailey yesterday, the prosecutio­n announced the Crown accepted her plea to the lesser charge on the grounds of diminished responsibi­lity.

The senior judge sentenced her to nine years and four months in jail, time she has already served in custody.

Speaking after walking free from court, Mrs Challen said: “I still love Richard and miss him dreadfully and wish none of this had ever happened.

“It’s been a really long road and at times I didn’t see any end to it.”

She also thanked her legal team and family for standing by her.

The judge said the killing came after “years of controllin­g, isolating and humiliatin­g conduct” with the added provocatio­n of her husband’s “serial multiple infidelity”.

He told her: “You felt trapped and manipulate­d because you were trapped and manipulate­d.”

In a victim impact statement on behalf of her sons heard by the court, James Challen said the last 10 years had been “hell”.

He said: “We have lost our father and we do not seek to justify our mother’s actions.”

“We believe the background circumstan­ces are such that our mother does not deserve to be punished any further.”

He said the family have conflictin­g feelings of “anger, grief, sadness and regret”.

Prosecutor Caroline Carberry QC said the Crown’s decision followed a psychiatri­c report which concluded Mrs Challen was suffering an “adjustment disorder” at the time.

Opening the facts of the case, Ms Carberry said Mrs Challens’s relationsh­ip had hit the rocks after 31 years of marriage but they had attempted a reconcilia­tion in 2010.

But suspecting he was seeing another woman, the defendant brought a hammer out of her handbag and attacked him from behind as he ate lunch at the kitchen table.

Afterwards, she went to throw herself off Beachy Head and told a chaplain: “I killed him with a hammer. I hit him lots of times... if I can’t have him no one can.”

When police arrived at the marital home they found the body of Mr Challen, with a hand written note on top reading: “I love you, Sally.”

In her police interview, Mrs Challen spoke about occasions when she believed he had been unfaithful to her.

In mitigation, Clare Wade QC said Mr Challen was “domineerin­g and controllin­g but not in a physical way” towards his wife, who worked at the Police Federation.

He made “humiliatin­g comments about her weight”.

On the day of the killing, it was Mr Challen’s words “don’t question me” that caused her to “flip”, the court was told.

I love Richard and miss him dreadfully and wish none of this happened Sally Challen

 ?? PICTURES: PRESS ASSOCIATIO­N ?? FREE: Sally Challen walks free from court ending nine years of hell, her family said.
PICTURES: PRESS ASSOCIATIO­N FREE: Sally Challen walks free from court ending nine years of hell, her family said.

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