Yorkshire Post

Sarah Everard killer fights whole-life term

- EMMA RYAN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: yp.newsdesk@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

THE POLICE officer who kidnapped, raped and murdered York woman Sarah Everard has appealed against his whole-life sentence – the only one that has been imposed for a single murder that was not a terror attack.

However, Wayne Couzens’ own barrister said that, while it was accepted he deserved “decades in jail”, a whole-life term was excessive for the crime which saw the then serving Metropolit­an Police officer abduct the 33-year-old, inset, as she walked home in south London in March last year.

Yesterday, senior judges at the Court of Appeal heard challenges to the prison sentences of five killers, including Couzens who appeared via video link from HMP Frankland.

Jim Sturman QC, said: “Mr Couzens accepts his crimes are abhorrent and nothing I say in any way is intended to minimise them or to minimise the impact of these crimes on Sarah Everard’s family and circle of friends.”

“The combinatio­n of his remorse and his guilty pleas... should balance out that aggravatin­g factor which clearly exists, of him being a police officer, albeit off-duty in half uniform.”

The barrister told the court Couzens was unique among the 64 people currently serving whole life orders.

“Whilst this may well be considered to be a case of equal seriousnes­s to a political, religious, or ideologica­l murder, it is not such an offence, nor does it fall into any other category listed in the schedule.”

Tom Little QC, representi­ng the Crown Prosecutio­n Service, said Couzens’ offending was of the “utmost seriousnes­s”, adding: “His criminalit­y was, as found by the judge, a fundamenta­l attack in reality on our democratic way of life.”

“A police officer is in a uniquely powerful position,” Mr Little said.

“The judge was entitled to form the view that he did in relation to a lack of genuine contrition.”

Also having sentences reviewed were Emma Tustin and Thomas Hughes, who killed sixyear-old Arthur Labinjo-Hughes in June 2020; double killer Ian Stewart who was convicted of murdering his first wife six years before he went on to murder his fiancee and Jordan Monaghan, who murdered two of his children and his new partner.

The hearing before the Lord Chief Justice Lord Burnett and four other judges concluded last night with a decision due at a later date. He said: “We propose to take time to consider our decisions in these difficult and tragic cases.”

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