The United Kingdom aristocrat and his partner get 14 years in prison for a little daughter
/ News/ News
A British woman of an aristocratic family and her partner were sentenced on Monday to 14 years in prison for Death of his newborn daughterwho died while they lived outside the network at frozen temperatures.
As a sentence passed, Judge Mark Lucraft told Constance Marten, 38, and Mark Gordon, 51, that the way they treated their baby, victory, had been “negligence of the most burdensome and serious type.”
The couple sat separately on the dock with glass facade at the Old Bailey Central Criminal Court in London, but had to be rebuked by the judge for making a gesture repeatedly and pass notes with each other, showing what Lucraft said it was a “complete lack of respect” to the court.
“Neither of them thought a lot about the care or well -being of their baby,” Lucraft told the couple, according to BBC News. The judge added that the two did not have “a genuine expression of remorse.”

Marten and Gordon, who had denied all the charges against them, ran after the police found a placenta in their burned car next to a highway on the outskirts of Manchester in the northwest of England.
They were arrested after a seven -week police hunt in January and February 2023 during which they spent time living in a tent.
A jury found them guilty of homicide in July After a previous jury could not reach a verdict on the position of involuntary homicide.
Marten and Gordon were trying to maintain their daughter’s custody after the authorities led their four children to attention due to the couple’s lifestyle, saying that their attitude represented a “significant risk” for children, according to the court.
Days after his arrest, Baby Victoria’s body was found in a shopping bag in a vegetable patch. Marten told the Victoria police died when he fell asleep with her in the store, but the judge said she thought she died of hypothermia.

In a statement to the court, Marten’s mother, Virginie de Selliers, said she had been horrified by how her daughter had been characterized, added that she did not reflect “the daughter I remember.”
His lawyer, Tom Godfrey, said that Marten felt genuine “sadness and remorse” for the death of Victoria.
Philippa Mcatatasney, defending Gordon, said he had not been thinking “properly or rationally” when he decided to leave, but he would have to live with the consequences of his actions for the rest of his life.
Rich a rich family
Born in a life of wealth and privilege, Marten grew up in a mansion of 25 rooms in a vast farm in Dorset in the southwest of England. His aristocratic family had links close to the royal family.
His grandmother was a childhood friend of the deceased Queen Elizabeth IIfor whom Marten’s father also served as a boy on the page.
But Marten rejected her privilege, according to News. She sometimes lived without paying the rent and while she was at Lam’s eliminated food from garbage containers.
Marten had told the Court that her family had been harmed against Gordon.

“There are some people in my biological family who see me as a shame and are afraid to talk about them and they will not stop at anything to get what they want,” he said.
He added, without completely explaining, that a family member “does not love me alive” after she spoke against them.
Gordon’s early life, born in British, was a world of distance from Marten and marked by poverty and violence.
In 1989, at the age of 14, he held a woman against her will in Florida for more than four hours and raped her while she was armed with a knife and courtesy, prosecutors told the London court. Within a month, he entered another property and carried out another crime that involved aggravated battery.
He was sentenced to 40 years in prison, but was released after his 22nd.
In 2017, Gordon was also convicted of assaulting two women police officers in a maternity unit in Wales, where Marten gave birth to his first child under a false identity.
- United Kingdom


