Constance Marten trial: Aristocrat accused of killing baby back in court – live
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Aristocrat Constance Marten is returning to court today as the trial into the death of her newborn baby enters its final days.
Marten, 36, and her partner Mark Gordon, 49, have been accused of manslaughter after their daughter Victoria died while they were camping on the South Downs in sub-zero temperatures last January.
In a bid to keep their baby after four previous children were taken into care, the couple had gone on the run and evaded police for nearly two months. Following their arrest, Victoria’s badly decomposed remains were found in a Lidl shopping bag in an allotment shed.
During her evidence, Marten told jurors she had intended to find someone to smuggle them abroad illegally, and claimed her daughter had died in her arms on 9 January after falling asleep in her jacket. She also defended their use of a tent during winter, stating: “Jesus survived in a barn.”
The couple deny charges of gross negligence manslaughter of Victoria between 4 January and 27 February last year, charges of perverting the course of justice by concealing the body, along with concealing the birth of a child, child cruelty, and allowing the death of a child.
The trial continues, with jurors expected to retire to consider their verdicts next week.
Watch: Police ask Constance Marten ‘where is your child?’ during arrest
Watch: Police ask Constance Marten ‘where is your child?’ during arrest
Police repeatedly asked Constance Marten “where is your child” in a video of her arrest in Brighton shown to jurors at the Old Bailey on Tuesday (6 February). The aristocrat, 36, and Mark Gordon, 39, were arrested on suspicion of child neglect on 27 February 2023 after going on the run. The couple had allegedly been living with their newborn baby off-grid in a tent on the South Downs for weeks. Marten and Gordon deny gross negligence manslaughter of their newborn daughter. The baby’s remains were found in a disused shed, hidden by a plastic bag and covered in rubbish “as if she was refuse”, the prosecution told the court. The trial continues.
Holly Evans11 April 2024 18:00
Parents deny private investigators were trailing Marten when she went on the run
In agreed facts read to the jury on Thursday, they were told Marten’s parents had made statements to the police about their use of private investigators.
The court heard that Marten’s mother employed a private investigator for two weeks in October 2016 because she was worried about her daughter.
Her father told police he had hired investigators to find her in 2017 and 2021.
However both deny any private investigator was instructed to find her in 2022 or in 2023 – when she went on the run with Gordon and baby Victoria.
Amy-Clare Martin11 April 2024 17:30
Expert says co-sleeping not ‘inherently dangerous’
Professor Fleming insisted co-sleeping was not “inherently dangerous”, adding: “It’s normal in our species.”
It comes after Marten previously told the court she fell asleep with baby Victoria on her chest zipped inside her jacket – before she awoke to find her dead.
Challenged about the conditions inside Marten and Gordon’s tent, he admitted they were “not optimal”.
“Are you saying that a baby being on their chest under a coat on a mother who is lying on the ground next to a tent surface on one side, somebody else on another side and a number of sleeping bags and pillows – are you saying that’s safe sleeping are you?” Mr Little said.
He replied: “No I am not. I am saying it’s not optimal.”
Amy-Clare Martin11 April 2024 17:00
‘Not safe’ to carry baby in a Lidl carrier bag
Professor Fleming agreed it would not be safe for a baby to be carried in a Lidl carrier bag in cold conditions.
Mr Little asked the expert: “On the basis that a baby of a few weeks old in a Lidl shopping bag for life…with limited clothing on in cold conditions – would you say that that was a safe thing to do?”
Professor Fleming responded: “No it’s not safe. Of course it’s not.”
Amy-Clare Martin11 April 2024 16:42
Expert challenged on study into babies in tents
Continuing his cross examination, Mr Little KC challenged Professor Fleming over a study he had written into babies raised in tents – called gers – in cold conditions in Mongolia.
Mr Little pointed out a ger is large enough for families to walk around in, often insulated with wool and heated by a fire.
He said it was “not helpful” to compare it to the “flimsy” tent Gordon and Marten were staying in on the South Downs.
“I was not comparing the tent with a ger I was comparing the environmental temperature around the baby,” Professor Fleming told the court.
Holly Evans11 April 2024 15:52
Defence expert admits never carrying out a post-mortem examination on an infant
Professor Peter Fleming, an expert on infant health, previously told the jury it was “exceedingly unlikely” baby Victoria died from the cold.
However, under cross examination, he admitted he has never carried out a post-mortem examination on an infant.
Challenged by prosecutor Tom Little KC, he said he is paediatrician and not a pathologist but insisted he had observed around 200 post-mortems.
Prosecutor Tom Little KC said: “You have carried out no post-mortem examinations?”
Professor Fleming replied: “I have attended and watched very closely hundreds of post-mortem examinations.”
Amy-Clare Martin 11 April 2024 15:08
Constance Marten and Mark Gordon return to the dock
The trial of aristocrat Constance Marten and her partner Mark Gordon has resumed.
Marten, 36, appeared in the dock on Thursday wearing a pink blouse alongside Gordon, 49, wearing a blue shirt and navy tie.
Amy-Clare Martin 11 April 2024 14:37
Trial due to resume at 2pm
The final parts of evidence are due to be heard this afternoon, with the court reconvening at 2pm.
We’ll be bringing you all the latest updates here.
Holly Evans11 April 2024 14:04
Key points from Constance Marten’s evidence
Over the course of her evidence, Constance Marten admitted that she felt “responsible” as a mother for the death of her baby Victoria and broke down in the dock on several occasions.
She told jurors that she had “neglected” herself while on the run after giving birth at a cottage on Christmas Eve, with her newborn dying inside her jacket on 9 January.
She also defended living in a tent during sub-zero temperatures, arguing that it was being looked at from a “Western perspective” and adding: “Jesus survived in a barn.”
During cross-examination, she took frequent aim at her “bigoted” family who she claimed had hired private detectives to follow her, and said that her four other children had been “stolen” by the state.
Holly Evans11 April 2024 12:44
When is the trial likely to conclude?
Jurors in the trial of Constance Marten and Mark Gordon are coming to the end of nearly three months of evidence, after it first began in January.
It has suffered a number of delays but is now due to conclude next week, with jurors hearing the remaining evidence today.
Holly Evans11 April 2024 11:41
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