Constance Marten: I carried baby’s body in a bag

43 minutes ago
About sharing

Constance Marten is on trial at the Old Bailey accused of the manslaughter by gross negligence of baby Victoria
By Daniel Sandford
BBC News

Constance Marten has told a jury that she carried her dead baby’s body around in a bag while on the run from police.

Her trial heard she and partner Mark Gordon rarely left Victoria’s body in a tent they were using near Brighton.

The couple deny manslaughter by gross negligence and causing or allowing the death of a child.

Ms Marten said Victoria died while she was sleeping and that she felt responsible for falling asleep on her daughter, “if that is what happened”.

In evidence at the Old Bailey, Ms Marten described the time that the couple were camping in Newhaven and Brighton while on the run from police.

Greater Manchester Police had launched a nationwide search after a placenta was found in the couple’s burnt-out car by the motorway near Bolton on 5 January last year.

It is alleged the defendants went on the run because they wanted to keep Victoria, after four other children were taken into care.

In her second day of evidence, Ms Marten told the court on Friday that Victoria died on 9 January.

After that, she said she kept her child’s body with her except on rare occasions, and detailed the trips the couple took before their arrest on 27 February.

She said occasionally the couple would go shopping in Brighton. Her barrister asked what she did with her dead baby.

“We usually carried her with us,” she said. “There were very rare occasions that we would leave her in the tent… I think that happened twice.

“We went to the beach once with Victoria’s body. I think we were very close to being arrested.”

Constance Marten and Mark Gordon both deny all the charges

Asked by her barrister Francis FitzGibbon KC what she was thinking, she said: “I don’t think we were really thinking.

“We just wanted to lay low and hide away from people. That was predominantly our main thought process.”

The court heard how the couple moved between various locations with Victoria’s body during their attempts to evade police.

Ms Marten said that she had once thought she had been recognised at Newhaven railway station, and “kept thinking people were going to recognise us” during a trip to the beach in Brighton.

She described how the couple stopped going shopping for fear of being caught and started rifling through bins at Brighton’s Hollingbury Golf Club.

However Mr Gordon became “anorexically thin, completely unwell”, she said, and they relented and went shopping. “If we kept going much longer, sharing one piece of bread out of the bin, it wasn’t sustainable.”

“I said ‘baby you are not in a good state, neither am I. We need to get some food, get our blood sugar up and figure out what we are going to do’.”

She said that after they went to the shops a member of the public recognised them and dialled 999 and shortly afterwards they were arrested.

She finished her evidence in chief by saying of her dead daughter: “She was our pride and joy. I had four kids. I know how to look after children.”

“Our primary concern was Victoria.”

“But I do feel responsible for falling asleep on her if that is what happened.”

The defendants, of no fixed address, deny manslaughter by gross negligence, perverting the course of justice, concealing the birth of a child, child cruelty and causing or allowing the death of a child.

The trial continues.

Related Topics