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Twelve weeks into this six week trial, an end is in sight.
A final day of Marten's testimony was followed by a paediatrician testifying for the defence.
Then, the last lap. The judge has now issued legal directions to the jury.
We've heard closing arguments from the prosecution, in which they laid out the case that Constance Marten was a liar. "Grand-standing on a premier league level", said Tom Little KC. And telling "big fat lies" about her baby's death.
And a particularly florid one from Mark Gordon's barrister, who called Marten "a lioness who loved her cubs". And meditated at length on the origins of her name. He pointed out that 149 000 babies sleep with their parents every night in the UK. The death of Victoria, he inferred, was unhappy chance.
This week, we're joined by Court News UK's co-founder, Guy Toyn, and star reporter Jack Hudson, who has been sitting through every day of the trial, to pick over what we've heard - and what is still left to come.
After so long, the jury are about to take their leave, and come to a conclusion on all five charges. The next we hear from the Court News team will be after the verdict. Stay tuned.
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Fresh From The Old Bailey is an independent podcast produced and presented by Gavin Haynes, that brings brand new stories of crime and the courts, straight from the mouths of the people who see justice being done every single day - Britain's first rank of court reporters.
Find us on Twitter.
Or on YouTube.
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The past fortnight has been dominated by five days of testimony by Constance Marten herself.
Finally on the stand, she has used her opportunity to offer some unusual testimony. She has spent long stretches making a string of allegations against social services regarding the care of her previous children, and she has been involved in long and testy back-and-forths with the chief prosecutor Joel Smith.
Smith has asked her about the proper burial or otherwise of baby Victoria. We've heard how at one point they planned a petrol cremation of Victoria's earthly remains. And we've heard how the duo of Marten and Gordon walked around with the infamous 'bag for life' containing Victoria, covered in soil and rubbish.
To unpack the events of these crucial weeks, we're joined by Guy Toyn, boss of Court News UK, star reporter Jack Hudson, who has been in court every day, and freelance journalist Alice Snape, who has also been covering the case.
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Fresh From The Old Bailey is an independent podcast produced and presented by Gavin Haynes, that brings brand new stories of crime and the courts, straight from the mouths of the people who see justice being done every single day - Britain's first rank of court reporters.
Find us on Twitter.
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After another week of delays, the Constance Marten court has sat on only two days.
But they have been fascinating days. On Tuesday, for instance, the jury were offered a rundown of 'undisputed facts' - statements that the prosecution and defence agree on - to do with the history of social worker interventions in the lives of Gordon, Marten, and their four previous children.
We learned that Marten had pretended to be an Irish traveller in order to secure a council house. That the duo had lived in a Welsh woodland, in a similar tent to the one they pitched on the South Downs. That Marten's father had applied for a custody order, and that social workers had warned her not to co-sleep with her baby.
We heard about a 'separation order', which put their first child into foster care, and how the pair were often missing when it came to visiting the children being cared for by the state.
There was also fresh detail on the finances of the duo. How Marten banked with the oldest private bank in the country. Her £48 000 of existing funds at a time when the duo were living in tents, exploring their 'alternative lifestyle'. Her many emails to the trustees of her trust fund, requesting more cash.
With us as usual are Guy Toyn, Court News UK's supremo, and reporter Jack Hudson - who has been covering every day of the case.
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Fresh From The Old Bailey is an independent podcast produced and presented by Gavin Haynes, that brings brand new stories of crime and the courts, straight from the mouths of the people who see justice being done every single day - Britain's first rank of court reporters.
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So far, the Constance Marten Trial has been subject to bizarre delays.
The Old Bailey was closed for the better part of a week after an electrical fire broke out in the building. But finally, the Marten case is back in front of a jury.
In the past two weeks, we have learned that Marten has switched her barrister. We've witnessed jurors climbing inside an Argos camping tent, set up in the court room.
The jury were also shown body cam footage of police investigating the Lidl 'Bag For Life' that contained the remains of baby Victoria. And we've been shown the police interviews of both Constance and her boyfriend and fellow defendant, Mark Gordon.
With us this week as usual are Guy Toyn, Court News UK's supremo. Reporter Jack Hudson - who has been covering every day of the case. And Alice Snape, a freelance journalist for Cosmopolitan and The Stylist, among others.
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Fresh From The Old Bailey is an independent podcast produced and presented by Gavin Haynes, that brings brand new stories of crime and the courts, straight from the mouths of the people who see justice being done every single day - Britain's first rank of court reporters.
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Live from the Court News office inside the Old Bailey, Gavin Haynes presents a new discussion panel, analysing the trial of Constance Marten and Mark Gordon.
Court News' star reporter Jack Hudson has been in Court Five every single day. Guy Toyn, the company's co-owner, has over thirty years experience of courts and court reporting.
Together, they offer a first-hand view of this complex trial you won't see in the papers.
Every week, across the six week estimated duration of this case, we'll be bringing back news from the front line.
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Xyaire Howard and Chelsea Grant were both from the Caribbean island chain of The Grenadines. Both were in their early 20s, though they still did not know each other when they arrived in the UK in 2022, both intent on working illegally by overstaying on their tourists visas.
But the very same night they met - at a mutual friend's house - they had sex.
And after that, they were inseparable, a couple, touring a range of shabby studio flats in North West London as they bounced between jobs, defaulting on their debts.
Then one day they spotted Susan Hawkey. Hawkey was a local 'character'. Seventy-one years old, after her parents had died, 5'2 Hawkey had become a hoarder and an alcoholic.
But in the eyes of Howard and Grant, she was nothing more than an easy mark. After two muggings and a home invasion, one of the two moved towards the final phase of a plan they had cooked up: a scheme of petty robbery and grotesque sexual violence.
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About The Show
Each week, Fresh From The Old Bailey tells the story of a case from the Central Criminal Court, or the London Crown Courts. Fresh stories of recent trials, told through the eyes of those who were there. This is real true crime. British justice as it is now — from the people who see justice being done, every single day.
You can follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/fresholdbailey
Or Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freshfromtheoldbailey/
Check out our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@FreshFromTheOldBailey
Subscribe to Court News’ Substack: https://courtnewsuk.substack.com/
If you’ve been personally affected by the crimes of Howard and Grant, or if you have deeper knowledge of the case, please get in touch through our Gmail: [email protected]. Discretion assured.
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Jo-Emma Larvin used to date Joe Calzaghe, the longest-reigning super-middleweight world champion in boxing history.
But by the time of the pandemic, her life had moved on. She was living up in Yorkshire, when she was recruited for an easy-money gig. Would she like to take eight suitcases full of cash to Dubai? The pay was good: £3000 per trip. And she'd be but up in the best hotel in town: the Palm Jumeirah. In her luggage was over a million quid.
Jo-Emma was hardly the only one to say 'yes'. Lead by a housewife from Leeds who co-ordinated her mules from a WhatsApp group called 'Sunshine and Lollipops', Larvin was one of at least six mules who'd run the route, collectively trafficking over £100 million of British drug money into the emirate.
In March of 2023, she and four fellow-accused stood in the dock of Isleworth, fighting for their freedom - the most TOWIE-flavoured group that Crown Court had seen in a long time.
Subscribe and follow for more episodes.
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About The Show
Each week, Fresh From The Old Bailey tells the story of a case from the Central Criminal Court, or the London Crown Courts. Fresh stories of recent trials, told through the eyes of those who were there. This is real true crime. British justice as it is now — from the people who see justice being done, every single day.
You can follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/fresholdbailey
Or Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freshfromtheoldbailey/
Check out our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@FreshFromTheOldBailey
Subscribe to Court News’ Substack: https://courtnewsuk.substack.com/
If you’ve been personally affected by the crimes of the Dubai Money Mules, or if you have other information that might be helpful for a broader investigation, please get in touch through our Gmail: [email protected]. Discretion assured.
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In February of this year, an entire family was tried for a crime that had never been prosecuted in England.
Senator EK Ekweremadu, his wife Beatrice and their daughter Sonia were prosecuted for trafficking a man from Nigeria to Britain, for the purposes of harvesting his kidney.
When their plot was uncovered, it triggered a section of the 2015 Modern Slavery Act that had lain dormant on the statute books.
Testimony at the trial revealed that this was not the first organ harvesting since 2015.
Their victim had been a mobile phone seller on the Lagos streets, before he was brought to Britain under false pretences. Pretending he was their daughter's cousin, the Ekweremadus got within a whisker of convincing doctors at the Royal Free Hospital in Hampstead to carry out the procedure.
This is a story of extreme wealth and hyper-mobility butting-up against the dignity of the world's poorest - a parable about globalisation in the 21st century.
Subscribe and follow for more episodes.
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About The Show
Each week, Fresh From The Old Bailey tells the story of a case from the Central Criminal Court, or the London Crown Courts. Fresh stories of recent trials, told through the eyes of those who were there. This is real true crime. British justice as it is now — from the people who see justice being done, every single day.
You can follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/fresholdbailey
Or Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freshfromtheoldbailey/
Check out our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@FreshFromTheOldBailey
Subscribe to Court News’ Substack: https://courtnewsuk.substack.com/
If you’ve been personally affected by the crimes of the Ekweremadus, or if you have been involved with any of the other cases we've covered, please get in touch through our Gmail: [email protected]. Discretion assured.
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This is the tale of a web of West End nightlife players who, one by one, were sucked into the orbit of a bad cop. But not a terrible cop, just a sort of greasy, easily led one.
Call girls, drinks, restaurant meals, Metallica tickets, visits to Elton John's house, signed Wayne Rooney shirts, bespoke monogrammed suits: what Frank Partridge received was fairly petty. But soon enough, his corruption had infested the West End's biggest players.
His trial in May of 2023 ended up being one of the biggest police bribery cases of the age, sucking in the owner of the Cirque du Soir nightclub - with its £120 000-a-bottle Jeroboams of champagne, the head of the West End's biggest nightclub security firm (an ex-armed robber), and the bosses of Leicester Square's Dstrkt. Many them were oddly glamorous, moneyed creatures. Many of them are now behind bars.
The trial touched on what modern Soho actually is. And how it really works, in London's after-dark economy.
Subscribe and follow for more episodes.
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About The Show
Each week, Fresh From The Old Bailey tells the story of a case from the Central Criminal Court, or the London Crown Courts. Fresh stories of recent trials, told through the eyes of those who were there. This is real true crime. British justice as it is now — from the people who see justice being done, every single day.
You can follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/fresholdbailey
Or Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freshfromtheoldbailey/
Check out our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@FreshFromTheOldBailey
Subscribe to Court News’ Substack: https://courtnewsuk.substack.com/
If you’ve been personally affected by the crimes of Frank Partridge, or if you have other information that might be helpful for a broader investigation, please get in touch through our Gmail: [email protected]. Discretion assured.
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Anthony Constantinou is the Wolf Of Bond Street.
In 2014, still only 33, he began an elaborate Ponzi scheme from posh offices in Heron Tower — the 40 storey glass and steel icon that looms over Liverpool Street Station.
Once word got out that his ‘Special Fund’ was paying five per cent returns a month — 60 per cent a year — he wasn’t shy of investors.
One woman had cancer: her insurance had paid out, so rather than buy her mother a house as she’d originally planned, she was convinced to put the whole lot into the Special Fund. Somehow, many retired Gurkhas were convinced to throw their life’s savings in with him.
Backstage of this elaborate hoax, Constantinou was living high on other people’s cash. He had his own Moto GP team, and sponsored the London Boat Show. He blew through £2.3 million just on his wedding. He spent £70 000 on his baby’s first birthday party. And he rented a house on the Bishop’s Avenue that cost more to rent in a year than most London houses are worth.
By the time the cops burst through his doors of Heron Tower, The Wolf had hoovered up some £70 million of other people’s money.
His trial took years to get to court — in part because he first had to be tried on charges of sexual assault.
But in June of 2023, after eight weeks of argument, a jury finally reached a verdict.
This is the story of how that trial played out, from the mouths of Britain’s top team of court reporters — the staff of Court News UK.
And it’s the even more shocking story of what happened after the trial had concluded.
Subscribe and follow for more episodes.
***
About The Show
Each week, Fresh From The Old Bailey tells the story of a case from the Central Criminal Court, or the London Crown Courts. Fresh stories of recent trials, told through the eyes of those who were there. This is real true crime. British justice as it is now — from the people who see justice being done, every single day.
You can follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/fresholdbailey
Or Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/freshfromtheoldbailey/
Check out our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@FreshFromTheOldBailey
Subscribe to Court News’ Substack: https://courtnewsuk.substack.com/
If you’ve been personally affected by the crimes of Anthony Constantinou, or if you have worked for him, please get in touch through our Gmail: [email protected]. Discretion assured.
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Anthony Constantinou is the Wolf Of Bond Street.
In 2014, still only 33, he began an elaborate Ponzi scheme from posh offices in Heron Tower — the glass and steel icon that looms over Liverpool Street Station.
Once word got out that his ‘Special Fund’ was paying five per cent returns a month — so, 60 per cent a year — he wasn’t shy of investors. One woman had cancer: her insurance had paid out, so rather than buy her mother a house as she’d originally planned, she was convinced to put the whole lot into the Special Fund. Somehow, many retired Gurkhas were convinced to throw their life’s savings in with him.
Meanwhile, backstage of this elaborate hoax, Constantinou was living high on other people’s cash. He had his own Moto GP team, and sponsored the London Boat Show. He blew through £2.3 million just on his wedding. He spent £70 000 on his baby’s first birthday party. And he rented a house on the Bishop’s Avenue that cost more to rent in a year than most London houses are worth.
By the time the cops burst through his doors of Heron Tower, The Wolf had hoovered up some £70 million of other people’s money.
His trial took years to make its way to court — in part because he first had to be tried on charges of sexual assault.
But in June of 2023, after eight weeks of argument, a jury finally reached a verdict.
This is the story of how that trial played out, from the mouths of Britain’s top team of court reporters — the staff of Court News UK. And it’s the even more shocking story of what happened after the trial had concluded...
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Each week, Fresh From The Old Bailey tells the story of a case from the Central Criminal Court, or the London Crown Courts. Fresh stories of recent trials, told through the eyes of those who were there. This is real true crime. British justice as it is now — from the people who see justice being done, every single day.
You can follow us on Twitter: @freshfrombailey
Or Instagram: @freshfromtheoldbailey
Check out our YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DOlqIMC3qgA
Subscribe to Court News’ Substack: [email protected]
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If you’ve been personally affected by the crimes of Anthony Constantinou, get in touch through our Gmail: [email protected].
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My insight is that there is a different way to cover crime. It has to do with making it feel real. It must be the sort of show my peers at J’Accuse and Drukpa could get behind.
The sister show to this is one which has the Crimewatch air that you were previously trying to think of. Who are you talking to though? Same issues.
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This is true crime as you've never heard it before.
Straight from the reporter's mouth.
Right from inside the Old Bailey.
In conjunction with Court News UK, we've put together a series that takes apart some of the most sensational, most lurid cases to have come out of the London courts in 2023. First hand. With deep analysis of the trials themselves.
The loved-up Grenadian couple who strangled a hoarder with a bootlace.
The Ponzi fraudster who stole £70 million from the Gurkhas and spent it on £70 000 parties for his baby.
The crooked cop who held the strip clubs of Soho in his back pocket.
The Nigerian senator who wanted to harvest the organs of a destitute man to give to his dying daughter.
The TOWIE-style glamour girls who made a mint smuggling criminal cash to Dubai.
Fresh From The Old Bailey not only gives you deep investigations into the crimes themselves, it takes you inside the court cases. The barristers, the judges, the legal arguments, the crumbling witnesses, the culprits sobbing in the dock.
From the world's most famous criminal court, comes the country's biggest true law show.