GUILTY UK - Darren Bonner, 24, Cresswell, Northumberland 10 July 2017

  • #21
14:57
'Continued to argue' with Darren Bonner
Spottiswood tells the jury that, after accusing Mr Bonner of spying for a rival drug dealer, they continued to argue.

He says he asked Mr Bonner if he had planned to “set him up” with the rival and accused him of “double-crossing” him.

Spottiswood says: “Darren asked me what I was going to do about it. I said I wanted him out. I wanted him out the garage and to pick his stuff up and that’s the end of it.”

Mr Hall asks: “What was his reaction?”

Spottiswood replies: “He got angry.”

15:01
Struggled over bag with guns in
Spottiswood says, at this point, he is carrying the bag with the guns in and Mr Bonner is holding the spade.

Asked what happened next, Spottiswood says: “He [Mr Bonner] reacted quite angrily, he tried to take the bag off me.

“I was at the entrance to where the hole is. I was facing it and Darren was in front of me and Darren had the spade in his hand and I had the bag in my left hand.

“He took hold of the bag with his right hand. He was struggling with it and I got hit in the mouth by the spade. I don’t think that was intentional.”


15:08
'I put him in a headlock'
Mr Hall asks: “What did you do?”

Spottiswood says: “I put him in a headlock straight away.”

Mr Hall asks: “With which arm?”

Spottiswood replies: “My right.”

Mr Hall asks: “How was Darren reacting?”

Spottiswood says: “He kicked right off. He tried to pull my arm off and tried to back-heel us. I tried to tell him to calm down and he just wouldn’t.”


15:13
Claims Darren Bonner 'went heavy'
When asked why he didn’t let go of Mr Bonner, Spottiswood says: “It would have been some protection when the bag was in front of him. The reason I didn’t want him having the bag was because of what was in it and the state he was in.”

Mr Hall asks: “Did you let go?”

Spottiswood replies: “I went backwards into the bushes and he just went heavy.”

He continues: “I tried to step back away from him but I still had him in a headlock and I stepped back into the bush about 10 or five yards away and he just went heavy.”

15:22
'He went like a dead weight'
Spottiswood tells the jury that he only had Mr Bonner in a headlock for about “20 seconds” and thought he was only “faking it” when he went limp.

Mr Hall asks: “Were you trying to cut off his air supply?”

Spottiswood replies: “No, I just wanted him to calm down. If I wanted to hurt him, there was a number of things I could have done.”

Mr Hall asks: “Darren then ‘went heavy’, what did you mean by that?”

Spottiswood says: “He went like a dead weight.”

15:33
'I left him face down'
Spottiswood is asked what happened next.

He says: “I lowered him down and he was face down on the floor and I told him to get up because I thought he was faking it.”

Mr Hall asks: “Did you leave him face down?”

Spottiswood says: “I left him face down as I thought he was going to get up.”

15:37
Darren 'looked dead' when he turned him over
Spottiswood is asked if he tried to look at Mr Bonner’s face.

With his voice breaking as he wipes away tears, Spottiswood says: “I turned him over and he was next to the hole at that time.

“One of his legs fell into the back of it [the hole]. I slapped his face a little bit when I thought he was faking it.

“I got my phone out. We were in the bushes, it was pitch black, and his face was just a weird colour.

“It was like blue and white and his tongue was swelling up.

“He looked dead.”

15:46
'I thought I had broken his neck'
Spottiswood is asked how he reacted. He tells jurors: “I started panicking. I didn’t know what to do.”

Mr Hall says: “What did you think you had done?”

Spottiswood replies: “To be perfectly honest, I thought I had broken his neck.”

Mr Hall says: “Did you try to break his neck?”

Spottiswood responds: “No. I just had hold of him. It was mad how it happened.”


15:51
Claims Mr Bonner 'slipped into the hole'
Spottiswood tells jurors that Mr Bonner was not breathing and, during the course of pulling his body, his shoe fell off and he “slipped into the hole”.

He adds: “He [Mr Bonner] just slipped and he was lying in the hole and one of his legs was sticking up. I didn’t know what I was doing.”


15:55
Stooped to pick up guns and spade
Spottiswood tells the court that he hid the spade and bag of guns in a bush and took Mr Bonner’s clothes back to the caravan site, where he put them in a bin.

He says he then went to bed for a few hours before packing up his belongings and driving back to South Shields.

Spottiswood tells the jury he stopped en route to pick up the bag of guns and spade.

When asked what happened to the guns, Spottiswood claims they were placed in a car in his garage, which was subsequently stolen during a burglary.

Mr Hall asks: “Have you been able to find that bag or car?”

Spottiswood replies: “No, na.”



15:59
Arrested while Mr Bonner was still alive
Spottiswood was arrested on suspicion of attempted murder two days after Mr Bonner was found as, at that point, he was still alive.

Asked how he felt when he discovered Mr Bonner was still alive, Spottiswood says:

“I banked on him coming around - he had to.

“I was sitting thinking how I got things so wrong, thinking he was dead. Finding out he was alive, I knew for a fact he would have me released straight away.

“There’s no way he would have spoken to the police. For him to do that, he would have to explain all the stuff with [the rival drug dealer], why he dug a hole and the firearms.

“He would have been looking at double figures in prison, alongside me.


16:05
Asked why he initially lied to police
Asked why he initially lied to the police by telling them he had no idea how Mr Bonner became injured, Spottiswood says: “Telling the truth would have got me a big jail sentence and I would have got Darren a big jail sentence.”

16:12
'I just wanted him to calm down'
Mr Hall asks Spottiswood: “Did you intend him to die?”

Spottiswood says: “I didn’t intend any of it. I just wanted him to calm down.”

Mr Hall asks: “Did you intend him serious harm?”

Spottiswood says: “No.”

Darren Bonner murder trial - man denies shallow grave killing
 
  • #22
Day 7 (cross-examination of defendant)

Mr Roberts asked Spottiswood why he removed the bag of guns as the firearms did not have his fingerprints on them, according to his evidence.

The defendant replied that the wrapping and duct tape that Mr Bonner used for them came from the garage and so he could be linked to them.

[...]

Today, Mr Roberts asked Spottiswood why Mr Bonner would want to bury the guns in Northumberland given that he did not have a proper home...

Spottiswood said Mr Bonner “was in a predicament” because Spottiswood needed to use the van and so he had to hide the guns somewhere quickly.

The defendant was also asked by Mr Roberts why he did not tell police about the guns during the interviews...

Spottiswood said... “it would be unthinkable to grass him up” because of the reaction he would get from others in the business.

Accused cross-examined in Northumberland shallow grave murder trial
 
  • #23
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  • #25
  • #26
  • #27
Bit of background on RS

2005
A SON who left a man with life-threatening stab wounds in a bid to protect his mother has been spared jail.

...needing surgery and a lifesaving blood transfusion. Prosecutors accepted [RS] was acting in self defence when he and lost his self-control when he continued slashing. A charge of attempted murder was dropped after [RS] pleaded guilty to unlawful wounding, and Judge John Milford sentenced him to 120 hours' community service.

KNIFE FIGHT OVER THREAT TO FAMILY

2006
A mechanic spared jail after knifing a hardman is today starting a four-year jail sentence for robbing a taxi driver.

Jailed for robbing taxi driver

2009/10
A PRISONER facing a sex charge against a South Tyneside woman held a knife to a prison warder’s throat before escaping during a hospital visit.

was yesterday sentenced to 16 months for the sex attack and four years for the escape bid.

Sex beast fugitive’s knife threat


2011
Rejecting the appeal, Mr Justice Butterfield said experts had assessed [RS] as a “high risk” of reoffending and was categorised as a “dangerous” offender.
“Further, the appellant has a formidable list of previous convictions and he has served long sentences in the past.”

RS will serve an extra year on licence after he has served his sentence, during which he will be returned to jail if he does not comply with restrictions.

Sex attacker loses sentence appeal
 
  • #28
This was also stated in the first trial but I don't suppose it forms part of the second trial since his former co-defendant isn't now on trial and is likely to be a hostile witness -

During later accounts of what happened, Burns claimed she had heard a furious row between the men while she was asleep but played no part in it.
'Sunderland man murdered by Jarrow boss and South Shields woman after drugs row,' hears trial

It puts paid to the claims that they didn't argue until they got to the grave site.
 
  • #29
This was also stated in the first trial but I don't suppose it forms part of the second trial since his former co-defendant isn't now on trial and is likely to be a hostile witness -



It puts paid to the claims that they didn't argue until they got to the grave site.

Thanks for all the updates, Tortoise!

I saw a few suspicious wordings in there and was wondering if he had priors...I'm glad you noted them.
 
  • #30
Day 5

...today, the police interviews with Spottiswood in the days following his arrest for what was at that stage an allegation of attempted murder were read out to the jury.

[...]

Detective Constable Watson said Spottiswood told the interviewing officers that when he woke up on the Monday morning, Mr Bonner had gone and this was normal behaviour from him. When questioned about how Mr Bonner was found naked in a shallow grave, Spottiswood then said ‘I don’t know anything about that hole’.

Police interviews read out during Northumberland shallow grave murder trial

BBM...."that hole"
 
  • #31
13:21
Spottiswood discusses plan to bury guns
Spottiswood tells the court that, at around 1.30am, Mr Bonner started talking about taking the guns to the hole he had previously dug and burying them.
Mr Hall asks: “Before you had a drink, had you been planning on helping Darren to bury the guns?”
Spottiswood says: “I hadn’t been planning on helping him. I knew he had been planning it and I was quite awake myself
Mr Hall asks: “Do you know what Darren had dug the hole with?”
Spottiswood says: “It was with the spade we had got from the garage earlier.”
Spottiswood tells jurors he and Mr Bonner set off to walk to the hole, with Mr Bonner carrying a bag, which he believed contained the guns he wanted to bury.

RSBM

excerpt:
Mr Hall asks: “Do you know what Darren had dug the hole with?”
Spottiswood says: “It was with the spade we had got from the garage earlier.”

Why did 'we' get a spade from the garage earlier if only the victim dug the hole? Or did they go back to the garage at some point to get the same spade when they went back to bury the guns?

I'm not sure if I missed something or if RS has just admitted that he helped dig the hole?
 
  • #32
Spottiswood tells jurors he and Mr Bonner set off to walk to the hole, with Mr Bonner carrying a bag, which he believed contained the guns he wanted to bury.
Struggled over bag with guns in
Spottiswood says, at this point, he is carrying the bag with the guns in and Mr Bonner is holding the spade.

Hey Amonet, great to see you (although I'm just about to clear off the bed :) )

Spot the difference above!

I'll be back to discuss more tomorrow.
 
  • #33
  • #34
Last comment for tonight - you don't need a man-sized grave to bury a plastic bag.
 
  • #35
When asked what happened to the guns, Spottiswood claims they were placed in a car in his garage, which was subsequently stolen during a burglary.

How utterly convenient that the McGuffin that necessitated the digging of the hole is now nowhere to be found... :rolleyes: Reading through this thread I was sceptical of his story to begin with, but ok, there was maybe some possibility, but this detail made my mind up. And then I saw his previous record... it's a pity the jury are unlikely to hear about that until after the verdict is reached; sadly I can see that they might have some trouble with the "reasonable doubt" side of this, it's human nature to want to believe the best of people and a "accidental death" story can be convincing (I've fallen for a few myself until more details come out... and this one's a bit lacking in extra detail).
 
  • #36
It strikes me that this was premeditated, with the collections of the spade and the van (to hide him in the back), and Darren, and the probable pre-digging of the hole. He didn't want Darren there but then came up with a plan for him to disappear on the last night of the break, and so he went to collect him.
 
  • #37
Last comment for tonight - you don't need a man-sized grave to bury a plastic bag.

Yes, I would have dug a hole rather than a grave-like shape.
 
  • #38
It strikes me that this was premeditated, with the collections of the spade and the van (to hide him in the back), and Darren, and the probable pre-digging of the hole. He didn't want Darren there but then came up with a plan for him to disappear on the last night of the break, and so he went to collect him.

I'm also concerned about the painting of the victim as having a bad character and being a great organiser person. If DB is such a great organiser why is he at RS's beck and call?

The bit from DB's ex about the lying makes me think a lot about Gwynne Evans, the last man hanged in Britain, who was reportedly a compulsive liar.

It doesn't seem to fit that RS would go and help out DB in this way that RS is describing. The other way around, yes. DB seems to be getting himself 'in' with bad people, but he seems like a follower not a leader.

If the jury is allowed to hear RS say that DB spent his money on prostitutes, then I think the judge should allow RS's priors...
 
Last edited:
  • #39
The archaeologist tells jurors he examined the shallow grave where Mr
Bonner was discovered and says he measured the hole as 1.4m long, 0.8m
wide and 0.6m deep.
reminder of the dimensions
 
  • #40
Also the beating marks on DB's back that the pathologist said looked like they'd been caused by a heavy bar...There's been no explanation for those marks, but I would guess they are definitely part of the story.
 

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