UK UK - Sarah Wellgreen, 46, Kent, 9 Oct 2018 #2 *B. Lacomba guilty*

Can I ask if Sarah's body is found ( not with the help of Bl ) he will be allowed parole ?
 
Grieving son still digging for murdered Sarah's body

'On a damp, overcast November afternoon in a patch of woodland near the top of Wrotham Hill, 22-year-old Jack Burdett is digging a hole in the ground.

He's not the only one. A group of volunteers have been doing the same thing, probing the woodland soil with metal rods for the best part of an hour, "venting" the earth so sniffer dog Jessie can get a better scent, occasionally stopping to swap rods for spades and cut down into the ground.

Sharon explains they've been brought here by a fresh lead from a farmer, who reported having seen lights in this field near the hedgerow around the time Sarah disappeared.'
 
27 years isn't too bad I suppose though, no sentence is enough really is it!

Glad y
Can I ask if Sarah's body is found ( not with the help of Bl ) he will be allowed parole ?


I think the way it works is that he won't get parole until he admits guilt - no admission of guilt then no remorse and can't be seen to be rehabilitated.

Once a body IS found, by any other means, I would imagine the Helen's Law angle goes out the window because all the families want is to have their loved one bsck, to be able to arrange a fitting resting place.
 
27 years isn't too bad I suppose though, no sentence is enough really is it!

Glad y



I think the way it works is that he won't get parole until he admits guilt - no admission of guilt then no remorse and can't be seen to be rehabilitated.

Once a body IS found, by any other means, I would imagine the Helen's Law angle goes out the window because all the families want is to have their loved one bsck, to be able to arrange a fitting resting place.

Please ignore my abandoned half comment at the top! Really hate that that happens!
 
Just saying this as a speaking point, and not specifically related to this case... but find the concept interesting that convicts will have to divulge the location of their victims before they can ever be paroled, even after time served.

I know it is statistically low where a person found guilty is later exonerated, but it happens. In such cases when a convict has forever claimed their innocence but not yet exonerated (if ever), they would remain in jail even longer - forever, because they can't say they did it, and can't know where the body is?
 
Just saying this as a speaking point, and not specifically related to this case... but find the concept interesting that convicts will have to divulge the location of their victims before they can ever be paroled, even after time served.

I know it is statistically low where a person found guilty is later exonerated, but it happens. In such cases when a convict has forever claimed their innocence but not yet exonerated (if ever), they would remain in jail even longer - forever, because they can't say they did it, and can't know where the body is?

Yes, I thought the exact same thing - in a miscarriage of justice it doesn't bear thinking about
 
Grieving son still digging for murdered Sarah's body
'On a damp, overcast November afternoon in a patch of woodland near the top of Wrotham Hill, 22-year-old Jack Burdett is digging a hole in the ground.
He's not the only one. A group of volunteers have been doing the same thing, probing the woodland soil with metal rods for the best part of an hour, "venting" the earth so sniffer dog Jessie can get a better scent, occasionally stopping to swap rods for spades and cut down into the ground.
Sharon explains they've been brought here by a fresh lead from a farmer, who reported having seen lights in this field near the hedgerow around the time Sarah disappeared.'

Reading that is so desperately sad.
 
This is Lewis and Jack's first interview since his conviction. Their relief that 'justice was done' is clear. They are incredibly thankful to the police and Crown Prosecution Service; also grateful to the volunteers from Sarah's Kent village who are still searching for her.

But the case is far from over for them and won't be until they have their mother back.

To that end, they reveal they have made the painful decision to request a prison meeting with Lacomba in the hope he'll break his silence.

'I want to look him in the eyes and say: "Just tell us where she is, for your kids' sake and for ours," says Jack, 22, a retail worker. 'No feeling will be left unsaid.'

more to read at link

Murder victim Sarah Wellgreen's sons plead with her ex-partner to reveal location of her remains | Daily Mail Online
 

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