What is a whole life order? How long is UK sentence, as Sarah Everard killer Wayne Couzens given court verdict

Wayne Couzens has been handed the most severe punishment in the UK criminal justice system - a whole life order.
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Former Metropolitan police officer Wayne Couzens was sentenced today by Lord Justice Fulford for the kidnap, rape and murder of Sarah Everard.

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What is a whole life order?

Sarah Everard. Met Police Sarah Everard. Met Police
Sarah Everard. Met Police

The Government states that “a whole life term means there’s no minimum term set by the judge, and the person is never considered for release” unless there are exceptional compassionate grounds.

According to government figures at the end of June, there are 60 criminals serving whole life orders. If Couzens is handed one, he will become one of a number of criminals expected to die behind bars.

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Who is serving a whole life order?

Serial killer and sex offender Levi Bellfield is thought to be the only criminal in UK legal history to be serving two whole life orders – for the murder of Milly Dowler, the killings of Marsha McDonnell and Amelie Delagrange, and the attempted murder of Kate Sheedy.

Other notorious criminals serving whole life orders include:

  • Gloucester serial killer Rose West
  • Michael Adebolajo, one of Fusilier Lee Rigby’s killers 
  • Mark Bridger, who murdered five-year-old April Jones in Wales
  • Neo-Nazi Thomas Mair who killed MP Jo Cox
  • Grindr serial killer Stephen Port
  • Reading terror attacker Khairi Saadallah, who murdered three men in a park

Before they died, Moors murderer Ian Brady and his girlfriend Myra Hindley, Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe, and doctor Harold Shipman – thought to be one of Britain’s most prolific serial killers – were also among those serving whole life orders.

Has Wayne Couzens been given a whole life order?

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He said: “The misuse of a police officer’s role such as occurred in this case in order to kidnap, rape and murder a lone victim is of equal seriousness as a murder for the purpose of advancing a political, religious ideological cause.”

The judge said Ms Everard was “a wholly blameless victim” of a “grotesque” series of offences which culminated in her death and disposal of her body.

Prior to the verdict, Prosecutor Tom Little QC suggested the case was so exceptional and unprecedented that it could warrant a whole life order.

In court, Little said: “Whilst it is impossible to summarise what the defendant did to Sarah Everard in just five words, if it had to be done then it would be more appropriate to do so as deception, kidnap, rape, strangulation, fire.”

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Couzens’ defence barrister Jim Sturman QC urged the judge to hand him a lengthy life sentence, meaning he would be eligible for parole in his 80s.

Sturman said: “The defendant was invited to look at the Everards. He could not, I am told.

“He is ashamed. What he has done is terrible. He deserves a very lengthy finite term, but he did all he could after he was arrested to minimise the wicked harm that he did.”

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Using his Metropolitan Police-issue warrant card and handcuffs, Couzens drove Ms Everard to a secluded rural area near Dover in Kent, where he proceeded to rape her. He then strangled her using his police belt.

Couzens burned her body in a refrigerator in an area of woodland he owned in Hoads Wood, near Ashford, before dumping her remains in a nearby pond.

He was arrested at his home in Deal, Kent, on 9 March after police connected him to a hire car he used to abduct Ms Everard, whose remains were found by police dogs on March 10.

Couzens initially claimed that he had been threatened into the kidnapping by an Eastern European gang, but later pleaded guilty to the kidnap, rape and murder of Ms Everard.

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