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Gambling addict 'drove over wife' | Gambling addict 'drove over wife' |
(about 2 hours later) | |
A civil servant addicted to gambling ran over his wife in an attempt to kill her to avoid losing everything in their divorce, a court has heard. | A civil servant addicted to gambling ran over his wife in an attempt to kill her to avoid losing everything in their divorce, a court has heard. |
Martin Hewlett, 45, knocked estranged wife Anne, 36, off her bicycle in Worthing, West Sussex, then drove back over her body, leaving her for dead. | Martin Hewlett, 45, knocked estranged wife Anne, 36, off her bicycle in Worthing, West Sussex, then drove back over her body, leaving her for dead. |
Hove Crown Court was told Mrs Hewlett was badly injured and would be in a wheelchair for the rest of her life. | Hove Crown Court was told Mrs Hewlett was badly injured and would be in a wheelchair for the rest of her life. |
Mr Hewlett, of Guildford Road, Worthing, denies attempted murder. | Mr Hewlett, of Guildford Road, Worthing, denies attempted murder. |
Prosecutor Richard Barton told the court Mr Hewlett stole the van and used it as a weapon against his wife as she rode home late at night on 29 February, 2008. | Prosecutor Richard Barton told the court Mr Hewlett stole the van and used it as a weapon against his wife as she rode home late at night on 29 February, 2008. |
It was the desperate act of a gambler, a last roll of the dice | |
Richard Barton | |
He said that Mr Hewlett then turned the van round and deliberately ran over his estranged wife's body as she lay defenceless in the road. | He said that Mr Hewlett then turned the van round and deliberately ran over his estranged wife's body as she lay defenceless in the road. |
"The defendant had planned it for months," said Mr Barton. | "The defendant had planned it for months," said Mr Barton. |
"It was an attempt on his part to avoid losing everything as a result of their ongoing divorce matrimonial finance proceedings, which were due to be heard four days after the attack." | "It was an attempt on his part to avoid losing everything as a result of their ongoing divorce matrimonial finance proceedings, which were due to be heard four days after the attack." |
The court was told Mr Hewlett met his Danish wife in the early 1990s when she was working as an au pair. | |
The couple married in 1994 and had two children but Mr Hewlett kept his finances separate and had a secret "severe gambling addiction" which led him into "greater and greater debt". | |
In 2000, he secured a £30,000 loan against their home, then in 2004 increased the mortgage to £130,475 by forging his wife's signature. | |
He also took out a life insurance policy without his wife's knowledge paying out a lump sum of £125,625 in the event of either death. | |
Multiple fractures | |
Theatre nurse Mrs Hewlett petitioned for divorce in August 2007, some months after finding out about his financial deceit. | |
Mr Barton said Mrs Hewlett sustained severe "life-threatening" injuries when she was run over in Canterbury Road. | |
She had multiple rib and neck fractures, bleeding in her internal organs and paralysis to the lower half of her body. | |
"It was the desperate act of a gambler, a last roll of the dice... knowing he had everything to lose at the forthcoming divorce hearing," said Mr Barton. | |
Mr Hewlett was arrested the day after the crash, then released on bail before being arrested again in July. | |
The trial continues. | The trial continues. |
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