Moment police uncover baby remains in Brighton shed shown in court

Constance Marten and Mark Gordon refused to tell police where their daughter was

Author: Emily Pennink, PA Old Bailey CorrespondentPublished 14th Feb 2024

The moment a missing baby girl was found dead amid rubbish stuffed inside a Lidl supermarket bag has been shown in the trial of wealthy aristocrat Constance Marten.

Marten, 36, and her partner Mark Gordon, 49, had refused to tell police where their daughter Victoria was after the fugitive couple were tracked down by police to Brighton, East Sussex.

Days later, police made the grim discovery of the child's remains in a disused shed on an allotment near to where they had been detained.

On Wednesday, the defendants sat in the Old Bailey dock as police bodyworn video was played of the moment baby Victoria was finally found on the afternoon of last March 1.

Officers were shown on camera carefully probing the large red shopping bag which had been placed on decking outside the shed on Lower Roedale Allotments.

They were seen pulling out pieces of rubbish to reveal the baby, whose body was blocked out on the video.

Pc Allen Ralph, who had been sent from Scotland Yard to help in the search, told jurors he had already seen earlier CCTV footage of the distinctive Lidl bag before he was deployed with a colleague to search the allotments.

As he approached the disused shed, he noticed a broken window and lifted the door to get in.

The first thing he noticed was the smell, he said: "I remember saying 'either something is dead in there or something has died'."

Inside there was a tent, out-of-date milk and bread on a makeshift table and the shopping bag underneath, he said.

During a break, Pc Ralph commented to his partner that he was sure he had seen that bag before so they went back to take a closer look.

He told jurors: "I lifted it and it was heavy and there was no reason for it to be heavy from what I could see inside.

"I remember quite clearly there was just a lot of rubbish."

Pc Ralph said there were two baby nappies, a pink baby blanket, drinks cans, cardboard, leaves and other pieces of rubbish.

The officer said he put on gloves before placing the bag on decking outside the shed to examine the contents.

As they searched, his colleague indicated that he had seen what looked like the head of a doll, jurors heard.

Pc Ralph said: "The head was to the left. It was concave, the top of the head. That was what we touched. I unwrapped it two or three times before I got to a part where I could see red pooling.

"A couple of seconds after, we went to the right-hand side. I put my hand down. My hand slipped on something. I looked and that was the baby's leg. My hand was soaking wet."

Pc Ralph said the baby was "very pale" and "very cold" to the touch.

Previously, the court heard how the couple went on the run with their newborn daughter on January 5 last year after their car burst into flames on a motorway near Bolton.

As police launched a nationwide search for the missing baby the defendants travelled across England and ended up living off-grid in a tent on the South Downs for around seven weeks, jurors have heard.

Last February 20, they were caught on CCTV footage carrying a Lidl bag and rummaging through bins outside Hollingbury Golf Club in Brighton.

They were arrested on suspicion of child neglect after a member of the public spotted them and called 999 last February 27.

The defendants were taken to separate police stations and repeatedly refused to answer questions about the missing child.

Jurors were shown photographs of Marten looking dishevelled and with furniture stuffing coming out of her clothes.

Prosecutor Joel Smith told the court: "The police still did not know where the child was, whether the child was alive or dead or even the sex of the child."

At Brighton police station, Marten told officers: "I'm sorry I haven't eaten or slept for a long time. I need to get some sleep before I can make a proper decision."

She went on to answer "no comment" to all questions she was asked.

Following his arrival at Worthing police station, Gordon was invited to tell his "side of the story".

He got out of a wheelchair and lay on the floor saying his legs were hurting and he was "in pain".

Later, he complained he was receiving "sub-par treatment", saying: "I don't think I should be talked to like I'm a nobody.

"I mean I'm a suspect. I have not committed any crimes, therefore I should have respect. I'm entitled to respect....

"I'm in custody but that doesn't mean I'm a dog."

Gordon asked for pills and said he was in "distress" before continuing: "I am the detainee. You can't just take my rights around me ... lock me up and say ah we don't care about your feet, you're fine, just go ahead and get interviewed.

"I feel like I'm scum. I feel like I'm scumbag actually. I feel like I'm a piece of shit. I feel like that's how I've been treated."

On being told by an officer that the "main concerns" were for the baby, Gordon continued to complain of pain.

An officer said: "I want to ask one question."

Gordon replied: "What?"

The officer asked: "What was the baby's name?"

Gordon looked at his solicitor and then refused to say.

Following the discovery of the baby girl, Gordon continued to say "no comment" to all questions, the court heard.

The defendants, of no fixed address, deny manslaughter by gross negligence, perverting the course of justice, concealing the birth of a child, child cruelty and causing or allowing the death of a child.

The Old Bailey trial continues.

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