Dorset woman's baby kept 'warm, dry and fed' before her death

Constance Marten and partner Mark Gordon deny gross negligence manslaughter

Author: Faye TryhornPublished 26th Jan 2024

The baby of Dorset woman Constance Marten and her partner Mark Gordon was kept "warm and dry, and was fed", a defence barrister has claimed.

The pair are on trial at the Old Bailey, charged with offences including the gross negligence manslaughter of the newborn daughter.

Outlining the defence argument, John Femi-Ola KC, representing Gordon, said the baby was "well cared for" and "did not require medical assistance".

After the baby - which was to be called Victoria - had died, petrol was purchased to cremate the child, but the couple decided against the idea, Mr Femi-Ola told the trial.

Marten, 36, "wanted to find out why her beloved baby died", jurors were told.

She did not attend court on Friday (26th January), for a second day.

Gordon, 49, sat in the dock wearing a blue shirt and dark blue tie.

The jury was previously told how the couple travelled across England in cars and taxis, with the newborn baby tucked underneath Marten's coat and later kept in a Lidl bag-for-life.

Mr Femi-Ola continued: "The defence's case is that baby Victoria was born on December 24th 2022 and that she died on January 9th 2023.

"Constance Marten said that after the baby died she did not know what to do.

"There was an attempt to preserve the body. She wanted to find out why her beloved baby died. Yes, beloved."

Marten and Gordon kept the baby in a tent in the middle of a cold winter, depriving it of "warmth, shelter and food", prosecutors allege.

Mr Femi-Ola disputed the claim and insisted the baby was "well cared for".

"The baby was kept warm and dry, and was fed such that she was well nourished," he told the jury.

"The baby did not require medical assistance ... there is no evidence of any violence.

"What Constance Marten had to say to police about the death of baby Victoria is entirely consistent with the findings of pathologists."

Marten and Gordon were "driven off grid," he added.

The couple, of no fixed address, also deny perverting the course of justice, concealing the birth of a child, child cruelty and causing or allowing the death of a child.

The trial continues.

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