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Sarah Everard: British court hears policeman Wayne Couzens made false coronavirus arrest before murder

  • The former London Metropolitan Police officer admitted to kidnapping, raping and murdering Everard in March, and is in court for sentencing
  • A prosecutor said he accused her of breaking Covid-19 lockdown restrictions, handcuffing her before later strangling her with his police belt

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Sarah Everard, who was abducted and killed while walking home in London. A policeman put handcuffs on her in a false arrest before her murder, a court heard. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse
A British court heard on Wednesday that a serving police officer kidnapped a woman as she walked home, handcuffing her in a false arrest for breaking coronavirus restrictions, before raping and murdering her.
The disappearance of Sarah Everard during a national lockdown in March was one of Britain’s most high-profile missing person investigations and sparked protests and a debate about women’s safety on the streets.

Wayne Couzens, 48, who served with the elite diplomatic protection unit of London’s Metropolitan Police, admitted her kidnapping, rape and murder in July.

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Everard, who had been visiting a friend in Clapham, south London, was strangled then set on fire, with her remains found in woodland a week after she was snatched.

At a two-day sentencing hearing, prosecutor Tom Little said Couzens targeted the 33-year-old marketing executive on March 3 after finishing a shift at the US embassy.

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Prosecutor Tom Little, QC speaks as former Metropolitan Police officer Wayne Couzens (second from right), sits in the dock at the Old Bailey in London on Wednesday. Court artist sketch: Elizabeth Cook via AP
Prosecutor Tom Little, QC speaks as former Metropolitan Police officer Wayne Couzens (second from right), sits in the dock at the Old Bailey in London on Wednesday. Court artist sketch: Elizabeth Cook via AP
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