GUILTY UK - Carol Park, 'Lady in the Lake', 30, murdered, Cumbria, 17 July 1976

smellsarat

Former Member
Joined
Sep 4, 2003
Messages
10,585
Reaction score
11
Website
Visit site
Another hubby,........... another missing wife...............

http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/crime/story.jsp?story=605710
Husband is convicted of 'Lady in the Lake' murder
By Ian Herbert, </B>North of England Correspondent


29 January 2005

The 30-year mystery of the "Lady in the Lake" was finally solved yesterday when a retired teacher was convicted of murdering his wife and dumping her body in Coniston Water in the Lake District.

Gordon Park, 60, claimed his wife, Carol, a primary school teacher, had disappeared from the family home on the first day of the summer holidays in 1976.

But, after a 10-week trial at Manchester Crown Court, a jury unanimously convicted him. Park was convinced he would be acquitted. After he was jailed for life, he was led from the dock trance-like, holding his hands out before him. Park's third wife, Jenny, burst into tears while Carol Park's brother, Ivor Price, who has always been convinced of Park's guilt, collapsed in the gallery.

The court was told Park, an "intense, deep and methodical" man, bludgeoned his "pretty and vivacious" wife on 17 July 1976 with an ice axe, bound her up in bags and pushed her from the side of his boat, Lady J. He would probably have escaped detection had he tipped the body a few feet further across Coniston. But he left it on top of a shallow slope where it was found by divers in August 1997.

Park was charged with murdering Carol, who was still clad in a blue nightdress when found. But prosecutors dropped the case because of lack of evidence in 1998.

Park and his wife had a stormy nine-year marriage, punctuated by violent rows, a wife-swapping episode and Carol's numerous affairs. She left to live with one boyfriend but was forced to return after Park was granted custody of the children: Jeremy, Rachel and Vanessa, who was adopted after her mother &shy; Carol's sister &shy; was also murdered, by a jealous boyfriend.

The jury heard how, until the body was discovered, she became "a name upon a file at Scotland Yard; a question mark in the minds of those who had known her" and Park got on with his life, remarrying twice.

The prosecution said that, since Mrs Park was still clad in her nightie and wrapped in one of her pinafore dresses, she must have been killed by someone who knew her. She was also bound by knots known only to climbers, sailors or someone with an "unusual interest in knots". Park was all three.

Sentencing Park, Mr Justice McCombe said: "I am not sure there was a significant degree of planning. [But] I have to take into account this terrible concealment of this body that led to so much suffering to so many people for such.............................MORE
 
sounds like a Peterson - smells like a Peterson - :eek:

does this scenario sound familiar?
Sentencing Park, Mr Justice McCombe said: "I am not sure there was a significant degree of planning. [But] I have to take into account this terrible concealment of this body that led to so much suffering to so many people for such.............................MORE
Yikes, Peterson was found guilty! and the jury recommended the death sentence!

Please remember the words by this Judge! - I have to take into account this terrible concealment of this body that led to so much suffering to so many people

Yeah, another country and another set of rules - but why? A life is a life, IMO!

DS:angel:
 
Park had always denied killing his 30-year-old wife, and was found hanged in his cell at HMP Garth, Lancashire, on January 25, 2010 - the morning of his 66th birthday.

Now the case is again under scrutiny, and Park's family have reportedly found new DNA evidence that they say may clear his name, and open the door for a new investigation into Mrs Park's death.


http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...tml?ITO=1490&ns_mchannel=rss&ns_campaign=1490
 
This was quite a famous crime at the time. Carol Park disappeared in 1976 and her body was found in a lake in 1997. Her husband Gordon was convicted of her murder and hanged himself in prison in 2010. His family now hope DNA will exonerate him posthumously.

Could 'Lady in the Lake' killer be cleared 42 years on? Family hope DNA test will overturn husband's conviction for murdering wife with an ice axe

The family of the Lady in the Lake killer are hoping to clear his name 42 years after she disappeared.

It took three police investigations and almost three decades to solve one of the most intriguing murder mysteries in British history.

Carol Park, 30, went missing from her home in Leece, near Barrow-in-Furness, Cumbria in July 1976.

Lady in the Lake Barrow in Furness killer Gordon Park could be cleared by DNA overturning conviction | Daily Mail Online
 
Three senior judges have rejected a posthumous appeal against the conviction of Gordon Park, the so-called "Lady in the Lake" killer.

Park was found guilty of murdering his wife Carol, whose body was found in Coniston Water in the Lake District in 1997, 21 years after her disappearance.

He killed himself in prison in 2010.

The case, brought by his son, Jeremy Park, was dismissed by the Court of Appeal, which said there was "no reason to doubt the safety of the conviction".

'Lady in the Lake' murder conviction upheld
 

Staff online

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
249
Guests online
3,845
Total visitors
4,094

Forum statistics

Threads
592,318
Messages
17,967,395
Members
228,746
Latest member
mintexas
Back
Top