Hero PC Andrew Harper’s family arrive at court for killers’ sentencing
‘Four weeks was all I had with my husband’: Hero PC Andrew Harper’s devastated widow Lissie reads heartbreaking impact statement as his three teenage killers are sentenced for manslaughter
- Policeman’s widow Lissie Harper broke down twice as she delivered a heartbreaking victim impact statement
- 28-year-old previously slammed jury’s decision to clear Henry Long, Jessie Cole and Albert Bowers of murder
- Mr Justice Edis began today’s sentencing hearing by addressing claims that the jury had faced intimidation
Published: 05:18 EDT, 31 July 2020 | Updated: 07:15 EDT, 31 July 2020
The widow of hero PC Andrew Harper gave a heartbreaking victim impact statement at the Old Bailey today as his three teenage killers prepared to be sentenced for manslaughter after being cleared of murder.
Lissie Harper, 28, breaking down twice, said: ‘My husband was brutally killed four weeks after our wedding day. Should I speak again of how we were robbed of our future or the plans stolen from us?
‘Four weeks was all I had with my husband – four weeks to be called his wife. My life often feels bleak, hopeless, irreparable. Every aspect of my life since Andrew was taken is bitterly different.’
Mrs Harper had previously slammed the jury’s ‘utterly shocking and appalling’ decision to clear her husband’s killers of murder over his death on August 15 last year.
She was joined in court today by his parents Phil Harper and Deborah Adlam.
PC Harper, 28, had tried to stop the three thieves from stealing a quad bike in Sulhamstead, Berkshire, but his ankles were lassoed by a trailing loading strap from their car as the teenagers tried to escape.
He was towed helplessly for over a mile behind the Seat Toledo as it reached speeds of 60mph.
Henry Long, 19, and 18-year-olds Jessie Cole and Albert Bowers, who were listening via video link from HMP Belmarsh, reacted to the news last Friday with hugs and pats on the back. Today Long’s defence barrister denied the defendants were ‘badly behaved’ during the trial and insisted her client had showed ‘genuine remorse’.
Mr Justice Edis today took the unusual step of addressing ‘controversy’ over the jury’s decision to find three teenagers not-guilty of murder, amid concerns they were being subject to ‘improper pressure’.
The judge said that ‘to the best of my knowledge’ there was ‘no truth’ to the claims. It came after Mrs Harper called on the Government to order an unlikely retrial in the hope of getting a murder conviction based on ‘suspected interference with the jury’.
PC Harper died after trying to stop the three thieves from stealing a quad bike in Sulhamstead, Berkshire. Lissie, his widow, is pictured outside court last Friday. They are also seen (left) celebrating their wedding at Ardington House in Oxfordshire in summer 2019
PC Harper’s mother, Deborah Adlam, arriving at the Old Bailey today. She was accompanied by the policeman’s father, Phil
Mrs Harper arrived at the Old Bailey by car this morning and later gave an emotional victim impact statement, saying: ‘Four weeks was all I had with my husband’
Police mugshots of (left to right), driver Henry Long, 19, and his passengers Jessie Cole and Albert Bowers, both 18
Mrs Adlam said she was ‘utterly and bitterly disgusted with the outcome’, which she said had ‘let down’ PC Harper
‘Four weeks was all I had’: Lissie Harper’s heartbreaking statement to the Old Bailey
‘This is my third attempt at writing a statement. I simply find myself in a lost and endless world.
‘That’s the reason in particular this question defeats me – unless you have stood in my shoes, lost a soulmate, a beloved partner you intended to spend your life with – how is this grief possible to describe?
‘I have used every word possible to describe this torture – indescribable trauma I have been forced to endure these past 11 months.
‘I have cried and broken down. My husband was brutally killed four weeks after our wedding day.
‘Should I speak again of how we were robbed of our future or the plans stolen from us?
‘Four weeks was all I had with my husband – four weeks to be called his wife. My life often feels bleak, hopeless, irreparable.
‘Every aspect of my life since Andrew was taken is bitterly different. Not only did these men take this man from me, they took our future too.
‘They took more than one life away that day, they stole the person I used to be. Every ounce of beautiful peace gone.
‘In answer to the question: how has Andrew’s death impacted me? You can be satisfied I am now a shadow of the person I once was.
‘Broken, distraught, beaten, a void, an empty shell. He gave everything.
‘Andrew will never grace us with his smile – his compassion and selfless generosity.
‘I will spend every day for the rest of my life with a hole that will never be filled.
‘I search around for words to express my heartbreak, but each word is inadequate.’
Today’s the prosecutor read a second victim impact statement, from PC Harper’s mother Deborah Adlam.
She said: ‘I am unable to explain the enormity of what I’m feeling and have been struggling with since we were awoken on August 15 2019 at 4.45am to the worst news imaginable.
‘He died because these defendants chose to steal a quad bike. My family and I feel broken – can you imagine a loved one dying with such indignity?’
Mrs Adlam added in her victim impact statement read to the court about the death of her son Pc Harper: ‘He was our first-born child and he has been ripped from me.
‘I haven’t been able to work for fear of breaking down, my mind just isn’t in the right place, my anxiety is overpowering.
‘I hardly sleep… I have no motivation or even daily routine – chores or cooking a meal, it just feels pointless now.
‘I have sat in the mortuary of my son’s covered body, too damaged for me to see. He will never get to be called ‘daddy’ or hold his own child – we imagined this was not too far away in the future.
‘Andrew was such a good man, a brave, a caring person, funny and uplifting. I love and miss him daily with every passing moment. He will be loved forever.’
Henry Long, Jessie Cole and Albert Bowers celebrated after they were declared not guilty of murder, while Bowers and Cole were seen laughing while leaving Reading Magistrates’ Court during an earlier hearing in 2019.
But today, Long’s defence barrister, Rossano Scamardella QC, insisted her client had ‘accepted responsibility’ for his role in the officer’s death.
Mr Scamardella told the Old Bailey it had been reported in the press that all of the defendants were ‘badly behaved’ during the trial.
He said: ‘Henry Long, we do not agree behaved badly during the trial.
‘What we do remember from the trial is Henry Long’s remorse about what he felt. We suggest his remorse is genuine.’
At the start of today’s hearing, Mr Justice Edis addressed the court about claims the jury had been intimidated during the trial.
He said: ‘These verdicts have caused some controversy.
‘I have deliberately avoided reading or viewing reports of the case and comment on it, because I have a duty to do justice in accordance with the law and the evidence which I have heard.
‘However, I have been made aware that there has been some discussion about the trial and, in particular, the measures which were in place for the protection of the jury.
‘It may be believed in some quarters that the jury was subject to some improper pressure. To the best of my knowledge and belief there is no truth in that at all.’
Albert Bowers (left) and Jessie Cole (centre) laughing as they leave Reading Magistrates’ Court on September 19, 2019. A fourth defendant, Thomas King, 21, from Basingstoke, admitted conspiracy to steal a quad bike. He will also be sentenced today (when he is pictured outside the Old Bailey). He was not directly involved in the incident which led to PC Harper’s death
The verdicts declaring Long, Cole and Bowers not guilty of murder were met with anguish from the 28-year-old victim’s widow, who said she was ‘utterly shocked and appalled’ at the decision not to convict the teenagers of murder.
She added: ‘I now have my own life sentence to bear and believe me when I say it will be a lot more painful, soul destroying and painful journey than anyone facing a meagre number of years in prison will experience.’
Lissie Harper then called on the Government to intervene, despite a retrial being both extremely unusual and unlikely.
In an open letter posted on her Facebook page on Tuesday evening, Mrs Harper wrote to Boris Johnson, Home Secretary Priti Patel and former Labour Home Secretary Lord (David) Blunkett urging them and others ‘to right such a despicable wrong for our country’.
She wrote: ‘I implore you to hear my words, see the facts that are laid out before us, and I ask with no expectations other than hope that you might help me to make these changes be considered, to ensure that Andrew is given the retrial that he unquestionably deserves and to see that the justice system in our country is the solid ethical foundation that it rightly should be.
‘Not the joke that so many of us now view it to be.’
Mrs Harper’s anger was shared by the policeman’s mother, Debbie Adlam, who wrote: ‘Andrew James Harper is my son. I am disgusted that he has been let down.
‘When they crossed the junction on A4 there’s no way they did not know he was there being thrown against the pavements.
‘Utterly and bitterly disgusted with the outcome. Andrew went to work to serve us all. And this is how he was repaid.’
It is almost exactly a year since PC Harper and his colleague Pc Andrew Shaw responded to a report of a stolen quad bike from a property in Stanford Dingley, Berkshire, on the night of August 15 2019. It was four hours after his shift was due to finish, though the pair were in the area so wanted to help.
They soon came nose-to-nose with the thieves towing the £10,000 Honda quadbike in Admoor Lane, prompting PC Harper to get out of the police car and chase Cole, who had unhooked the rope between the Seat Toledo getaway vehicle and the stolen Honda.
The Seat Toledo with tow rope and the police car in a similar position at the site of the meeting of the vehicles during the Old Bailey jury site visit to the scene in Sulhamstead on July 1
Cole dived into the Seat, past PC Harper’s grasp, prompting Long to make off at speeds of 42.5mph, carrying the stricken policeman behind for 91 seconds.
His uniform was stripped away and he was found by colleagues unconscious and barely alive in Ufton Lane near the A4 moments later.
Despite attempts to save him, he died at the scene.
The getaway vehicle was later tracked to the nearby Four Houses Corner caravan site.
Following his arrest, Long – who later admitted manslaughter – concocted a false alibi that he had been watching the racing film Fast And Furious at the time.
But an examination of mobile phone data eventually placed all the defendants – members of the travelling community – in the Seat.
Their defence claimed the incident was a ‘freak event’ that none of them could have planned or foreseen.
But the prosecution said at more than 6ft and weighing 14 stone, the defendants must have been aware PC Harper was being dragged to his death.
A fourth defendant, Thomas King, 21, from Basingstoke, had admitted conspiracy to steal a quad bike and is also due to be sentenced today. He was not directly involved in the incident which led to PC Harper’s death.
‘An abominable injustice…’ PC Harper’s widow issues a heart-rending call for a retrial
The policeman’s widow Lissie Harper called on the government to order a retrial. Prime Minister Boris Johnson sent her his sympathies but he does not have the power to grant this
‘Dear Boris Johnson, Priti Patel, David Blunkett and any other person in which has the power, moral value and sheer strength of character to right such a despicable wrong for our country…
‘The way in which the trial was conducted, the suspected interference with the jury and the manner in which the defendants behaved was a total disregard for any legal justice system.
‘If there is even the slightest chance this abominable injustice can be rectified then I will do everything I possibly can to ensure that it is.
‘There are many, many details which made this recent trial atrociously below board…
‘ I will keep fighting on behalf of Andrew, the future that was stolen from us and also the victims who find themselves in this unjustly situation in the future.
‘Who are we if we allow our legal system to fail us? What is this country if it does not provide justice for the innocent?
‘What does it say to the public and the police? It says that we are weak, that we will roll over to the despicable thieves and vile miscreants of this world and literally let them get away with murder.
‘What else can I do for my husband now? My heart bleeds for the life that was so selfishly taken from us. I implore you to hear my words… to ensure Andrew is given the retrial he unquestionably deserves.’
The ‘gentle giant country boy who loved his food’: How newlywed PC Andrew Harper was dragged to death four hours after his shift was meant to end because of his determination to help and protect the public
Mark Duell for MailOnline
He was ‘the gentle giant with a heart of gold’.
The ‘country boy’ who loved his food.
The newlywed police officer who died in the line of duty – more than four hours after his shift was due to finish – because he had a hardwired determination to help and protect.
Andrew Harper and his childhood sweetheart Lissie should have been spending the end of summer 2019 on honeymoon in the Maldives.
Andrew Harper and Lissie should have been spending the end of summer 2019 on honeymoon in the Maldives
Instead, the new Mrs Harper was left facing the rest of her life without her partner of 13 years, after he was killed while responding to an emergency call on August 15 – four weeks after the pair tied the knot.
Andrew Harper was born on March 22 1991, to parents Philip and Debbie, and grew up in Wallingford, Oxfordshire, a big brother to siblings Sean and Aimee.
He joined Thames Valley Police as a 19-year-old in 2010, first as a special constable and then as a full-time regular officer the following year.
He was more than 6ft tall, weighed 14 stone, and had size 14 feet.
But his kind and selfless demeanour saw him described by his wife at his funeral service as ‘a gentle giant with a heart of gold’.
‘Our superman, our bodyguard, our light in the dark,’ Mrs Harper said in a tribute to her husband days after his death.
‘My God, we will miss you. Forever you will be remembered as the best of us.’
Lissie Harper posted a message on Facebook six days ago, which was one year on from her wedding to PC Harper. In it, she said: ‘I am alone in utter disbelief’
Together, the couple enjoyed spending time outdoors, going on long walks and bike rides, and exploring new places.
At the time of his death, PC Harper was raising money for children with cancer, setting an initial sponsorship target of £500 for his participation in a 20-mile obstacle course.
Mrs Harper was left facing the rest of her life without her partner of 13 years, after he was killed on August 15 last year
Within weeks of his death, the total exceeded £300,000.
Colleagues recalled PC Harper’s love of food, infectious smile and sense of humour.
His colleague, Pc Jordan Johnstone, told mourners at the 28-year-old’s funeral: ‘I remember Harps’ first day … He arrived in the office with a clean white hat, shiny boots and an incredible range of Tupperware.
‘We laughed, we joked and we never stopped smiling.’
But there was a serious side to PC Harper, demonstrated by him and his colleague deciding to respond to reports of a burglary in Bradfield Southend in Berkshire at 11.17pm on August 15 2019.
Prosecutor Jonathan Laidlaw told jurors that ‘despite it being well beyond the end of their shift, and because they were close and thought they could help’, the duo offered to attend the scene.
Mr Laidlaw described it as ‘going beyond the call of duty’.
It was to be PC Harper’s final case.
The depth of hurt caused by PC Harper’s death reverberated across Thames Valley Police, with officers forming an almost guard of honour as members of the jury visited the crime scene.
And so raw was the emotion for the family that jurors were not told about PC Harper’s status as a newlywed in case the weight of a widow’s grief was detrimental to the defendants.
Instead, members of PC Harper’s family watched on as three teenagers described their respective involvements in the death.
Hare-coursing, attacking homes with fireworks and thievery: How illiterate cop-killing travellers brazenly documented their law-breaking on Facebook
By Mark Duell for MailOnline
Henry Long, 19, and his passengers Jessie Cole and Albert Bowers, both 18, are facing years in jail for manslaughter over the death of PC Andrew Harper.
Newlywed PC Harper, 28, became entangled in a tow rope attached to their Seat Toledo as he tried to apprehend them in Berkshire last August.
The teenagers admitted plotting the theft and Long pleaded guilty to manslaughter but each denied knowing that PC Harper was there.
All three were cleared of murder by an Old Bailey jury today which had deliberated for more than 12 hours, but Cole and Bowers were found guilty of manslaughter.
Here is a profile on each the killers, revealing how they documented their law-breaking in Facebook posts of hare-coursing and attacking homes with fireworks:
HENRY LONG (driver)
Fast and Furious loving driver: Illiterate hell-raiser, 19, with string of juvenile offences for violence and drunken disorder
Henry Long, 19, was taken out of school by his father after he got into trouble with teachers
Unable to read or write, Henry Long, 19, was taken out of school by his father after he got into trouble with teachers.
Aged 12 he followed in the footsteps of his father and grandfather and began thieving, he told the jury.
Specialising in stealing quad-bikes and machinery, Long carried with him tools for breaking into sheds, and snapping metal chains and padlocks.
The career thief first spotted the quad-bike and drove the getaway car which dragged PC Andrew Harper to his death. He had a reputation among travellers as a good driver able to steer vehicles at break-neck speeds.
With the help of Albert Bowers and Jessie Cole, both 18, he disguised his Seat Toledo by disabling the rear lights, covering the number plates with tape and removing any logos. Long was the ringleader, telling Bowers and Cole to ‘shut up’ and ‘turn the music up’ as he drove.
In cross examination Long came ‘perilously close’ to admitting he was enjoying the chase as it went on knowing PC Harper was being dragged behind him.
He tried to convince jurors that, had he known the officer was behind him, he would have stopped and tried to save him.
Specialising in stealing quad-bikes and machinery, Long (pictured in September 2019) carried with him tools for breaking into sheds, and snapping metal chains and padlocks
While sat in the dock he laughed with Bowers and Cole as details of the horrific death were read out which reduced PC Harper’s widow to tears. At first he told the police: ‘I do not give a f*** about any of this’ when they arrested him for murder.
He lied and claimed he was watching Fast and Furious all night. But police managed to trace his mobile phone to the scene forcing him to change his story.
Throughout the trial he argued he could not hear or feel anything behind the car. Long has four convictions for five offences, all as a juvenile. He is convicted of two charges of battery, two counts of being drunk and disorderly and a further two offences of shop lifting.
ALBERT BOWERS (passenger)
Accomplice with passion for blood-sport: Racist thug, 18, who posed with dead hares on Facebook and fell asleep during trial
Albert Bowers, 18, fell asleep in the trial when the prosecution were show footage of the officer being dragged to his death
Albert Bowers, 18, has a keen interest in the blood sport hare coursing.
Photographs from his Facebook account show the teenager holding pictures up of dead hares killed by his sighthound.
He had turned to waiting photographers and started to laugh following one of his first appearances at Reading Magistrates’ Court after the killing.
Even when PC Harper’s body was described as being like a ‘dear carcass’ Bowers, Long and Cole continued smirking in the dock.
His attention span lasted only 40 minutes and at one stage he fell asleep in the trial when the prosecution were show footage of the officer being dragged to his death.
In evidence he said he could not read or write and had to be supported by an intermediary. He left school in year six and occasionally worked as a landscape gardener while supporting himself by stealing.
Jurors heard he and Long were close friends who often went out together looking for property to take. They both knew the nearby roads well and used this knowledge of the terrain to try and evade the police.
Bowers has three convictions for five offences while a juvenile.
He has been convicted of one count of criminal damage, one charge of sexual assault by touching, one offence of possessing an offensive weapon, one conviction for battery and one for a racially aggravated public order offence.
JESSIE COLE (passenger)
Tree-cutter, 18, who left school only able to spell his own name needed help from intermediary while he gave evidence at trial
Jessie Cole, 18, cannot read or write and left school aged 14
Jessie Cole, 18, claimed he had only recently met Bowers and Long.
He claimed he went out thieving with them and not on his own because he was scared.
Like the other two he cannot read or write and left school aged 14. He attended a college for boys with learning difficulties and by the time he dropped out he could just spell his name.
Since then he worked with his father as a tree-cutter in Reading, Basingstoke and the Isle of Wight earning up to £70 a day. In the weeks before the killing he worked with his father on the island before returning to live with his mother.
His parents had separated when he was 18-months-old. Cole said he was closer to his mother than his father. As with Bowers he was helped by an intermediary as he gave evidence.
Cole claimed he did not see PC Harper chasing him but dash-cam footage from the pursuing police car shows him turning towards the officer before he jumped through the Toledo window. He has no previous convictions.