Constance Marten jury shown images of destroyed baby clothes found near car
The jury in the Constance Marten and Mark Gordon manslaughter trial have been shown harrowing images of destroyed baby clothes found near couple's burnt-out car.
The couple are on trial at the Old Bailey accused of killing their newborn daughter Victoria. It is alleged they travelled across England and lived off-grid in a bid to keep the baby after four other children were taken into care. The trial opened last week, with the court hearing how Greater Manchester Police launched an investigation after discovering their abandoned car on the M61 with a placenta inside.
The new images show a white baby blanket, a cream baby sleeping bag and a white baby romper among other items left along the fence line of the motorway's junction with Anchor Lane. There are also other burned infant clothing and dummies in separate evidence photos. Baby Victoria was later found deceased by police inside a Lidl bag and covered in rubbish in a disused shed in Brighton on March 1. Wealthy aristocrat Marten, 36, and partner Gordon, 49, are also accused of concealing her birth.
Today, taxi drivers spoke of their "concerns" after picking up the couple up while they were on the run with their baby. Jurors have viewed CCTV in which the child was allegedly carried under Marten's coat, only being briefly glimpsed when the couple stopped in East Ham.
The jury viewed more CCTV footage of the couple after they reached Whitechapel in east London. While there, Gordon had bought a two-person tent and camping bedding, including a children's unicorn sleeping bag, in Argos, the court was told.
Baby boy has spent his life in hospital as doctors are 'scared' to discharge himThe couple allegedly abandoned a buggy and were carrying Argos bags and a Lidl bag-for-life when they got into a black cab shortly after midnight last January 8. In a statement read to the court, taxi driver Abdirisakh Mohamud said he became "suspicious" and "uncomfortable" during the journey.
The male passenger allegedly asked the driver if he was a Muslim, whether he was "trustworthy" and if there were cameras in the cab. Mr Mohamud said he told the man there were cameras, even though there were not, because he wanted to feel "safe".
The man then asked him: "Are you sharing this conversation with anyone?" and Mr Mohamud said "no", jurors heard. Mr Mohamud said in his statement that he feared "something was not right". He asked the couple why they were wearing blue Covid facemasks, and the woman said she was a Muslim and it was her "hijab", the court heard.
On being told by the driver that it was not a hijab, she allegedly told him it was the only thing she had. The man said he wore a mask because he "had a problem with his hair", the witness said. Mr Mohamud said he decided to drop the couple off early in Green Lanes in Haringey rather than Enfield Tesco Extra where they had asked to go.
He said: "The more I thought about it, the more concerned I felt about the baby." Another taxi driver Hasan Guzel described hearing "meowing" noises when he drove the defendants from Haringey to Newhaven in East Sussex early on January 8. He said in his statement that he had stopped when a woman waved at him and she told him to wait while her "friend" got in.
They initially asked to be taken to Portsmouth then changed the destination to Newhaven, jurors heard. Mr Guzel said he had charged £475 for a three-hour trip. Describing the woman, he said: "I thought she had a bag under her coat as she looked quite big in the chest area."
During the journey, he said: "I heard what sounded like a cat meowing. I was annoyed at first because I thought she had a pet without telling me. I could see it was a baby, I could see the noise was coming from a baby. I thought why didn't she tell me about this, it's been nearly four hours we have been travelling."
He said that when he dropped them off in Newhaven, he saw it was cold and dark and he was "concerned as to what they were going to do next". The couple were captured on CCTV heading towards the South Downs at around 6.30am last January and were not spotted again until they resurfaced at a Texaco garage four days later, on January 12.
Marten allegedly bought items including Haribo sweets, mini cheddars, matches, bottles of water and a filled glass bottle of petrol which she paid for in cash. Gordon was filmed carrying the Lidl bag which then appeared to be blowing in the wind as if it was empty. On the morning of last January 16, Nicholas Frost allegedly spotted him emerging from a blue tent in woodland in Stanmer Park, Brighton. In a statement, Mr Frost said he and his wife had been walking their dog when he saw the man he later recognised from the news.
He said: "I thought to myself it was unusual because you never see people camping in that area. It was also very cold, not camping weather. It was about minus two degrees. The male came out from inside the tent. This startled us and the male appeared to be startled as well." He added: "I definitely got the impression that he did not want to be seen."
Tragedy as 13-month-old boy dies after the stolen car he was in crashedThe witness said the male was carrying two bags including an orange bag-for-life which "looked like it had stuff in it". Mary Thomsen, 66, told jurors she was on a trip to Asda when she spotted a "bright blue" tent last February. She said: "I said to my husband: 'They must be bloody freezing or mad because no-one would want to be out camping, it was so cold'."
Mrs Thomsen said the sighting played on her mind, saying: "For that time of year it was out of place." The court has heard how the couple became front-page news last January when Greater Manchester Police launched a missing persons inquiry after finding a placenta in the couple's burnt-out car on a motorway near Bolton.
On February 19, Pauline Mason and her husband went to Stanmer Park in Brighton for some "fresh air", the court heard. Mrs Mason was in a mobility scooter and her husband was walking when she saw a tent near Stoney Mere Way. She told jurors: "I noticed a tent, the tent was royal blue, it was not very big. I just thought it might be a hiker. My husband had walked ahead of me and I shouted to him, 'Come over, what's that tent doing there?'
"He said, 'Dunno, someone is sleeping out on a cold night'. I was taken aback by it then continued on my scooter." Further on, she noticed a "mum with baby", Mrs Mason said. Prosecutor Tom Little KC asked: "What did you notice, if anything, about the baby?" Mrs Mason said: "The mother was focused on the baby, her eyes were totally focused on that baby and my eyes went from her to the baby. The baby was in a sling. She was holding her around the baby's head to steady it."
The child was very pale, did not make any sound and her head was "wobbling", "floppy" and "unsteady", the witness said. She was "very surprised" to see the child had no hat, socks or booties on and was only wearing a cardigan and leggings. Mrs Mason said the woman looked tired and she felt sorry for her.
The defendants spent hundreds of pounds on taxis taking them from the North West to Essex, London and the south coast, jurors have heard. Last February, Marten and Gordon were arrested in East Sussex. Days later, the body of baby Victoria was found in a Lidl supermarket bag covered in rubbish inside a disused shed.
The defendants, of no fixed address, deny manslaughter by gross negligence of the little girl between January 4 and February 27 last year. They are also charged with 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.