
Brother who killed sister with hammer detained indefinitely
Exeter Crown Court heard the siblings were reclusive and at the time of the Miss Law's death there was an 'inter-related spiral of mental decline'.
Jo Martin KC, prosecuting, said on the afternoon of January 17, Law phoned 999 and told the operator: 'I've killed my sister, and so I need you to come.
'We've both gone mad, I mean, mentally. I just couldn't cope with it all.'
The emergency services found Miss Law dead in her bed having suffered severe head injuries.
'He told the police there had been a build up from Christmas Day, although there had been no big argument,' Miss Martin said.
'He said, 'I kept hitting her to make sure because I didn't want to leave her. She wanted to die, the same as I did'.
'He went on to say, 'Part of my problem is being reclusive and withdrawn. The last thing you want to do is go to counselling or go to the doctor'.'
After being taken to the police station Law told officers he had intended to take his own life and was detained under the Mental Health Act.
A post-mortem examination found Miss Law had suffered 'catastrophic head injuries' from at least six blows from a hammer.
Police investigations found the siblings led quiet but separate lives, despite sharing their former parents' home.
'They were not well known to their neighbours,' Miss Martin said.
'What though did seem to be known of the two of them was they didn't have a particularly good sibling relationship.
'They led independent lives to the extent that they would shop and eat separately.
'When the police spoke to all of the friends and neighbours, it was clear that despite what they knew of their fraught relationship, no one had anticipated it would end in the killing of Judith by her brother.'
Miss Martin said Law told psychiatrists that both he and his sister spoke of suicide and that he was becoming 'increasingly stressed'.
'On January 17 he said that they'd had a conversation about how long it would take them both to rot if they just stayed in bed and didn't eat,' she said.
'He said that he recalled thinking that this was the day to end their lives.'
Law, of Lark Rise, Newton Poppleford, had previously been charged with murder but pleaded guilty to manslaughter by reason of diminished responsibility.
Two psychiatrists found he had been suffering from a 'severe depressive disorder' which had affected his culpability.
Dan Pawson-Pounds, defending, said tensions between the siblings had exacerbated after their village had flooded in 2023 and their home needed repairs.
'The characterisation of the relationship between Mr Law and his sister is a difficult one because of course they were both relatively reclusive, Mr Law rather more than his sister,' he said.
'It appears that Mr Law's reclusive nature was a longstanding character trait developed over a number of years and was identifiable from the latest the mid-1990s.
'The knowledge of the neighbours and others of their relationship was naturally and inevitably somewhat limited.
'We would say that whilst there were clear tensions in that relationship, and those tensions were obviously exacerbated by the flood damage to their home and the ongoing repair work in 2023, it does appear that the balance of the observations taken from third parties is that while they lived their lives largely separately under the same roof, there was no suggestion of any violence at all between them.'
Judge Anna Richardson imposed a hospital order under Section 37 of the Mental Health Act and a restriction order under Section 41 – meaning Law can be detained indefinitely.
'On January 17 this year you rang 999 telling the operator that you had killed your sister, that you had struck her with a hammer more than once, and that you had both gone mad,' she said.
'You exhibited substantial signs of disturbance in your manner during that call.
'You have since told medical experts that your intention was to kill Judith and yourself, but you were unable to go through with killing yourself.
'I accept that you are genuinely remorseful.
'I have concluded that the protection of the public is not best served by passing a penal sentence which would be of relatively short duration.
'Rather the justice of the case and the public are better served by the making of a hospital order under Section 37 of the Mental Health Act.
'I am satisfied that you are suffering from a mental disorder of a nature and degree which makes it appropriate for you to be detained in hospital for medical treatment.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
8 hours ago
- BBC News
Met Police officers face assault charges over patient restraint
Five Metropolitan Police officers have been charged with inflicting grievous bodily harm (GBH) after a man was restrained during an incident at a 3 April 2023 a man in his 50s was detained by police under the Mental Health Act after reportedly behaving erratically in the street, threatening members of the public and setting fire to his was taken to an Islington hospital, which has not been named, where he "became agitated and was restrained by officers", according to the Independent Office for Police Conduct investigated the incident and then referred it to the Crown Prosecution Service, which decided to press charges against the officers. The man was released from hospital in May five officers charged are PC David Hollands, PC Anthony Bhar, PC Robert Wall, PC Elena Cebotari and PC Dan are based in the Met's Central North Command and have been charged with two counts each of Bhar is due to appear at Westminster Magistrates' Court on 5 August and the remaining four will appear at the same court on 15 Supt Jason Stewart, who leads policing for Central North Command, said: "It is always a matter of deep regret when a member of public is injured through an interaction with officers and I know this matter will cause concern. "We must now let criminal proceedings proceed unhindered while continuing to maintain an open dialogue with the community."


Evening Standard
9 hours ago
- Evening Standard
Five Met police officers charged with GBH over hospital restraining incident
The charges follow an investigation by the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) into the incident on April 3, 2023, when a man in his 50s was detained under the Mental Health Act having reportedly been seen to be behaving erratically in the street, threatening members of the public and setting fire to his clothing.


Times
a day ago
- Times
Stephen Bacon obituary: media lawyer for national newspapers
Burning the midnight oil as he scrutinised the next day's newspaper for defamation and contempt gave Stephen Bacon a thriving career in media law. Much of it was spent with Express Newspapers, including the Daily and Sunday Express titles and the Daily Star whose editors were renowned for pushing the legal limits. From time to time he appeared in court apologising for the misdemeanours of his client paper and disclosing a financial settlement to the judge. In 1989 the cricketer Ian Botham heard Bacon withdraw the Daily Star's libellous claim that he had been involved in a pub brawl, while in 2007 Danielle Lloyd, a former Miss Great Britain, donated her damages to charity after he apologised for allegations that she had been intimate with a nightclub DJ. On one occasion he apologised to Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman after what started as a laudatory newspaper feature was mistakenly leavened by the inclusion of unsubstantiated rumours. Cruise attended the hearing and afterwards they spoke directly, with Bacon expressing his sorrow that things had gone awry. 'I believe he genuinely accepted this and I came away thinking what a thoroughly nice person he was,' Bacon said. He once came face to face with Ian Brady, the Moors murderer, who was pursuing the Sunday Express over a story alleging that he had tried to force himself on a female visitor. For security reasons the hearing took place at Ashworth Hospital, Liverpool, though Bacon had to explain firmly to his insistent editor that he would be in contempt of court by surreptitiously taking a picture of Brady for the paper. Among the cases that gave Bacon the most pleasure was the one in which Lord Archer of Weston-super-Mare was ordered to repay a £500,000 libel settlement from 15 years earlier, having been jailed in 2001 for perverting the course of justice. Afterwards he gave a satisfied interview to Legal Director magazine under the headline 'The long wait for justice'. Despite being a man of forthright opinions, Bacon had a great affection for journalists even though they constantly solicited free legal advice or requested his signature on passport photographs. 'I was usually told that I would be bought a drink by way of thanks; such drinks almost never materialised.' However, there were also surreal occasions. When the Coronation Street storyline included the arrest of Deirdre Rachid (later Barlow) for murder, the Daily Star took up the character's cause under the banner 'Free the Weatherfield One' and Bacon was required to write a legal opinion under the headline 'Our legal eagles will fight for her'. Stephen Francis Theodore Bacon was born in Oldham in 1945, the only child of Dr Frank Bacon, a theologian, and Cecila (née Pursglove), who became headmistress of a Manchester comprehensive school. As a boarder at the Perse School, Cambridge, he excelled at cross-country running but never learnt to swim. He read law at King's College, London, where his degree included an element of theology that he later used in debates with the local vicar. He was called to the Bar 'one balmy summer's evening' in 1969, a few minutes before Brenda Hale. Both joined the Northern Circuit as pupil barristers in Manchester, though she became president of the Supreme Court while 'after some ten years as a general common lawyer' he 'ended up in the rough and tumble of being 'the lawyer' at national newspapers'. Bacon's connection with the Daily Express began in 1971 as an occasional night lawyer in the paper's Manchester office, checking stories before they went to press. Winnie Johnson, whose son Keith Bennett was murdered by Brady and Myra Hindley, worked in the paper's canteen and 'always kept Daily Express journalists up to date in any developments [and] also made a very good sausage barm cake'. In 1973 he married Susan Johnson. He is survived by their son Nicholas, who has served in uniform. Their daughter, Hannah, died in 2009, aged 29. The marriage was dissolved and in 2001 he married Felicity Quant, a journalist whom he met at the Express offices. She survives him with their daughter Clio, who is studying law. Bacon formally joined Express Newspapers as an in-house lawyer in 1978, shortly after it launched the Daily Star as a red-top rival to The Sun. In the mid-1980s he moved to the company's London offices, having previously provided holiday cover there. New owners and policies at the turn of the century brought fewer high-risk stories, though a steady flow of complaints remained, notably about the titles' coverage of the disappearance of Madeleine McCann in May 2007. 'In this case sales increased with each new twist to the story. Not a bad thing, until a legal problem arises,' he wrote. Again it fell to him to clear up the mess, draft an apology and negotiate a financial settlement. 'Forcibly retired', as he put it, in 2011, he took locum work at The Times, Sunday Times and The Sun. Despite living for many years in Kent, he retained a taste for northern cuisine, including pork pies and chips fried in beef dripping. He was a fine cook, often threatening to enter MasterChef, and had a wide range of interests including steam and model railways, horse racing at Sandown and following the fortunes of Lancashire county cricket club. After more than 50 years spent offering advice to editors and journalists, Bacon was well placed to observe how media law has developed, especially in relation to privacy. 'The law was comparatively straightforward when in the 1980s the Daily Star was censured by the Press Council, a predecessor of Ipso, [for publishing] a photo of Princess Diana taken from an adjacent Caribbean island with a long lens,' he wrote in a letter to The Times in 2023. However, he concluded with a note of caution: 'Today the law of privacy is far more complex, uncertain and strict.' Stephen Bacon, media lawyer, was born on September 3, 1945. He died from prostate cancer on July 13, 2025, aged 79