
Three men who stole watches worth £750,000 from cycling star Mark Cavendish told to pay back money or face extra six years each in jail
Sir Mark was beaten and threatened to be stabbed in front of his wife Peta and his three-year-old son during the violent raid, when the masked gang broke in at the dead of night.
They are believed to have been after a £2 million sapphire Richard Mille watch the athlete was loaned for an awards ceremony.
Instead, they made off with two other watches by the same upmarket firm worth £400,000 and £350,000.
Romario Henry, 34, of Lewisham, south-east London, and Ali Seasay, 30, of Rainham, Kent, were eventually caught and sentenced to 15 years and 12 years respectively in 2023 for two counts of robbery at the family house in Ongar, Essex.
A third man, Jo Jobson, 28, of no fixed address later handed himself in to police and was also given 15 years inside for the same charges.
They faced further court proceedings today over the stolen goods, which are still missing, and also include three mobile phones worth around £2,300 and a Louis Vuitton suitcase valued at £2,200.
Judge Alexander Mills, sitting at Chelmsford Crown Court for the Proceeds of Crime Act hearing, said the owed a total of £754,525 and must repay it by August or have the time added to their jail terms.
The robbers took items including two Richard Mille watches with a combined value of £750,000
He said he was satisfied the defendants were 'in it together' and had jointly obtained the value of the stolen property, adding 'any defendant can pay off this order to relieve the others of the responsibility of doing so'.
Judge Mills added he 'did not accept it's inevitable they [the watches] were sold' as they were 'not depreciating goods but goods that act as a store of wealth'.
The amount owed was reduced by a Mercedes car valued at £1,000 that was seized from Sesay and £24,740 in cash found at a property where he had been living.
An unspecified amount was secured from Jobson's NatWest bank account.
The judge said these should be used to pay £1,897 compensation to Sir Mark, £3,359 to his wife, and the remainder to the watch company who were 'the losers of the value of the watches'.
Model Mrs Cavendish, who was pregnant with the couple's fifth child at the time of the raid on November 27, 2021, went to investigate a noise downstairs as her husband was recovering from three broken ribs and a torn lung following a cycling accident.
She raced back to the bedroom as she saw 'figures running towards her'.
Describing the scene during Henry's trial prosecutor Edward Renvoize said: 'Mrs Cavendish got into the bedroom and Mr Cavendish got hold of a panic alarm.
'Two assailants jumped on him and punched him and asked him to turn the alarm off. One individual produced a knife and threatened to stab him in front of his children.'
Three men in balaclavas in the bedroom demanded Cavendish open his safe and he was 'subjected to more violence' when he was unable to access it as the batteries for the keypad had gone flat.
His wife, who hid their son under the covers to stop him seeing what was happening, said one of the men brandished a 'Rambo-style' knife and snatched her phone when she tried to call police.
Mr Renvoize described the raid to jurors as a 'well-orchestrated and executed, planned invasion of a home of well-known individuals with the intention of grabbing high-value timepieces'.
One of the intruder's took Mrs Cavendish's mobile phone and it was later found outside their property, which he said was a 'significant error in what was an otherwise carefully executed plan'.
DNA recovered from the phone was attributed to Ali Sesay and police then 'traced a phone attributed to Mr Sesay', using its data to identify the phone numbers of other people involved in the offence.'
Mrs Cavendish previously revealed she and her husband were considering selling the house because the robbery had ' turned a loving family home into a constant reminder of threat and fear '.
Sesay admitted the offences, while Henry and Jobson were both convicted following trials.
Judge Mills said the defendants could apply for an extension to the three-month period to repay the money.

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


BBC News
12 minutes ago
- BBC News
Man on violent disorder charge over Epping hotel protest
A man has been charged with violent disorder and criminal damage following a protest outside a hotel used to house asylum of people gathered outside The Bell in Epping, Essex, on Thursday night, with several officers injured and police vehicles Police said a 33-year-old man from Loughton was arrested on Saturday and questioned by detectives from its serious crime has been remanded in custody and is due to appear at Chelmsford Magistrates' Court on Monday. The man's arrest was the third in connection with demonstrations at the hotel.A 65-year-old man from Harlow is due before Chelmsford magistrates in September, charged with affray over an alleged assault near the hotel on 13 July.A man arrested on Thursday for failing to comply with a dispersal order was later released on conditional bail."Our investigations into the incidents which followed a peaceful protest in Epping on Thursday evening are continuing at pace and we thank the public for sharing vital information," police said. Follow Essex news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.


The Sun
12 minutes ago
- The Sun
My brother was knifed to death at home by his pal…court ‘loophole' meant we never got justice & killer struck AGAIN
WAYNE Keenan's body was draped over a breakfast bar in his Blackpool flat, where he'd been stabbed multiple times. His pal Mark Oldfield had fled the scene, just yards from a police station, but two days later would hand himself in before being charged with murder. 8 8 8 But in the middle of his trial the judge gave the jury the option to try him for the now defunct charge of manslaughter by provocation instead. They took up the offer and Oldfield, from Leeds, was sentenced to just seven years in prison, and after early release would go on to viciously attack his next door neighbour with a pizza cutter - as well as at least one other offence with a bladed article. Heartbroken sister Beverley Keenan told The Sun: 'I've spent more than two decades fighting this, trying to understand why it suddenly wasn't considered murder. He'd been stabbed in the back. 'There was no justice for my brother. I want an apology from the government, because it was their laws that failed to protect him and others in a similar boat.' She added: 'As soon as Mark was released he attacked again.' Beverley says she's never had a clear answer as to what led to her brother's death - and the weapon used was never found. Dad-of-three Wayne - known to friends and family as Joey Evans, having adopted his stepdad's surname and his own middle name - had been allowing Oldfield to stay in his flat on and off when the deadly row erupted on June 4 2000. Joey, 34, had, on a whim, moved to the Lancashire city from Leeds months earlier, after his mum Alison Evans and sisters Beverley and Julie had done the same. His relationship with the mother of his youngest son had broken down and he wanted a fresh start. Beverley explained: 'He turned up on New Years Eve 1999 and it was a right shock, because we weren't expecting to see him. 'I'd just moved into a new house, and he came and stayed with us all over New Year. 'We had a lovely time, it was the first time that all the family had been together since we were kids. 'He was gutted because he had three kids in Leeds but needed a fresh start. He planned to move to Blackpool permanently and fight for custody of his youngest, and we were going to help.' Joey signed up to a local job agency and soon found regular work in factories, often working two jobs at once, days and nights. 'He was earning good money and then his mate from Leeds turned up,' explained Beverley. Joey and Oldfield, then 36, stayed at Alison's home in Central Drive before her son found himself a flat on Chapel Street just half a mile away. But by June, Joey and Oldfield's relationship appeared to have soured somewhat, and Beverley believes her brother had not seen his eventual killer much for some time when he arrived suddenly at his flat in the early hours of Sunday, June 4 2000. 'He turned up early Sunday morning, and stabbed Joey at nine o'clock on Sunday night,' she said. 8 8 8 'Joey had had a bath that night, he'd ironed his clothes ready to go to work the next day, before being killed.' Beverley recalls how half an hour after stabbing her brother, Oldfield 'casually' walked past her and sister Julie as they drove back to their mum's home after bingo. 'He was stood looking at me in the car, and because of my arthritis I couldn't wind the window down to ask him where Joey was. 'He was with a girl. We drove round to the back of my mum's old house, and we suddenly couldn't see him anywhere.' What exactly happened during the tragedy is unclear. In her campaign to have the conviction upgraded, Beverley says she was told the court transcripts were destroyed after five years. Reports in the Blackpool Gazette from December 2000, during the trial, say Oldfield alleged his victim had first gone for him with a knife. He claimed Joey had also punched one of several women who were also in the flat at the time and had stepped in. However, Julie Taylor, described as Joey's girlfriend, is reported to have told the court she saw Oldfield raise an arm and stab his victim four times. While giving evidence, Oldfield had told the court how he and Joey had spent the day drinking and watching Formula One on the TV. One article adds the defendant said he must have later fallen asleep and that on waking he heard screaming and crying. 8 8 It says: 'Oldfield told the court he saw Joey punching someone called Mandy. The defendant said he took hold of him and dragged him into the hallway.' However, Joey allegedly broke loose and headed back to the living room. Oldfield said: 'Joey came back into the room. I saw a knife in the right hand. I thought he had run on to the knife [sic]. 'From listening to the forensic pathologist I now believe I must have lunged at him and stabbed him in the chest, thinking he was going to stab me.' In another article, the court is reported to have heard Oldfield claimed he was acting in self defence and had actually grabbed a knife from the coffee table after fearing Joey was going to arm himself, and used it to kill his friend. In an article from December 23 2000, the day after Oldfield was sentenced for manslaughter by provocation, Beverley was reported as saying: 'Oldfield was known as Rampton in Leeds and butchered my brother. 'I am considering appealing to the Home Secretary about the leniency of the sentence.' Mum Alison - who passed away in 2010 - had said: 'How in God's name could the judge sentence him to only seven years? 'He could be out walking the streets again in three years.' Referring to the police, she added: 'We feel so let down by them.' Early prison release and subsequent attack Oldfield was released early from prison and in May 2009 was sentenced to eight years in custody for assault occasioning actual bodily harm, having attacked his neighbour with a pizza cutter. Then in May 2011, while still on licence, Oldfield reportedly committed another offence with a bladed article and was given a 10-month prison term. Beverley said: 'How many more times will he escape justice? Does he really have to take another life before someone listens?' She has been campaigning ever since Oldfield was jailed for her brother's killing, for a tougher sentence. 'I started more or less immediately,' she explained. She said she was protesting outside Parliament and several Labour ministers at the time 'all walked past', and she appeared on TV. 'I wrote to everyone in Parliament and got a lot of letters back from a lot of MPs that agreed with me but they said you've got to go through your own. 'My MP tried his best but it's proving it. No solicitor would ever touch it because there'd been a trial. Even though the trial's gone wrong.' The partial defence of provocation in English law, which could reduce a murder charge to manslaughter, was abolished in October 2010. In April 2005 the double jeopardy rule came into effect in the UK, allowing for retrials in cases of very serious offences where new and compelling evidence had emerged after an acquittal or conviction. Beverley said it wasn't until the new law came in that police came to see her, in part because she'd been collecting paperwork from the case, and asked for the court transcripts, which she didn't have. What is manslaughter by provocation and double jeopardy? The partial defence of manslaughter by provocation in English law, which could reduce a murder charge to manslaughter, was abolished in October 2010. In April 2005 the double jeopardy rule came into effect in the UK, allowing for retrials in cases of very serious offences where new and compelling evidence had emerged after an acquittal or conviction. 'They said 'we're going to try him on double jeopardy'. Beverley continued: 'They knew he'd murdered Joey, they knew it. I tried to get the transcripts but they said we've destroyed them after five years. 'You can find transcripts online from decades ago but Joey's have been destroyed after five years.' Despite being on benefits at the time, she managed to save up the £5,000 needed to receive the transcripts before finding out they'd been destroyed. She said police said, in the end, the potential for a new trial fell through on the basis of this. 'Really you'd think they'd do a new inquiry again,' she continued. 'The police said they were underfunded and couldn't keep going back and forth to Leeds. And that was that.' She went on to say: 'I seem to have missed out every which way but loose. Every which way I go I hit a brick wall.' She added: 'At the end of the day, it's us who are the victims, us who serve the life sentence, not them who do it.' Having suffered a number of health setbacks, Beverley said her campaign has now been reinvigorated. I seem to have missed out every which way but loose. Every which way I go I hit a brick wall. At the end of the day, it's us who are the victims, us who serve the life sentence, not them who do it. Beverley Keenansister of tragic Joey Evans Mum Alison died from brain cancer in 2010, while Beverley herself has struggled with rheumatoid arthritis since she was a baby. 'In the last 10 years I've had my two new hips and two new knees, I've had a lot going on in my life,' she explained. 'But the other day I just thought I should really get an apology off the government. 'That manslaughter with provocation was a mess, they knew it was a mess, they've admitted it was a mess, and that's the reason they abolished it because they knew murderers were getting away with murder.' She added: 'I would like other victims in this situation to come forward. 'I'd love to get a group of us together like the Post Office crew, because someone needs holding accountable for this farce. It should never have happened.' Attorney General In an email from MP Chris Webb to Beverley in January, seen by The Sun, he told her: 'Provocation law, as it stood, was widely criticised for being outdated and susceptible to misuse. 'While its intent was to address specific circumstances, its application in other cases, including the ones you've described, led to unjust outcomes that failed to reflect the gravity of the crimes committed. 'I agree that the government must not acknowledge the failures of the past without fully examining their consequences and offering both accountability and redress.' As a result, he wrote to the Attorney General on her behalf to 'highlight the importance of this issue'. In April, Mr Webb then forwarded his response from Sarah Sackman KC, Minister for Courts and Legal Services, who said the correspondence had been transferred to the Ministry of Justice. She said: 'You and your constituents may be interested to learn about the 'Unduly Lenient Sentence (ULS) Scheme' where the Attorney General can refer certain serious offences sentenced in the Crown Court to the Court of Appeal if they believe they might be unduly lenient. 'The Court of Appeal will then review the sentence and may decide to dismiss and replace it with a sentence that it considers more appropriate.' However, she warned: 'The bar to increasing a sentence is a very high one. 'The Court of Appeal will only grant permission to refer a sentence in exceptional circumstances: for example, if the judge has made some gross error, or has passed a sentence that falls outside the range of available and reasonably appropriate sentences.' She added the independent Law Commission are also 'undertaking a review of criminal appeals' and in June launched a public consultation in relation to reforms to the ULS. Lancashire Police declined to comment when approached by The Sun.


Daily Mail
12 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
BREAKING NEWS Border Patrol agent shot in the face by illegal immigrant during botched robbery in New York City park
An off-duty Border Patrol agent was shot in the face by an illegal immigrant in a robbery gone wrong - before the agent fired back in dramatic scenes on Saturday. The federal agent, 42, was sitting in Fort Washington Park, Manhattan, when he was approached by two men on a moped attempting to rob him just before midnight. One of the immigrants took out a gun after a brief commotion and fired at the agent, hitting him in the face and left forearm. The victim, who was sitting on a rock with a female friend, quickly reacted and took out his own gun and shot at the two men. The 42-year-old is expected to survive his injuries - but is currently in hospital. His bullets hit a Dominican national, who has been living illegally in the US since 2023. He has been taken into custody. The second suspect has not been found. A crime scene was set up in the early hours of Sunday morning - and police with the NYPD were seen sweeping the park for shell casings and evidence. There is still a large police presence inside the park and underneath the George Washington Bridge. A firearm was found at the scene - as well as a backpack, along with a wallet and jacket. It's unclear who they belonged to. The frightening ordeal comes amid the White House's massive deportation push. Trump is continuing full steam ahead to try and remove the over 10 million migrants who illegally entered the country under President Joe Biden. The Department of Homeland Security said the administration has carried out 239,000 deportations since Trump's inauguration in January. New York City in particular felt the brunt of the immigration crisis over the last four years - with thousands of migrants arriving in the Big Apple seeking shelter and asylum. The Roosevelt Hotel in Midtown was set up as a makeshift registration center and shelter for immigrant families who had arrived in the US through the southern border and made their way to the Democrat city to start their new life.