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Vincent
TABAK
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
To
gain sexual gratification
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: December 17, 2010
Date of arrest:
January 20, 2011
Date of birth: February 10, 1978
Victim profile:
Joanna Clare "Jo" Yeates, 25
Method of murder:
Strangulation
Location: Clifton,
Bristol, England, United Kingdom
Status:
Sentenced
to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 20 years on October
28, 2011
Joanna Clare "Jo" Yeates (19
April 1985 – 17 December 2010) was a 25-year-old landscape
architect from Hampshire, England, who went missing on 17 December
2010 in Bristol after an evening out with colleagues. Following a
highly publicised appeal for information on her whereabouts and
intensive police enquiries, her body was discovered on 25 December
2010 in Failand, North Somerset. A post-mortem examination
determined that she had been strangled.
The murder inquiry, named Operation Braid, was one of the
largest ever police investigations in the Bristol area. The case
dominated news coverage in the United Kingdom around the Christmas
period as Yeates' family sought assistance from the public through
social networking services and press conferences. Rewards
amounting to £60,000 were offered for information leading to those
responsible for Yeates' death. The police initially suspected and
arrested Christopher Jefferies, Yeates' landlord, who lived in a
flat in the same building.
Vincent Tabak, a 32-year-old Dutch engineer and neighbour of
Yeates, was arrested on 20 January 2011. Media attention at the
time centred on the filming of a re-enactment of her disappearance
for the BBC's programme, Crimewatch. After two days of
questioning, he was charged on 22 January 2011 with Yeates'
murder. On 5 May 2011, Tabak pleaded guilty to Yeates'
manslaughter, but denied murdering her. His trial started on 4
October 2011; he was found guilty of murder on 28 October 2011,
and sentenced to life imprisonment with a recommendation he serve
at least 20 years.
The nature of press reporting on aspects of the case led to the
instigation of legal proceedings against a number of UK
newspapers. Libel action was brought by Jefferies against eight
publications over their coverage of his arrest, resulting in the
payment to him of substantial damages. The Daily Mirror and The
Sun were found guilty of contempt of court for reporting
information that could prejudice a trial. A memorial service was
held for Yeates at the parish church in the Bristol suburb where
she lived; her funeral took place near the family home in
Hampshire. Several memorials were planned, including one in a
garden she had been designing for a new hospital in Bristol.
Background and disappearance
Joanna Clare Yeates was born on 19 April 1985 to David and
Teresa Yeates in Hampshire, England. She was privately educated at
Embley Park near Romsey. Yeates studied for her A-levels at Peter
Symonds College and graduated with a degree in landscape
architecture from Writtle College. She received her Master's
degree in landscape architecture from the University of
Gloucestershire.
In December 2008, Yeates met then-25-year-old fellow landscape
architect Greg Reardon at the firm Hyland Edgar Driver in
Winchester. The couple moved in together in 2009 and settled in
Clifton, Bristol, when the company relocated to that area. Yeates
later changed jobs to work at the Building Design Partnership in
Bristol.
At approximately 8:00 pm on 19 December 2010, Reardon returned
home from a weekend visit to Sheffield to find Yeates absent from
their flat on Canynge Road, Clifton. Reardon had been trying to
contact her by phone and text, but did not find it "completely out
of character" that she did not respond. While awaiting Yeates'
return, Reardon found that her purse and keys were at the flat,
and that their cat appeared to have been neglected. After he
called her again, her mobile phone rang from a pocket of her coat
at the flat. Around midnight, Reardon contacted the police and
then Yeates' parents to report her missing.
Investigators subsequently pieced together the sequence of
events leading up to her disappearance. They determined Yeates had
spent the evening of 17 December 2010 with colleagues at the
Bristol Ram pub on Park Street, leaving at around 8:00 pm to begin
the 20-minute walk home. She told friends and colleagues that she
was looking forward to spending the weekend alone; she planned to
spend her time baking and shopping for Christmas. Yeates was seen
on closed-circuit television (CCTV) at around 8:10 pm leaving a
Waitrose supermarket without purchasing anything. She phoned her
best friend, Rebecca Scott, at 8:30 pm to arrange a meeting on
Christmas Eve. The last known footage of Yeates recorded her
buying a pizza from a branch of Tesco Express at around 8:40 pm.
She had also bought two small bottles of cider at a nearby
off-license, Bargain Booze.
Search, public appeal, and discovery of body
Reardon and Yeates' friends set up a website and used social
networking services to help look for her. On 21 December 2010,
Yeates' parents and Reardon made a public appeal for her safe
return at a police press conference.
In another press conference, broadcast live on 23 December 2010
by Sky News and BBC News, Yeates' father David commented on her
disappearance: "I think she was abducted after getting home to her
flat ... I have no idea of the circumstances of the abduction
because of what was left behind ... I feel sure she would not have
gone out by herself leaving all these things behind and she was
taken away somewhere".
Her keys, phone, purse and coat were left behind at her flat.
Detectives retrieved a receipt for a pizza, but found no sign of
it or of its packaging. Both bottles of cider were found in the
flat, one of them partially consumed. As there was no evidence of
forced entry or a struggle, investigators began to examine the
possibility that Yeates may have known her abductor.
On 25 December 2010, a fully clothed body was found in the snow
by a couple walking their dogs along Longwood Lane near a golf
course and next to the entrance of a quarry in Failand,
approximately 3 miles (4.8 km) from her home.
The body was identified by police as that of Yeates. Reardon
and the Yeates family visited the site of the discovery on 27
December 2010. David Yeates said that the family "had been told to
prepare for the worst" and expressed relief that his daughter's
body had been recovered. Funeral arrangements were delayed as
investigators wished to retain the body for a while. The
pathologist Dr Nat Carey consented to the release of the body on
31 January 2011.
Investigation
The investigation, called "Operation Braid", comprised 80
detectives and civilian staff under the direction of Detective
Chief Inspector Phil Jones, a senior officer with Avon and
Somerset Constabulary's major crime investigation unit. It became
one of the largest police operations in the Constabulary's
history. Jones urged the public to come forward with any
information to help catch the killer, especially potential
witnesses who were in the vicinity of Longwood Lane in Failand in
the period before Yeates' body was discovered there. He stated
that the investigation was seeking the driver of a "light-coloured
4x4 vehicle" for questioning.
Jones said that officers had been "inundated with thousands of
calls" and were "exhausting every lead and avenue that [they were]
provided with." Police examined over 100 hours of surveillance
footage along with 293 tonnes (293,000 kg) of rubbish seized from
the area around Yeates' flat. Refuse collection had been suspended
in that part of Clifton since 23 December 2010.
Crime Stoppers offered a £10,000 reward for information leading
to the arrest and conviction of her murderer, while The Sun
newspaper offered £50,000. Authorities advised people living in
the area to secure their homes, and warned women not to walk alone
after dark. Speaking on 29 December about the murder investigation
Yeates' father said, "I fear that whoever has done this will never
hand themselves in, but we live in hope that the police will catch
who is responsible."
Post-mortem and initial enquiries
Following the discovery of Yeates' body detectives from the
Avon and Somerset Constabulary issued an appeal for anyone with
information about the death to come forward, and investigated
similarities with other unsolved cases. Of particular interest to
them were those of 20-year-old Glenis Carruthers who was strangled
in 1974, Melanie Hall, aged 25, who disappeared in 1996 and whose
body was discovered thirteen years later, and 35-year-old Claudia
Lawrence who went missing in 2009.
Investigators identified "striking similarities" between the
Yeates and Hall cases, notably their age and appearance, and that
they had disappeared after returning home from meeting friends,
but the possibility of such connections was later downplayed by
authorities.
The police gathered surveillance video from Clifton Suspension
Bridge, which forms part of the most direct route from the crime
scene to the Clifton suburb where Yeates was last seen alive. The
footage was of poor quality, making it impossible to clearly
distinguish individuals or car registration numbers. Investigators
were aware that the perpetrator could have used an alternative
bridge across the River Avon less than a mile to the south to
avoid CCTV coverage.
A post-mortem examination began on 26 December 2010, though
results were delayed due to the frozen condition of the body.
Police initially thought it possible that Yeates froze to death
because her body showed no visible signs of injury. Investigators
announced on 28 December 2010 that the case had become a murder
inquiry as the coroner determined that Yeates had died as a result
of strangulation.
The post-mortem indicated that she had died "several days
before being discovered" on 25 December 2010. The examination also
confirmed that Yeates did not eat the pizza she had purchased.
Detective Chief Inspector Jones stated that the investigation
found "no evidence to suggest that Joanna was sexually assaulted".
The police searched Reardon's laptop computer and mobile phone as
part of standard procedure. Reardon was ruled out as a suspect and
treated as a witness.
A young woman attending a party at a neighbouring house on
Canynge Road on the night of Yeates' disappearance recalled
hearing two loud screams shortly after 9:00 pm coming from the
direction of Yeates' flat. Another neighbour who lived behind
Yeates' home said that he heard a high-pitched woman's voice
scream "Help me". Officers removed the front door to Yeates' flat
to check for clothing fibres and DNA evidence, with investigators
examining the possibility that the perpetrator had entered the
flat before Yeates returned home.
Further enquiries
Senior officers from the investigation asked for assistance
from the National Policing Improvement Agency, which provides
expertise for difficult cases. On 4 January 2011, a clinical
forensic psychologist, who had previously been involved as a
criminal profiler in other high profile murder cases, joined the
investigation to help narrow down the number of potential
suspects.
Jones stated that his officers were checking through 1,300 tips
and pieces of information from the public and had established over
1,000 lines of inquiry, 239 of them considered "high priority".
Jones said, "I can assure you, we are determined to solve this
crime and bring Jo's killers to justice. No stone will be left
unturned." On 5 January, Detective Chief Inspector Jones announced
that one of Yeates' socks was missing when she was found dead and
that it had not been found at the crime scene or in her home.
Police launched a national advertising campaign to appeal for
witnesses through Facebook. The page, established on 4 January,
had been viewed nearly 250,000 times by the following day, while
CCTV footage of Yeates had been viewed 120,000 times on YouTube by
5 January.
On 9 January 2011, Bristol East MP Kerry McCarthy gave her
support to the idea of a public DNA screening process if the
police found it useful. The Avon and Somerset Constabulary had
conducted mass DNA screening during the 1995 investigation into
the disappearance of then-18-year-old Louise Smith. McCarthy
suggested that the screening process should be extended beyond
Clifton to the wider Bristol area. Saliva that had been found on
Yeates' body was tested for a potential DNA profile. Detectives
liaised with officials from the Multi-Agency Public Protection
Arrangements (MAPPA), which manages individuals convicted of
violent and sexual offences, with a view to interviewing
registered sex offenders living within their jurisdiction.
Arrests and reconstruction of crime
Shortly after 7.00am on 30 December 2010, Christopher
Jefferies, Yeates' landlord who lived in the same building, was
arrested on suspicion of her murder. He was taken to a local
police station for questioning while forensic investigators
inspected his flat. A senior police officer granted investigators
a 12-hour extension to the arrest on 31 December, enabling them to
hold him in custody for additional questioning.
Police subsequently applied to magistrates for a further
extension, and were granted another 24 hours on 31 December. but
released Jefferies on bail the following day. He retained the
legal services of the law firm Stokoe Partnership to act on his
behalf. On 4 March 2011, police released him from bail and stated
he was no longer a suspect. He subsequently won an undisclosed sum
in libel damages for defamatory news articles published following
his arrest.
In January 2011, a dramatic reconstruction of the case was
filmed on location in Bristol for broadcast in the 26 January
edition of the BBC television programme Crimewatch. A firm that
had been involved in the production of the Harry Potter films was
contracted to reproduce the snowy conditions at the time of Yeates'
disappearance. The reconstruction of Yeates' last movements was
filmed on 18 January, and within 24 hours of news coverage about
the production, over 300 people contacted the police. A
breakthrough led investigators to believe that Yeates' body may
have been transported in a large holdall or suitcase.
On the morning of 20 January, the Avon and Somerset
Constabulary arrested 32-year-old Vincent Tabak, who lived with
his girlfriend in the flat next door to Yeates. However,
authorities declined to reveal additional details while the
suspect was being interrogated due to concerns over controversial
media coverage of Jefferies' arrest, which had breached the rules
governing what can be reported when an individual is arrested. The
Tabak arrest followed an anonymous tip from a female caller, hours
after a televised appeal by Yeates' parents on Crimewatch.
Canynge Road was closed by police while scaffolding was
constructed around Yeates' home; and officers sealed off the
adjacent flat of Dutch engineer Tabak. Investigators also searched
the nearby townhouse of a friend, where Tabak was believed to have
been staying, about a mile away. Tabak had previously been ruled
out as a suspect during an earlier stage of the investigation, and
had returned to England from a holiday visit to his family in the
Netherlands.
Following Tabak's arrest, the BBC cancelled its plans to air
the Yeates re-enactment on Crimewatch. On 31 January, Yeates'
family publicly released photos of her that previously had been
scheduled to be broadcast on the programme.
DNA tests
DNA tests were carried out by LGC Forensics, a private company
which undertakes forensic analysis for criminal investigations.
Lindsey Lennen, a body fluids and DNA specialist member of the
team that analysed DNA samples from Yeates' body said that
although DNA swabs matched Tabak, they were not of sufficient
quality to be evaluated.
The team deployed a method known as DNA SenCE, which enhances
unusable DNA samples through purification and concentration: "We
couldn't say whether the DNA was from saliva, or semen, or even
touch. But we could say that the probability of it not being a
match with Tabak was less than one in a billion."
Legal proceedings and perpetrator
Murder charge and plea
After questioning during 96 hours of detention, Tabak was
charged on 22 January 2011 with the murder of Joanna Yeates. He
made a brief appearance at Bristol Magistrates' Court on 24
January and was remanded in custody. Tabak, legally represented by
Paul Cook, declined to request bail during a hearing the following
day. Tabak was moved from Bristol Prison because of fears for his
safety, and was placed under suicide watch at Long Lartin Prison
near Evesham. Tabak's family and friends in the Netherlands
started to fundraise for his court defence.
Tabak initially maintained he was not responsible for Joanna
Yeates' death, claiming that DNA evidence linking him to the crime
had been fabricated by corrupt officials. However, on 8 February,
while on remand he told Peter Brotherton, a prison chaplain that
he had killed her and intended to plead guilty.
On 5 May 2011, Vincent Tabak pleaded guilty to the manslaughter
of Yeates, but denied murdering her. His plea of guilty to
manslaughter was rejected by the Crown Prosecution Service. On 20
September, Tabak appeared in person at a pre-trial hearing at
Bristol Crown Court. Appearances at previous hearings had been
made via videolink from prison.
Vincent Tabak
Vincent Tabak (born 10 February 1978) was a Dutch engineer who
had lived and worked in the United Kingdom since 2007. The son of
Gerald and Sonja Tabak, and the youngest of five siblings, he was
raised in Uden, 21 miles (34 km) north of Eindhoven.
Tabak's childhood next-door neighbour, John Massoeurs,
described him after the trial as an intelligent "introverted"
loner. Tabak studied at Eindhoven University of Technology from
1996, graduating with an MSc in architecture, building and
planning in 2003, then began a PhD in which his thesis was a study
of how people use space in office buildings and public areas. The
paper was published in 2008.
Leaving university in 2007, he moved to the United Kingdom
after taking a job at the headquarters of Buro Happold, an
engineering consultancy firm in Bath, and settled in a flat in the
town. He worked as a "people flow analyst", a role which required
him to examine how people move around public spaces such as
schools, airports and sports stadiums.
While living in Bath he established a relationship with a woman
he first met through The Guardian's online dating website
Soulmates. She was later described by the newspaper as his first
serious girlfriend; he paid tribute to her in the acknowledgements
of his thesis: "I am very happy she entered my life." The couple
moved to a flat in Canynge Road, Bristol, in June 2009. Though
Joanna Yeates and her partner moved into the neighbouring flat in
Canynge Road in the autumn of 2010, she and Tabak did not meet
prior to 17 December.
In the months leading up to Yeates' death, Tabak had used his
computer to research escort agencies during business trips in the
United Kingdom and United States, and contacted several
prostitutes by phone.
He also viewed violent internet pornography that depicted women
being controlled by men, showing images of them being bound and
gagged, held by the neck and choked. During the murder
investigation, police found images of a woman who bore a striking
resemblance to Yeates. In one scene she was shown pulling up a
pink top to expose her bra and breasts. When Yeates was
discovered, she was wearing a similarly arranged pink top.
At Tabak's trial, prosecuting barrister Nigel Lickley QC,
argued that the evidence of Tabak's activities should be provided
to the jury: "It might shed light on the need to hold a woman for
long enough and the need to squeeze hard enough to take her life."
Details of Tabak's viewing of pornography were not included in the
prosecution's case since the judge believed it did not prove that
Tabak had acted with premeditation. After the trial it was
disclosed that images of child pornography had been found on
Tabak's laptop.
Trial
The trial of Vincent Tabak started on 4 October 2011 at the
Crown Court at Bristol before Mr Justice Field and a jury. His
counsel in the trial was William Clegg QC and the prosecutor was
Nigel Lickley QC. Tabak pleaded guilty to manslaughter, but denied
murder.
The prosecution case was that Tabak had strangled Yeates at her
flat within minutes of her arrival home on 17 December 2010, using
"sufficient force" to kill her. The trial was told that Tabak –
around 1 foot (0.30 m) taller than Yeates – had used his height
and build to overpower her, pinning her to the floor by the
wrists, and that she had suffered 43 separate injuries to her
head, neck, torso and arms during the struggle.
Injuries included cuts and bruises, and a fractured nose.
Lickley told the court that the struggle was lengthy, and her
death would have been slow and painful. However, he did not offer
an explanation for the reasoning behind Tabak's initial attack on
Yeates.
Evidence was presented that Tabak had then tried to conceal the
crime by disposing of her body. The court heard that DNA swabs
taken from Yeates' body had provided a match with Tabak. Samples
found behind the knees of her jeans indicated she may have been
held by the legs as she was carried, while fibres suggested
contact with Tabak's coat and car. Blood stains were found on a
wall overlooking a quarry close to where Yeates was discovered.
The prosecution also said that Tabak attempted to implicate
Chrisopher Jefferies for the murder during the police
investigation, and that in the days following Yeates' death, he
had made internet searches for topics that included the length of
time a body takes to decompose and the dates of refuse collections
in the Clifton area.
In his defence, Tabak claimed that the killing had not been
sexually motivated, and told the court that he had killed Yeates
while trying to silence her after she screamed when he tried to
kiss her. He claimed that Yeates had made a "flirty comment" and
invited him to drink with her. He said that after she screamed he
held his hands over her mouth and around her neck to silence her.
He denied suggestions of a struggle, claiming to have held Yeates
by the neck with only minimal force, and "for about 20 seconds".
He told the court that after dumping the body he was "in a state
of panic".
The jury was sent out to deliberate on 26 October, and returned
with a verdict two days later. On 28 October 2011, Tabak was found
guilty of Joanna Yeates' murder by a 10 to 2 majority verdict. He
was jailed for life, with a minimum term of 20 years. Passing
sentence, Mr. Justice Field referred to a "sexual element" to the
killing.
Media controversy
The manner in which certain aspects of the case were reported
by the British media led to one television broadcaster being
temporarily banned from attending press conferences, and the
instigation of legal proceedings against several newspapers by
both Yeates' former landlord, and the Attorney General.
Following a television news report on 4 January 2011 that
criticised the handling of the investigation, ITN reporters were
banned by the Avon and Somerset Constabulary from attending a
press conference convened to give updates on the murder case.
The item, presented by journalist Geraint Vincent claimed
police had made little progress with their investigation, and
questioned whether they were following correct procedural methods.
A former murder squad detective told the report that "certain
routine inquiries" such as looking for fresh evidence at the crime
scene were not being carried out. ITN accused the police of
attempting "to censor what information we can broadcast" while the
constabulary filed a complaint with the Office of Communications,
calling the broadcast "unfair, naïve and irresponsible reporting".
The police subsequently lifted the sanctions against ITN, but
said that they would "not hesitate to adopt similar tactics in the
future." Legal action was also considered over a tweet revealing
that Tabak had viewed internet pornography showing erotic
asphyxiation and bondage. The contempt of court charges were
dropped after the tweet was removed.
Writing in London's Evening Standard on 5 January 2011, the
media commentator Roy Greenslade expressed concern over a number
of negative articles that had appeared in newspapers concerning
Yeates' landlord, Chris Jefferies, following his arrest,
describing the coverage as "character assassination on a large
scale". He cited several examples of headlines and stories that
had been published, including a headline in The Sun describing
Jefferies – a former teacher at Clifton College – as weird, posh,
lewd and creepy; a story from the Daily Express quoting unnamed
former pupils referring to him as "a sort of Nutty Professor" who
made them feel "creeped out" by his "strange" behaviour; and an
article from the Daily Telegraph, which reported Jefferies "has
been described by pupils at Clifton College…as a fan of dark and
violent avant-garde films". Jefferies launched legal action
against six newspapers on 21 April – The Sun, the Daily Mirror,
the Daily Star, the Daily Express, the Daily Mail and the Daily
Record – seeking damages for libel.
On 29 July he accepted "substantial" damages for defamation
from The Sun, the Daily Mirror, the Sunday Mirror, the Daily
Record, the Daily Mail, the Daily Express, the Daily Star and The
Scotsman in connection with their coverage of his arrest. In an
interview following Tabak's conviction, Jefferies commented: "It
has taken up a whole year virtually of my life, that period of
time has meant that everything else that I would normally be doing
has been in abeyance." He criticised the government's plans to
change the law on legal aid, which he said would prevent people
with limited means from taking action against newspapers.
Dominic Grieve, the Attorney General for England and Wales,
stated on 31 December 2010 that he was considering action under
the Contempt of Court Act 1981 to enforce the obligation of the
media not to prejudice a possible future trial. Criminology
professor David Wilson commented on the resonance of the murder
case with the national news media: "The British public loves a
whodunnit ... It's a particularly British thing. We were the first
nation to use murder stories to sell newspapers and that culture
is more ingrained here than elsewhere." Wilson called Yeates, a
white female professional, an "ideal victim" for the media.
On 1 January, Yeates' boyfriend Greg Reardon commented on the
media coverage surrounding the arrest of Christopher Jefferies:
"Jo's life was cut short tragically but the finger-pointing and
character assassination by social and news media of as yet
innocent men has been shameful."
On 12 May 2011, the Administrative Court granted the Attorney
General permission to move a motion for committal for contempt of
court against The Sun and the Daily Mirror for the way they had
reported the arrest of Jefferies.
On 29 July, the court (Lord Judge CJ, Thomas LJ & Owen J) ruled
that both newspapers had been in contempt of court, and fined the
Daily Mirror £50,000 and The Sun £18,000. The Lord Chief Justice
of England and Wales, Lord Judge stated that "in our judgment, as
a matter of principle, the vilification of a suspect under arrest
is a potential impediment to the course of justice." The
publishers of The Sun and the Daily Mirror subsequently appealed
against their fines, but the Mirror case was rejected by the
Supreme Court of England and Wales on 9 March 2012, while The Sun
withdrew its appeal.
Ramifications
The Yeates case was mentioned during a Parliamentary debate on
a private member's bill that would have imposed a six-month
sentence on any journalist who names an uncharged suspect. The
proposed legislation was introduced into the House of Commons in
June 2010, by Anna Soubry, the Conservative MP for Broxtowe, a
former journalist and criminal law barrister. In a debate on 4
February 2011 Soubry told the House: "What we saw in Bristol was,
in effect, a feeding frenzy and vilification. Much of the coverage
was not only completely irrelevant, but there was a homophobic
tone to it which I found deeply offensive. The slurs on the man
were out of order." However, she withdrew the proposal after
encountering opposition from the Conservative-led coalition
government.
Jefferies gave evidence to the Leveson Inquiry, established by
Prime Minister David Cameron to investigate the ethics and
behaviour of the British media following the News of the World
phone hacking affair. Jefferies told the inquiry that reporters
had "besieged" him after he was questioned by the police; he said:
"It was clear that the tabloid press had decided that I was guilty
of Miss Yeates' murder and seemed determined to persuade the
public of my guilt. They embarked on a frenzied campaign to
blacken my character by publishing a series of very serious
allegations about me which were completely untrue." Appearing
before the same inquiry on 16 January 2012, the Daily Mirror
editor, Richard Wallace, described the newspaper's coverage of
Jefferies' arrest as a "black mark" on his editing record.
Aftermath and memorials
Associate vicar Dan Clark led a memorial service for Yeates at
Christ Church in Clifton on 2 January 2011. Prayers for her were
also said at the church on 17 December 2011, the first anniversary
of her death, while visitors left tributes and messages of
condolence for her family. Greg Reardon started a charity website
in Yeates' memory to raise funds on behalf of families of missing
people. Yeates' friends and family planted a memorial garden at
the Sir Harold Hillier Gardens in Romsey where she had worked as a
student. Building Design Partnership and the local NHS trust
announced plans to commemorate her with a memorial in a garden she
had been designing for a new £430 million hospital in Southmead,
Bristol.
Other plans for memorials included a garden of remembrance at
the BDP firm's studio in Bristol, a published anthology of Yeates'
work and an annual landscape design prize named after her for
students of the University of Gloucestershire. BDP announced it
would dedicate a charity cycle ride between its offices on its
50th anniversary, with proceeds to go to charities selected by her
family. Yeates left behind an estate valued at £47,000, which
included money set aside to purchase a home with Reardon. As she
had not written a will, the sum was inherited by her parents.
Following the release of her body on 31 January 2011, Yeates'
family arranged to hold her funeral at St Mark's of Ampfield,
Hampshire, and have her interred in the churchyard. Yeates was
buried on 11 February; approximately 300 people attended the
service, which was led by vicar Peter Gilks.
Wikipedia.org
Vincent Tabak kept a sick
trophy from his murder of Jo Yeates, says man who led hunt
Detective believes killer kept one of her socks
DailyMail.co.uk
November 1, 2011
Vincent Tabak kept a sick trophy from his
murder of Joanna Yeates, said the detective who led the hunt
today.
Detective Chief Inspector Phil Jones revealed
that the killer kept the defenceless landscape architect's sock,
after removing it during the attack at her Bristol flat.
He claimed during his murder trial that it came
off as he was hauling her battered body into his neighbouring
flat, after he squeezed her throat until she went limp.
But Det Jones, who led the investigation that
captured the Dutch engineer, believes Tabak may have stashed the
garment as a memento.
The sock, along with a Tesco Finest pizza
bought by Miss Yeates on her walk home the night she died, has
never been found.
Det Jones also said that the cold-blooded
murderer might have never been caught if he hadn't failed to throw
her body over a 4ft high stone wall.
He said that the body would not have been found
had Tabak dumped her in a quarry on the other side of the wall as
he had planned.
Because he didn't manage to throw her over the
fence, Tabak left the body at the side of the road, where it was
was eventually found by dog walkers on Christmas Day, eight days
after she was killed.
Forensic experts found Joanna's blood on the
side and the top of the wall suggesting Tabak tried to push her
over.
The other side of the 4ft high stone wall in
Failand, north Somerset drops sharply into disused Durnford
Quarry.
Police do not know why the 6ft 4in Dutchman
could not lift the 5ft 4in Miss Yeates over the wall, but in court
he claimed he did not have the strength to lift the 9st woman.
He said he panicked and set about piling leaves
on and around her body in an attempt to cover her up.
This all happened just two hours after they had
first met, back at Miss Yeates' ground-floor flat in Bristol.
DCI Jones, from Avon and Somerset Police, said
yesterday: 'I felt it could have been significant in that it was a
trophy.
'I think he took the sock, and the pizza she
had bought on her way home, because he was linked to those items
evidentially.
'No other trace of him was found in the flat.'
DCI Jones, who led the largest investigation in
Avon and Somerset Police history, also branded Tabak as a 'cold'
killer.
Vincent Tabak found guilty of
Joanna Yeates murder
Vincent Tabak has been found guilty of
murdering landscape architect Joanna Yeates for sexual thrills.
By Martin Evans - Telegraph.co.uk
October 28, 2011
The verdict comes despite prosecutors being
blocked from telling jurors about Tabak's sex secrets.
He strangled Miss Yeates after becoming
obsessed with violent sex and pornography, it can now be revealed.
The 33-year-old Dutch engineer was convicted
following a three-week trial at Bristol Crown Court.
The jury of six men and six women returned
their 10-2 majority verdict on their fourth day of deliberation.
He was sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 20
years.
Tabak had pleaded guilty to manslaughter but
had denied murdering the 25-year-old whose frozen snow covered
body was discovered in a remote country lane by dog walkers on
Christmas morning last year.
During the trial Tabak, who lived in the
adjoining flat to Miss Yeates in Canynge Road, Clifton, claimed
her death had been an accident.
He told the court Miss Yeates, whose boyfriend
Greg Reardon was away for the weekend visiting relatives, had
invited him in after spotting him passing her kitchen window on
the evening of December 17 last year.
He told jurors she had made a “flirty” comment
and he had misread the situation thinking she wanted him to kiss
her.
Tabak claimed Miss Yeates had screamed when he
had made a pass at her and he had put his hand around her neck in
an attempt to calm her down and stop her screaming.
The 6ft 4in Dutchman said he had held her for
less than 20 seconds using only moderate force, but after a short
time she went limp and fell to the ground.
But the jury rejected his version of events
after hearing that Miss Yeates had 43 separate injuries when she
was killed including numerous abrasions and bruises.
It can now also be reported that when police
seized Tabak's work and home computers they discovered a chilling
collection of pornographic films, featuring women being choked.
Detectives fear he may have graduated from
“observer to perpetrator” after watching the films and strangled
Miss Yeates for his own sexual gratification.
He also stored images on his computer of a
woman who bore a striking similarity to Miss Yeates exposing her
breasts.
In the photograph the woman was also wearing a
pink t-shirt similar to the one Miss Yeates was wearing on the
night she was killed.
The information was kept from the jury during
the trial, but can now be reported after the judge, Mr Justice
Field, lifted an order banning publication.
It can also be revealed that far from being in
a monogamous relationship as he claimed in court, Tabak sought out
the company of prostitutes while on business trips to Newcastle
and Los Angeles.
Tabak looked down at his feet but showed no
sign of emotion as the verdict was delivered.
He immediately sat down and put his head in his
hands.
Mr Justice Field began sentencing by telling
the jury: "I think there was a sexual element to this killing."
The judge told Tabak he had committed "a
dreadful, evil act on a vulnerable young woman".
Tabak intended to go "much further" after
attempting to kiss her, the judge added, saying that Miss Yeates
died "in pain and fear" and her disappearance left her family
suffering "seven days of agonising uncertainty"
Tabak denied that there had been a struggle but
the prosecution accused him of deliberately killing Miss Yeates in
a sexually motivated attack.
Nigel Lickley QC, prosecuting described Tabak
as “calculating, dishonest and manipulative”.
One of the most shocking aspects of the case to
emerge came when it was revealed that after killing Miss Yeates,
Tabak had placed her body in the boot of his car before driving to
a supermarket where he went shopping for beer and crisps.
While there he had even sent a text message to
his girlfriend Tanja Morson, telling her he was bored.
Tabak had claimed he was in state of panic at
the time and did not know what he was doing.
But the jury rejected that suggestion after
being shown CCTV footage of him calmly strolling round the aisles.
He later drove to Longwood Lane in Failand
around three miles from Clifton where he attempted to drop her
body into a quarry.
But after failing to lift her, Tabak left Miss
Yeates’s body on the grass verge covering her with leaves.
Heavy snow later that night concealed the body
for another eight days until she was finally discovered on
Christmas morning.
Joanna Yeates's boyfriend maintained his
composure as the jury delivered a guilty verdict.
Greg Reardon, 28, had been perched on the edge
of his seat in the front row of the public gallery looking at the
jury of six men and six women.
Miss Yeates's parents, David and Teresa, have
attended almost every day of the trial but decided not to come to
court today.
Other members of the Yeates family were in
court to hear the verdict but showed little emotion.
Mr Reardon, wearing a black suit with a grey
shirt and tie, was supported by his brother as they listened to
the foreman speak in a slow, clear voice when he answered the
clerk's questions.
The jury had been deliberating its verdict for
13 hours and 36 minutes before returning to Court One at Bristol
Crown Court.
There was complete silence as the foreman,
wearing glasses and a grey jumper, replied: "Guilty."
Flanked by six dock officers, the bespectacled
33-year-old Dutchman stood behind the glass-fronted dock and
looked down at his feet but showed no sign of emotion as the
verdict was delivered.
He immediately sat down and put his head in his
hands.
Vincent Tabak found guilty of
Joanna Yeates murder: how it happened
Vincent Tabak was today found guilty of the
murder of architect Joanna Yeates. We trace back the timeline of
events.
By Martin Evans - Telegraph.co.uk
October 28, 2011
Friday 17 December 2010
8pm
After joining colleagues from the architectural
firm BDP for a Christmas drink at the Bristol Ram Pub, Joanna
Yeates sets off for the 20 minute walk to her flat in the Clifton
area of the city.
8.13pm
After stopping off at Waitrose, Miss Yeates
uses her mobile phone to ring her best friend Rebecca Scott to
arrange to meet on Christmas Eve.
8.25pm
She then pops into a branch of Bargain Booze
where she purchases two bottles of cider.
8.31pm
Miss Yeates stops off at Tesco Express where
she buys a pizza.
8.33pm
Miss Yeates is captured on CCTV walking past
The Hophouse public house in Clifton, close to her flat.
8.45pm
A local priest, Father Henwood, is the last
person to see her alive as he is walking her dog close to her flat
in Canynge Road.
8.49pm
Screams are heard coming from the direction of
Miss Yeates’ flat by a couple attending a party nearby.
9.25pm
Vincent Tabak sends text message to his
girlfriend, Tanja Morson, in which he says: “Miss you loads. It is
boring here without you Vxx.”
10pm
Tabak leaves Canynge Road in his grey Renault
Megane car.
10.25pm
Mr Reardon sends text to Miss Yeates telling
her he has arrived safely in Sheffield and asking if she enjoyed
her evening at the pub. He receives no reply.
10.28
Tabak visits a branch of Asda in Bedminster,
Bristol where he purchases rock salt, beer and crisps.
10.30pm
Tabak sends a text message to Miss Morson in
which he says: “How are you, I am at the Asda buying crisis (sic).
Was bored cannot wait to pick you up.”
Saturday 18 December 2010
Midnight
Tabak goes online back at his flat and checks a
number of work related websites.
1.30am
Tabak accesses the BBC News website and looks
up information about the weather.
1.32am
Miss Morson calls Tabak.
2am
Tabak arrives home after collecting Miss Morson
from her office party.
Lunchtime
Tabak and Miss Morson go out for lunch.
10pm
Tabak and Miss Morson attend a friend’s
birthday party at the Pitcher and Piano pub.
Sunday 19 December 2010
Evening
Miss Yeates’s boyfriend Greg Reardon returns
from a weekend visiting his half-brother in Sheffield to discover
she is missing.
12.45am
Mr Reardon dials 999 and reports Miss Yeates
missing.
Tuesday 21 December 2010
Police organise a search of the nearby Avon
gorge and Joanna’s parents, David and Teresa, appeal for her to
come home.
Wednesday 22 December 2010
Mr Reardon makes an emotional appeal for Miss
Yeates’s safe return and speaks of his distress at her
disappearance.
Thursday 23 December 2010
Vincent Tabak and his girlfriend Tanja Morson
leave Bristol to spend Christmas with her family in Cambridge.
Police reveal they are keen to establish what happened to the
pizza Miss Yeates bought on her way home. The receipt was found in
the flat but there was no sign of the pizza or its packaging.
Meanwhile Mr and Mrs Yeates make another
tearful appeal for information about their daughter and say they
believe she has been abducted.
Friday 24 December 2010 - Christmas Eve
Detectives release CCTV footage of Miss Yeates
buying the pizza in Tesco.
Saturday 25 December 2010 – Christmas Day
9am
A couple walking their dog in Longwood Lane,
Failand discover a woman’s frozen body on the roadside verge. Mr
and Mrs Yeates say they assume it is her daughter.
Sunday 26 December 2010 – Boxing Day
Police are unable to conduct a post-mortem
examination due to the fact the remains are still frozen but are
satisfied the body is that of Miss Yeates.
Monday 27 December 2010
Mr and Mrs Yeates and Mr Reardon make an
emotional visit to the spot where their daughter’s body was
discovered.
Tuesday 28 December 2010
Tabak and Miss Morson travel from Cambridge to
Holland in order to spend New Year with his family. Police
announce that Miss Yeates died as a result of strangulation.
Thursday 30 December 2010
6am
Joanna’s landlord, Chris Jefferies, is arrested
by detectives from Avon and Somerset Police on suspicion of her
murder.
Friday 31 December 2010
Detectives are granted more time to question Mr
Jefferies, a former teacher at Clifton College. Two detectives
from Avon and Somerset police fly to Amsterdam to interview Tabak
after he claims to have seen Mr Jefferies move his car on the
night Miss Yeates was killed.
Saturday 1 January 2011
3pm
Mr and Mrs Yeates release a statement saying
they have confidence their daughter’s killer will be caught.
9pm
Chris Jefferies is released on police bail
without charge.
Monday 3 January 2011
Tabak and Miss Morson return from their trip to
Holland and temporarily move into a friend’s flat in nearby
Aberdeen Road, while the forensics team continued to search 44
Canynge Road.
Wednesday 5 January 2011
Police reveal that Miss Yeates was missing one
grey ski sock when her body was found. They appeal for the
public’s help in locating the sock.
Saturday 15 January 2011
Tabak and Miss Morson attend a dinner party
with friends at which he jokes about he investigation and tells
another guest the killer must be a “crazy detached person”.
Tuesday 18 January 2011
A reconstruction of Miss Yeates’s movements
before she disappeared is filmed and for the BBC’s Crimewatch
programme.
Thursday 20 January 2011
6am
Miss Yeates’s next-door neighbour Vincent Tabak,
a 32-year-old Dutch engineer, is arrested on suspicion of her
murder.
Friday 21 January 2011
Police are granted more time to question Tabak.
Saturday 22 January 2011
10pm
Police charge Tabak with the murder of Miss
Yeates.
Monday 24 January 2011
10am
Tabak appears before Bristol Magistrates
charged with murder. He is remanded in custody.
Friday 11 February 2011
Miss Yeates’s funeral takes place in her
hometown of Ampfield, Hants.
Thursday 5 May 2011
10am
In a hearing at the Old Bailey Tabak appears by
video link and pleads guilty to manslaughter but not guilty to
murder. A trial date is set for October 4 at Bristol Crown Court.
Monday 10 October 2011
Prosecution open their case against Vincent
Tabak at Bristol Crown Court.
Friday 29 October 2011
Vincent Tabak is found guilty of the murder of
Miss Yeates.
Vincent Tabak strangled
Joanna Yeates to gain sexual gratification
By Martin Evans - Telegraph.co.uk
October 21, 2011
Nigel Lickley QC, prosecuting,
accused the Dutch engineer of throttling Miss Yeates because it
aroused him.
Dismissing Tabak’s claims that he had grabbed
her throat in a panic after she screamed when he tried to kiss
her, Mr Lickley said the killing had been motivated by sex.
As he continued his cross-examination, Mr
Lickley said Tabak's attempt to kiss Miss Yeates showed he had sex
on his mind prior to killing her.
Mr Lickley said: “That is sexual Vincent Tabak
why won’t you admit that? Is it because there are other sexual
elements to what happened?”
Tabak replied: “There were no other sexual
elements.”
But Mr Lickley went on: “Was the holding of her
throat by you, sexual in your mind?”
Speaking in a clear voice the defendant
replied: “Definitely not.”
Mr Lickley continued: “Did you derive sexual
gratification from holding her throat. Were you sexually aroused
when you had your hand around her throat and your hand over her
mouth?”
Tabak again replied: “Definitely not.”
Referring to the fact Miss Yeates's clothing
had been pushed up above her chest area when she was found, Mr
Lickley said: "You moved her clothing Vincent Tabak. You pulled up
her top."
The defendant replied: "Not intentionally."
Mr Lickley went on: "Is that what made her
scream?" Tabak said: "No, that is not what made her scream."
Mr Lickley also suggested that rather than
being invited into Miss Yeates’s flat, Tabak had used her pet cat,
Bernard, as a pretext to get her to open her door.
The court had earlier heard that the cat would
often go into Tabak's flat next door.
The prosecutor suggested Tabak had knocked on
Miss Yeates's door with the cat, knowing her boyfriend was away
that weekend.
Tabak denied the claim and insisted Miss Yeates
had waved at him from her kitchen window as he passed before
inviting him in.
He told the court: "We were standing close to
each other, she invited me in for a drink. She made a flirty
comment. I thought she was flirtatious."
Tabak was asked why he had conducted internet
research into the definition of sexual assault in the weeks after
killing Miss Yeates.
He said: "I was worried that my pass at her
could be seen as sexual conduct."
Mr Lickley said: “This was a sexual attack by
you and part of that involved you strangling her and you wanted to
kill her.”
Tabak replied: “Definitely not.”
The court also heard from Home Office
pathologist Dr Nat Cary, who told the court he had worked on many
cases involving sexual assault.
He explained: “There are some people, perhaps a
pretty small number in the population who become sexually aroused
by asphysxia.”
But he said there was no evidence to suggest
that Miss Yeates had been subjected to sexual interference.
Asked by William Clegg QC, defending, what that
suggested, Dr Cary said: “It means that in the end of the day to
suggest this is a primarily sexual attack is largely speculative.”
The pathologist also told jurors: “Overall the
injuries could be consistent during the course of a fairly short
attack.”
Tabak admits manslaughter but denies murder.
The trial continues.
Vincent Tabak apologises to
family of Joanna Yeates
Vincent Tabak broke down in tears today and
apologised to the family of Joanna Yeates as he described the
moment he strangled her.
By Murray Wardrop - Telegraph.co.uk
October 20, 2011
The 33-year-old, who admits manslaughter but
denies murder, began giving his own version of events in a bid to
explain claims he did not intend to kill her.
He tearfully apologised to Miss Yeates's
parents as he explained how he tried to cover his tracks by
dumping her body.
He said: "I'm so sorry for doing that. I put
Joanna's parents through a week of hell. I still can't believe I
did that.
"It will haunt me for the rest of my life, no
matter what sentence I get."
As Miss Yeates' family listened to Tabak, they
looked towards him with frowns on their faces.
The Dutchman said he put his hand on Miss
Yeates's throat because he panicked and wanted to stop her
screaming.
The court has previously heard that Tabak
claims he misread his next-door neighbour's signals after she
invited him in for a drink.
He says he put his hand to his 25-year-old
victim's throat after she protested at his advances.
Defence QC William Clegg said Miss Yeates's
death was tragic misfortune.
Miss Yeates is said to have invited Tabak into
her flat after smiling at him as he walked past her kitchen
window, Mr Clegg said.
Giving evidence, Tabak said he thought Miss
Yeates wanted to kiss him, adding that he did not mean to kill
her.
When asked why he put his hand to Miss Yeates's
throat, Tabak said: "I was panicking. I wanted to stop her
screaming. I wanted to calm her down."
After strangling her for less than a minute
"she went limp, she fell to the floor", Tabak said, adding: "I
still can't understand what happened."
Tabak told the court how he briefly took Miss
Yeates's body back to his flat to put her in a bicycle cover,
adding: "I carried her with my arms. One hand was underneath her
back, the other was under her knees."
He also insisted that a text message received
by his girlfriend from his phone telling her he was bored had been
sent prior to Miss Yeates's death, not after, as the prosecution
alleged.
He said he thought he left his flat "within
minutes" after sending Tanja Morson a text message at 9.25pm
saying: 'Missing you loads. It's boring here without you. Vxx'.
"I think I sent it before I decided to go to
Asda," Tabak told the jury.
"I took my usual route past Flat 1" – Miss
Yeates's flat.
Mr Clegg said Miss Yeates and Tabak were
virtual strangers – but were both at loose ends at their flats in
Clifton.
"If Joanna Yeates had stayed for one more drink
in the Ram pub, she'd be alive today," the barrister said.
"If Vincent Tabak had left half an hour earlier
to go to Asda, as was his intention, he wouldn't be standing in
the dock now."
Mr Clegg has said he would not try to justify
Tabak's actions after her death, saying his client was "living a
lie" by attending dinner parties and attempting to carry on his
life as normal.
He said it was "frankly disgusting" that Tabak
had tried to hide the body and "did everything he could to cover
his tracks".
But he urged the jury to focus on what happened
in Miss Yeates's flat as Tabak takes to the stand this morning.
Mr Clegg said: "What he is being tried for is
whether when he killed Joanna Yeates that was planned,
premeditated and something that he intended to do, intended to
kill or cause really serious harm to her, or whether when he was
responsible for her death, when he killed her, he panicked and did
it without thinking of the consequences, without intending that
she should die, without intending that she should suffer really
serious harm.
"That's the issue you need to focus on."
The trial continues.
Vincent Tabak researched
unsolved murders after killing Joanna Yeates
Vincent Tabak researched the unsolved murders
of Melanie Hall and Anni Dewani after strangling Joanna Yeates, a
court heard today.
By Martin Evans - Telegraph.co.uk
October 19, 2011
The 33-year-old defendant also looked up
satellite imagery of the site where he dumped Miss Yeates's body.
Lyndsey Farmery, an internet use analyst who
assisted police with the investigation, took the jury through
Tabak's online activity in the days after killing 25-year-old Miss
Yeates.
Web records from work and personal laptops show
he researched the Wikipedia page for murder and maximum sentence
for manslaughter, she said.
While regularly checking the Avon and Somerset
police website and a local news site, the Dutch engineer was also
checking body decomposition rates.
Days after killing Miss Yeates at her Clifton
flat on December 17, Tabak watched a time-lapse video of a body
decomposing, Bristol Crown Court heard.
Tabak – who denies murder but admits
manslaughter – also went on Google to look up the definition of
sexual assault, find out about the pizza Miss Yeates bought, and
extensively checked rubbish collections in the area.
He was also said to have looked at an online
article entitled: "Did killer take sock as a trophy?"
Ms Farmery only spoke to confirm the images
displayed as the jury was shown dozens of internet pages said to
have been viewed by Tabak.
Yesterday, a prison chaplain told the court how
Tabak confessed to killing Miss Yeates during an emotional meeting
in jail.
Peter Brotherton, a voluntary Salvation Army
chaplain at Long Lartin prison in Worcestershire said the Dutchman
had unburdened himself on February 8 this year.
He said Tabak had requested a meeting,
informing him: “I have something to tell you that will shock you.”
Giving evidence at Bristol Crown Court, Mr
Brotherton said: “I said ‘you tell me and we will see’, or words
to that effect.
“He said ‘I am going to change my plea to
guilty’. He said it was to do with the crime he had committed.
“I said, ‘is this concerning the young lady
from Bristol?’, he said ‘yes’.”
Mr Brotherton said Tabak was upset and said he
was going to find it very difficult to tell his girlfriend, Tanja
Morson.
The chaplain told the court he then advised him
to contact his legal team and inform them of the decision and
offered to pray with him.
While Mr Brotherton accepted he had told Tabak
the conversation would be in confidence, he decided to tell his
superiors because he did not regard it as a religious confession.
But under cross-examination by William Clegg
QC, defending, Mr Brotherton accepted that Tabak had not told him
he wanted to change his plea, only that he intended to plead
guilty.
Mr Brotherton also told the court that Tabak
was depressed and distressed and had been on suicide watch on the
prison’s health care unit.
He said Tabak had been angry that he had
breached his confidence and told him he would not tell him
anything else.
Earlier as jurors were taken through DNA
evidence, Miss Yeates’s Mother Teresa wept as a picture of her
daughter’s body was shown in court.
She looked away and was comforted by her
husband David as the harrowing photograph was displayed on a
monitor.
The mortuary image showed the 25-year-old
landscape architect lying fully clothed in the fetal position with
her pink top pushed up, exposing her bra.
As Mr Yeates supported his wife, he looked over
his shoulder from the public gallery towards Tabak, 33, who was
sitting in the dock with his head in his hands.
The photograph – along with others – had been
shown to the jury on Friday but Mr and Mrs Yeates were not in
court.
The court also heard that DNA matching that of
Tabak was found on swabs taken from the breasts and nipples of
Miss Yeates.
Traces of his DNA were also found on the
waistband of the jeans she was wearing when she was found.
The hearing continues.
Vincent Tabak confessed
Joanna Yeates killing in emotional meeting with prison chaplain
A prison chaplain has told how Vincent Tabak
confessed to killing Joanna Yeates during an emotional meeting in
jail.
By Martin Evans - Telegraph.co.uk
October 18, 2011
Peter Brotherton, a voluntary
Salvation Army chaplain at Long Lartin prison in Worcestershire
said the Dutchman had unburdened himself on February 8 this year.
He said Tabak had requested a meeting,
informing him: “I have something to tell you that will shock you.”
Giving evidence at Bristol Crown Court, Mr
Brotherton said: “I said ‘you tell me and we will see’, or words
to that effect.
“He said ‘I am going to change my plea to
guilty’. He said it was to do with the crime he had committed.
“I said, ‘is this concerning the young lady
from Bristol?’, he said ‘yes’.”
Mr Brotherton said Tabak was upset and said he
was going to find it very difficult to tell his girlfriend, Tanja
Morson.
The chaplain told the court he then advised him
to contact his legal team and inform them of the decision and
offered to pray with him.
While Mr Brotherton accepted he had told Tabak
the conversation would be in confidence, he decided to tell his
superiors because he did not regard it as a religious confession.
But under cross-examination by William Clegg
QC, defending, Mr Brotherton accepted that Tabak had not told him
he wanted to change his plea, only that he intended to plead
guilty.
Mr Brotherton also told the court that Tabak
was depressed and distressed and had been on suicide watch on the
prison’s healthcare unit.
He said Tabak had been angry that he had
breached his confidence and told him he would not tell him
anything else.
Earlier as jurors were taken through DNA
evidence, Miss Yeates’s mother Teresa wept as a picture of her
daughter’s body was shown in court.
She looked away and was comforted by her
husband David as the harrowing photograph was displayed on a
monitor.
The mortuary image showed the 25-year-old
landscape architect lying fully clothed in the foetal position
with her pink top pushed up, exposing her bra.
As Mr Yeates supported his wife, he looked over
his shoulder from the public gallery towards Tabak, 33, who was
sitting in the dock with his head in his hands.
The photograph - along with others - had been
shown to the jury on Friday but Mr and Mrs Yeates were not in
court.
The court also heard that DNA matching that of
Tabak was found on swabs taken from the breasts and nipples of
Miss Yeates.
Traces of his DNA were also found on the
waistband of the jeans she was wearing when she was found.
Forensic scientist Tanya Nickson, who examined
bloodstains found on a wall next to where Miss Yeates had been
found on Christmas morning on Longwood Lane, in Failand, said the
pattern indicated smearing rather than splattering.
She said this suggested that someone had been
attempting to put the body over the wall into the quarry below.
Ms Nickson told the jury: "The presence of the
blood on the top of the wall may indicate that an attempt was made
to deposit the body over the top of the wall."
Vincent Tabak trial: Joanna
Yeates 'may have been strangled with one hand'
Joanna Yeates's killer may have used just one
hand to strangle her, the jury in the trial of Vincent Tabak heard
today.
By Martin Evans - Telegraph.co.uk
October 17, 2011
During cross-examination by
Tabak's lawyer QC William Clegg, pathologist Russell Delaney said
he could not "exclude the use of one hand".
He also said that while it is not possible to
determine the exact duration of the sequence that led to Miss
Yeates' death, it could be a matter of seconds rather than
minutes.
Miss Yeates suffered 43 injuries at the hands
of Tabak at her flat in Clifton, Bristol, on December 17, Bristol
Crown Court has heard.
Mr Clegg asked whether it would have been
impossible for Miss Yeates to scream as her neck was being
squeezed.
"That would depend on the nature of the neck
compression," Dr Delaney replied.
When Mr Clegg asked if her injuries were
consistent with being strangled with one hand, Dr Delaney replied:
"Or two, yes."
Tabak, 33, admits manslaughter but denies
murdering 25-year-old Miss Yeates.
Blood found on Miss Yeates's pink T-shirt may
have been deposited after her death, Dr Delaney added.
Dr Delaney took to the witness box for a second
day as bereaved boyfriend Greg Reardon prepared to give evidence.
Mr Reardon and Rebecca Scott, a close friend of
the couple, will be asked about their last contact with Miss
Yeates.
On the night of her death, she is said to have
told a colleague she was dreading being without Mr Reardon for the
weekend while he visited family in Sheffield.
Miss Yeates's body was found "in a fetal-type
position" on Christmas Day by dog walker Daniel Birch.
Mr Birch and his wife, Rebecca, spotted the
pocket of her denim jeans exposed through the snow as they walked
their chocolate Labrador Roxy along Longwood Lane, Failand,
Somerset.
Today marks the beginning of the second week of
the trial.
Last week, Tabak held his head in his hands and
covered his eyes as images of Miss Yeates' dead body were shown to
the jury at Bristol Crown Court.
At one point the 33-year-old Dutch engineer,
who was Miss Yeates’s next-door neighbour, removed his spectacles
and wiped tears from his face as the photographs appeared on a
17-inch monitor in front of the dock.
The graphic images showed Miss Yeates lying in
a fetal position wearing blue jeans and a pink T-shirt, which had
been pushed up exposing her bra.
Laid on her side, her right arm was bent around
her head while her left was resting straight across her body.
Tabak appeared visibly distressed as a close-up
image of her face, with blood stained short blonde hair was shown
to the court.
Miss Yeates’s eyes were closed and one of her
earring studs was still in place.
A picture of her right foot with the sock
removed was also shown.
She had been wearing a chunky white watch with
a silver necklace and pendant.
Abrasions and bruises could be clearly seen on
her neck and face and were among 43 separate injuries found during
post-mortem examinations.
The images were shown as Home Office
pathologist Dr Russell Delaney explained to the jury details of
his examination of her body.
Dr Delaney said the body had been frozen rigid
when it was recovered and he was initially unable to conduct a
full post-mortem until it had fully thawed out.
He explained that he was able to ascertain that
the vast majority of the injuries had been sustained while Miss
Yeates was alive.
Dr Delaney said: "Bruising only occurs when the
heart is beating – so the injuries occurred during life."
Miss Yeates’s snow-covered body was discovered
in a remote country lane by a couple walking their dog on
Christmas morning last year.
In a written statement read to the court,
Daniel Birch, described how he and his wife had made the gruesome
discovery as they were out with their chocolate Labrador, Roxy.
Mr Birch explained he had seen a lump in the
snow piled up on the verge of Longwood Lane and noticed a piece of
denim poking through.
He said: “I did not think about it straight
away and carried on walking. After about 10 paces my mind was
saying, ‘that was a body’, to me.
“I handed the dog to my wife, I remember saying
to Rebecca, ‘that was a body back there’, and walked back to the
lump in the snow.
“I could see the form of a human body covered
in snow. It was lying on its side, facing the wall, parallel to
the road.”
He added: “Although the body was almost covered
in snow there was a small section with not covered. I could see
what appeared to be a rear jeans pocket.”
The prosecution claim Tabak strangled Miss
Yeates on the evening of December 17 before dumping her body in
Longwood Lane and covering her in leaves.
Snow that fell that night also resulted in her
body being further concealed.
The court heard that Tabak searched the
internet in the aftermath of Yeates' death for information about
decomposition of bodies. He also used the internet to look up the
differences in sentencing for murder and manslaughter.
Tabak has admitted manslaughter but denies
murder. The trial continues.
Joanna Yeates trial: snow
covered body found by dog walker
Photographs of the snow-covered body of Joanna
Yeates have been shown to the jury as a dog walker described the
moment he found her remains.
By Martin Evans - Telegraph.co.uk
October 14, 2011
In a written statement read out
to Bristol Crown Court, Daniel Birch said he had his wife Rebecca
had been walking their chocolate Labrador, Roxy, on Christmas
morning when they made the gruesome discovery.
Mr Birch said he had seen a lump in the snow
piled up on the verge of Longwood Lane and noticed a piece of
denim poking through.
Miss Yeates had been missing for eight days
when her body was found.
Describing the events, Mr Birch said: “I saw a
lump in the snow on the left hand verge and I thought I saw what
appeared to be a denim jeans pocket.
“I did not think about it straight away and
carried on walking. After about 10 paces my mind was saying, ‘that
was a body’, to me.
“I handed the dog to my wife Rebecca, I
remember saying to Rebecca, ‘that was a body back there’, and
walked back to the lump in the snow.
“I could see the form of a human body covered
in snow. It was lying on its side, facing the wall, parallel to
the road.”
He added: “Although the body was almost covered
in snow there was a small section with not covered. I could see
what appeared to be a rear jeans pocket.
“Although also riding up above this the top
edge of what appeared to be white coloured knickers and that made
me think it was a female.”
The jury was shown images of the snow-covered
body as forensic officer, Martin Faithfull, described the
operation to retrieve her body.
At one point as the images were shown on a
screen, Tabak, who is accused of murdering the 25-year-old
landscape architect, appeared to dab his eyes and placed his head
in his hands.
Mr Faithfull told the court how the forensic
team had made efforts to prevent Miss Yeates frozen body from
thawing out, in order to avoid losing any potentially significant
evidence.
Miss Yeates suffered 43 injuries after being
strangled by Tabak at her Clifton flat on December 17, the court
has heard.
He has admitted manslaughter but denies murder.
The trial continues.
Pathologist to give evidence
at Joanna Yeates murder trial
The pathologist who recorded 43 injuries on
Joanna Yeates's body will give evidence at her murder trial today.
By Martin Evans - Telegraph.co.uk
October 14, 2011
Dr Russell Delaney is said to
have found 12 wounds to her head and neck, three to her trunk and
12 to her right arm.
Jurors are also due to hear evidence from
Daniel Birch, the dog walker who discovered her frozen corpse on
Christmas Day.
Mr Birch made the grim discovery during an
early-morning wander in Failand, near Bristol.
Yesterday Bristol Crown Court heard how Joanna
Yeates's killer Vincent Tabak drank champagne at a friend’s
birthday party the night after he strangled the 25 year-old.
Tabak, 33, appeared his usual self after the
killing and, following another social gathering, even offered to
see home safely a female friend who was worried about what had
happened to Miss Yeates, the court was told.
The night after the killing, Tabak was
described as “bored” and “disinterested” at the party as he stared
across the room and drank a glass of champagne.
The previous evening, Miss Yeates told her
friends that she was dreading being home alone at her Bristol flat
for the first time hours before her neighbour killed her, the
court heard.
During an after-work drink, the landscape
architect said she was not looking forward to the weekend because
her boyfriend, Greg Reardon, with whom she lived, was visiting his
family in Sheffield.
Elisabeth Chandler, the office manager at BDP,
the firm where Miss Yeates and Mr Reardon worked, told Bristol
Crown Court in a written statement: “Jo told me that she was
dreading the weekend because it was the first time she was going
to be left on her own. Her partner Greg, who I know, was going
away.”
Despite her concerns, other colleagues said she
was her usual “jovial” self on the night she was killed.
Darragh Bellew, who also works as a landscape
architect at BDP and had been in the Bristol Ram pub on December
17 last year, said Miss Yeates said she was planning to spend the
weekend baking bread and cakes.
“We had a joke and said she was going to bring
them into the office on Monday morning,” he told the jury.
The prosecution claims that, within an hour of
leaving the pub at around 8pm, Miss Yeates had been murdered by
Tabak. Her snow-covered body was found around three miles away by
dog walkers on Christmas morning.
The night after she was killed, Linda Marland
said she spoke to Tabak as her daughter Elizabeth celebrated her
24th birthday at a bar in Bristol. Mrs Marland’s daughter had
stayed in Tabak’s spare room while he was working in Los Angeles
in the autumn, she said.
She told the court: “Vincent sounded tired and
disinterested. He was being short with his answers, not
elaborating.
“He only looked at me once. The rest of the
time he was staring up the room. I got the impression Vincent was
bored with my conversation. He was drinking a glass of champagne.”
The jury heard from other friends of Tabak, who
described his “happy and relaxed” demeanour in the weeks after the
killing. Sarah Maddock, a solicitor, who attended a dinner party
with Tabak and his girlfriend, Tanja Morson, said the group had
discussed the case and had agreed it was very mysterious.
The court heard that one of the female guests
had been worried about walking home alone that night because of
what had happened to Miss Yeates, and Tabak had offered to see her
home safely.
In her statement, Ms Maddock said Tabak had not
looked uncomfortable during their discussion of the killing and he
had said: “Someone would have to be a totally detached, crazy
person to be able to act normally after doing something like
that.”
Ms Maddock said Tabak “was his usual quiet,
calm self” during the evening.
Andrew Lillie, the host of the dinner party,
told the jury that Tabak had made jokes about the investigation,
claiming police who searched his flat had looked in a drawer for
Miss Yeates’s body.
Jo Yeates murder suspect
arrested 'after sobbing tip-off from anonymous caller distraught
by parents' TV appeal'
Daily Mail.co.uk
January 22, 2011
The Dutch architect arrested on suspicion of
the murder of Joanna Yeates was held by police after an anonymous
tip-off, it has been claimed.
Vincent Tabak, 32, was taken into custody this
week after Avon and Somerset Police received an emotional
phonecall from a woman moved by the television appeal by Ms Yeates’
parents.
As officers were given an extra 30 hours to
quiz the Dutchman, it was suggested police had spoken to his
girlfriend Tanja Morson, though detectives have refused to confirm
if she implicated her boyfriend.
Mr Tabak had lived with 34-year-old Ms Morson
in the flat next door to Miss Yeates in the Clifton area of
Bristol, though conflicting reports yesterday suggested the couple
may have recently split.
The vital call to Crimewatch that preceded Mr
Tabak's arrest reportedly came after Ms Yeates' parents David and
Teresa recorded an appeal for the BBC1 show, according to The Sun.
The bereaved couple said: 'If you know
something and do not come forward you are consciously hampering
the apprehension of Jo's killer and the perpetrator is still free.
'You will also be prolonging the torment of
Jo's family and friends.'
Yesterday, as detectives were granted extra
time to question Mr Tabak, Miss Morson turned up for work as usual
at Dyson, in Malmesbury, Wiltshire, where she is a financial
analyst. A colleague confirmed she was there, but was not taking
calls.
Her father yesterday insisted that it was
‘absurd’ to suggest that Miss Morson and Tabak were no longer an
item.
But on the day Tabak was arrested he had been
rather less sure about the status of his daughter’s relationship
with the suspect, saying: ‘I do not know if he is her boyfriend or
not. He’s a boy, she’s a girl and they are friendly with each
other.’
Photos on Facebook show the couple had a fun
and loving relationship. In one they pose in fancy dress at a
summer festival and in another they are seen at a 10km run.
Meanwhile, more evidence of a disturbance on
December 17 emerged. A resident living in the building directly
behind 44 Canynge Road has told police he heard a woman screaming
‘Help me’ on the night Miss Yeates went missing.
He heard the cries from his bedroom, which
looks on to the ground-floor flats which are now screened with
tarpaulin while forensic experts continue to examine them.
The neighbour reported the incident to police
before Christmas, when Miss Yeates was still being treated as a
missing person. He was interviewed again after a murder inquiry
began.
He said: ‘I was in my bedroom with the blind
down when I heard someone scream “Help me” in a loud, high-pitched
voice.’
The description of the cry follows reports from
a woman at a party in a house opposite of two loud screams at
around 9pm on December 17, shortly after Miss Yeates is believed
to have arrived home.
A pedestrian passing Canynge Road also heard
screams.
Yesterday it was also reported that DNA traces
were found underneath Miss Yeates’s clothing, suggesting that she
may have been sexually assaulted. Samples were found on the
25-year-old’s midriff and jeans.
It was already known that police had obtained
DNA from her body – but it was not known how many traces or where
they were found.
All three are thought to have been from the
killer’s saliva, but have yielded only partial results. Sources
said that they should be enough to rule out suspects over her
murder – but probably not enough to conclusively prove anyone’s
guilt.
Until now, police have said there was no direct
sign of Jo being sexually attacked. But they had stressed it could
have been the motive.
A police source said: ‘The fact that DNA
samples have been found on her bare body could well mean whoever
murdered Jo tried to sexually assault her beforehand.’
Yesterday forensic officers continued their
search of a cordoned-off property on Aberdeen Road, Bristol, where
Tabak was arrested on Thursday morning. The experts were carrying
long ladders, suggesting they may have been checking the loft for
clues.
Police have been given an extra 30 hours to
question Tabak, giving them until late tonight either to charge or
release him on bail.
A force spokesman said yesterday: 'Police have
this morning been granted extra time to question a 32-year-old man
arrested yesterday on suspicion of the murder of Jo Yeates.'
Man next door quizzed over Jo
Yeates murder: Police hold architect, 32, as they start new search
By Luke Salkeld, Ryan Kisiel, Christian Gysin,
Michael Seamark and Andrew Levy - DailyMail.co.uk
January 21, 2011
An architect who lived in the flat next to
Joanna Yeates has been arrested on suspicion of her murder.
Vincent Tabak, 32, was seized by police in a
pre-dawn raid at a friend’s house in Clifton, Bristol, yesterday.
This morning police were granted more time to question him.
Detectives had spoken to the Dutch national in
the very early stages of their inquiry but ruled him out as a
suspect.
Detectives were today granted a further 12
hours to question him and will then have to apply to magistrates
for a further extension.
A force spokesman said: 'Police have this
morning been granted extra time to question a 32-year-old man
arrested yesterday on suspicion of the murder of Jo Yeates.'
The Daily Mail has been told that he left
Britain for Holland to spend Christmas with his family two days
after the landscape architect was last seen alive.
Police believe Miss Yeates, 25, arrived at her
flat on Friday December 17 after walking home from a pub where she
had been drinking with colleagues. Her body was found near a golf
course on Christmas Day.
Tabak rented Flat 2 at 44 Canynge Road with his
girlfriend, directly adjacent to Miss Yeates’s Flat 1.
Yesterday a team of officers closed off Canynge
Road and put up scaffolding and 12ft-high tarpaulin barriers
around the two ground floor flats.
These were once connected via a door that was
bricked up when the building was converted to flats.
Forensic experts also began a fresh search of a
nearby flat which is home to one of Tabak’s friends.
Officers cordoned off a townhouse on Aberdeen
Road, around a mile away, just after midday.
Last night they loaded three wheelie bins and a
mountain bike from the house into an unmarked white transit van.
Another police vehicle marked ‘Scientific
Investigations’ had earlier been parked outside the address, which
is usually occupied by 31-year-old Emily Williams, who is
currently in South America.
It is believed she was letting Tabak stay while
the police activity at Canynge Road made his flat uninhabitable.
Her street is in Redland, an affluent Bristol
area popular with students and professionals, which borders
Clifton.
Neighbours said Tabak left Britain on December
19 and returned only recently.
Yesterday Avon and Somerset Constabulary
refused to confirm whether he was the 32-year-old man they had
arrested, despite the obvious police presence at his home and
workplace.
Calls to his office at the architectural firm
Buro Happold Ltd in Bath were also directed to the force
investigating Miss Yeates’s murder.
Yesterday her father, who this week made an
emotional appeal to anyone who may have been hiding her killer to
come forward, said he was pleased the investigation had made
progress.
With his wife Teresa at his side at their home
in Ampfield, Hampshire, and holding Miss Yeates’s cat Bernard, he
said: ‘Both Teresa and I are very pleased an arrest has been made
and the investigation is moving forward.
‘Police informed us at 6am this morning that
someone had been arrested on suspicion of Jo’s murder, and their
age.
‘They told us before they made the announcement
about the arrest and other than that we do not know much more.
‘We are optimistic about the progress, but we
have not been told the name of the person who has been arrested.’
He later added: ‘I have never heard of Vincent
Tabak, nor had Jo ever mentioned him. I have never met anyone who
lives in flat two of Jo’s block.’
It is not known whether Tabak knew Miss Yeates
and Mr Reardon before they became such close neighbours last year.
He had moved to Britain in 2007 to work in Bath
and lived in the city before moving to the affluent area of
Clifton in 2009 to set up home with his girlfriend Tanja Morson, a
treasury analyst at Dyson in Malmesbury, Wiltshire.
Miss Morson is a fitness fan. She has run for
the Bristol-based Westbury Harriers club and both she and Tabak
have taken part in several ten-kilometre running events. Tabak had
previously refused to speak to reporters about the murder.
Miss Yeates had been strangled and her body
dumped on the grass verge of a country lane in Failand, North
Somerset, three miles from where she lived.
Her body was clothed apart from a sock which
was missing, while her phone, purse, keys, boots and coat were all
found back at her £200,000 flat.
Police also found two bottles of cider, and the
receipt for a Tesco pizza, which tests showed was not eaten by
Miss Yeates, and has never been found.
Detectives have 24 hours to hold a suspect
initially, but can apply for several extensions, as they did with
Miss Yeates’s landlord Chris Jefferies, the 65-year-old who was
released on bail.
This week it emerged that detectives hunting
the murderer had enlisted the help of the forensic laboratory
which helped catch Rachel Nickell’s killer. Scientists were
understood to be examining a ‘partial’ DNA sample found on Miss
Yeates’s strangled body.
And last week her final text message was
revealed.
She invited a male friend out for a drink on
the night she was murdered.
But he was busy at a Christmas party and did
not reply for an hour - by which time she was not answering.
After the Avon and Somerset Constabulary
announced yesterday’s arrest, Detective Chief Inspector Phil Jones
said: ‘I would like to thank the public for their continued
support for the investigation and the information they have
provided to us.
‘I would also like to pay tribute to Jo’s
family and to Greg who continue to be unfailing in their support
to me and my team at what is an incredibly difficult and painful
time for them.’
Dutchman called 'beanpole' with a love of
sailing
Relaxing on a sailing holiday, architect
Vincent Tabak looks like any adventurous young man. Enjoying the
outdoor life, he appears carefree and happy.
But yesterday this lanky and talented Dutchman
was at the centre of the Joanna Yeates mystery after he was
arrested on suspicion of her murder.
To his former neighbours in Bath, Somerset,
32-year-old Mr Tabak – who is 6ft 4in tall – was known as a
‘mild-mannered beanpole’.
Indeed, on the street where the sailing
enthusiast lived until 18 months ago, news of yesterday morning’s
arrest was met with astonishment.
One resident said: ‘I cannot believe he has
been caught up in this murder inquiry.
‘He was a very nice and considerate young man.
We were sad when he left. He was very personable and polite.’
Mr Tabak moved into the one-bedroom flat
three-and-a-half years ago when he started work at Bath-based
engineering consultancy, Buro Happold.
The neighbour, who didn’t wish to be named,
said the ‘quiet and helpful’ man would often invite friends and
family from Holland to his rented home in fashionable Walcot
Parade.
In 2009, Mr Tabak moved into Flat 2 at 44
Canynge Road with his girlfriend, lawyer’s daughter Tanja Morson,
34.
Jo Yeates lived at No 4 with her boyfriend,
Greg Reardon.
‘She (Miss Morson) was an occasional visitor
and he told me that he wanted a bigger place they could share in
Bristol,’ said the former Bath neighbour.
The couple’s sailing holiday took place several
years ago and Mr Tabak uploaded his photos onto the internet to
share with friends.
He was born in February 1978 in Veghel, a town
with a population approaching 40,000 north of Eindhoven, to
parents Sonja and Gerald and he has several sisters and a brother.
Fluent in Dutch, English and German, after
school in 1996 he began studying at Eindhoven University of
Technology, where he gained a degree in architecture, building and
planning.
Between 1999 and 2003 Mr Tabak worked as a
research assistant and part-time teaching assistant at the
university before embarking on a PhD on ‘User Simulation of Space
Utilisation’ – a research project looking at developing a system
exploring links between buildings and the movement of humans
within offices.
In his thesis the Dutchman had warm words of
praise for his partner, saying: ‘I want to thank my girlfriend
Tanja Morson for her support in the last difficult month of my
PhD. I am very happy that she entered my life.’
Mr Tabak – who on a CV lists his interests as
hiking and travelling in south and north America and Asia,
photography and sailing – moved to Britain in 2007 and started
working at global consulting engineers Buro Happold that September
as a ‘people flow consultant’.
Projects the company has been involved in
include the recent re-design of the Royal Shakespeare Theatre at
Stratford and the £220million restoration of London’s Savoy hotel.
Last night the company was referring all
inquiries about Mr Tabak – whose unusual Facebook photograph is
his elongated shadow cast on grass – to Avon and Somerset Police.
Mr Tabak’s girlfriend, Miss Morson, works as a
treasury analyst for Dyson in Malmesbury, Wiltshire.
Her father, Geoffrey, declined to discuss
developments yesterday at the £1million detached home in one of
the most exclusive roads in Cambridge.
The Canadian citizen, who has worked in the
U.S. as a lawyer, said: ‘I don’t know anything. I don’t know the
young woman who was reported to be murdered, although I am very
sorry about what happened to her.
‘Tanja’s mother, Elisabeth, expressed concern
at his welfare, saying: ‘We saw what happened to the landlord and
don’t want to see that happen to our lovely Vincent.’