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John Darwin was driven by the pursuit of cash.
Among his plans were snail breeding and making garden gnomes, Teesside Crown Court heard.
The canoeist ran market stalls, wrote computer games, and also dabbled on the Stock Market. The jury was told that the couple amassed a property portfolio of around a dozen homes across the Durham area. They were told that he bought some houses on a credit card.
His son, Anthony Darwin, told the court: “I remember hearing that he was buying a property on his credit card. I believe at the time the properties were rather cheap.”
He was a teacher who retrained to become a financial advisor for Barclays Bank before changing career again and becoming a prison officer at Holme House Prison, Stockton, Teesside.
The canoeist's other son, Mark Darwin, agreed with David Waters, QC, for the defence, that “the appearance of wealth is important to your father”.
The court heard that he enjoyed driving his Range Rover with its personalised number plate. In a statement to police, Mark called the number plate “cherished”. He told the court: “It was something he had in front of his car that he liked having there.”
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The sentence is really appalling. Sure they scam the insurance life, but when it's the contrary, the punishment is different. When insurance companies refuse to indemnify poeple intentionnaly it's not a so big deal.
Claire, Hertford, U.K
The judge said that the crime was the one committed against their children, as much as it is appalling I don't think that is a crime!!.. Am I the only one that thinks 6 years is crazy, for what amounts to the sake of the cost of a house (£250,000)?
kirk, Rotherham, UK
Is Anne Darwin being punished for causing her sons' grief ?
Richard Roe, London,
Are we now sentencing people for making their sons feel 'uncherished'? If so, I have a few more people to name whom the courts should consider.
Edwin, Bucharest,
These two tried what may otherwise have been an entertaining movie. ie 'Good on you ..you have
beaten the system'..
The two sons losing a father is where reality steps.
Truth is stranger than fiction.
leon, Melbourne,
I suspect John Darwin's sons feel very un-cherished - that an expensive number-plate was more valuable to him than his own children.
So, no big deal - really??
Aine, Leicester, UK
In the good old days all personalised numberplates were called 'cherished numberplates'.
That's why his son called it cherished. No big deal.
Annie , Bath, UK