Abusive husband murdered 'very special' wife in 'final act of control'

A controlling husband who went on the run after he murdered his wife in “a final act of control” has been jailed.
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Mark Barrott, 55, hit his wife Eileen in the head with a hammer and then strangled her, at their home in Whinmoor, Leeds, after subjecting her to years of abuse.

The father-of-two fled to Scotland and his son Joel found her body in the living room on Sunday, August 15 in 2021.

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The killer was tracked down by police and arrested at Pluscarden Abbey, near the town of Elgin, on August 19.

Eileen Barrott was murdered at home by her controlling husband in August 2021Eileen Barrott was murdered at home by her controlling husband in August 2021
Eileen Barrott was murdered at home by her controlling husband in August 2021

Barrott was sentenced to life in prison, with a minimum term of 21 years, at Bradford Crown Court today, after he was found guilty of murder at a nine-day trial. But he refused to attend court for the sentencing.

Judge Andrew Hatton said there was a “long history” of domestic abuse and controlling behaviour, as Barrott regularly followed his wife, hid a tracking device in her handbag and turned up unannounced when she was socialising with friends or at work.

Ms Barrott, a 50-year-old nurse who was described as “a very special and talented woman”, had been with her husband for almost 30 years.

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The court heard she was found dead the days after she had told her husband that she was leaving him.

Mark Barrott, 55, hit his wife Eileen in the head with a hammer and then strangled her, at their home in Whinmoor, Leeds, after subjecting her to years of abuse.Mark Barrott, 55, hit his wife Eileen in the head with a hammer and then strangled her, at their home in Whinmoor, Leeds, after subjecting her to years of abuse.
Mark Barrott, 55, hit his wife Eileen in the head with a hammer and then strangled her, at their home in Whinmoor, Leeds, after subjecting her to years of abuse.
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“This time you knew there were no more final chances, you knew you had exhausted them all,” said the judge.

“Your controlling and manipulation had come to an end and you killed her in a final act of control over her.”

The judge accepted Barrott suffered with severe mental health issues, including depression and obsessive-compulsive disorder, but said his attempt to use the diminished responsibility defence had been dismissed.

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Joel Barrott, 21, told the court he had been suffering with “debilitating” mental health problems since he found his mother’s body.

“My mother was a very special and talented woman. She was a brilliant nurse and an even better mother,” he said.

“She often gave me advice around healthcare, my future and how to be a better person. She told me right from wrong and at any point when I was struggling, she was there for me, to show me and guide me to be the man I am today.

“However, on August 15 this was all snatched away from me, by the man that I once called my dad.”

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He added: “The worst pain that you have given me is that the very last memory I have of my mum is of me finding her dead and lifeless on the sofa.”

Carita Barrott, 23, told the court she lost both of her parents on the night of the murder and she was “completley devestated”.

She said: “My life was completely thrown upside down and changed so suddenly. In a flash, it changed my whole outlook on the world and shattered any hope I have left for life – any zest for life.

“I felt completely hollow and was plunged into a depression, walking around like a soulless, hollow, empty shell that no longer belonged in this world, without the biggest inspiration in my life.”

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She added: “The bittersweet side was that after 23 years of my life, of abuse and control, and 27 of my mum’s, I was now free, as well as my brother and my mum. No longer in pain, wherever she is.”

She also said her dad had remained “emotionless” throughout the trial and asked him: “Do you even care?”

The judge told the court that Barrot had given several accounts of what happened on the day of the murder, but they are all “demonstrably false”.

In one version, Barrott claimed an argument broke out while he was fixing the door and he “instinctively” hit his with with a hammer after she pushed his head into the door.

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Barrott said she “rushed” at him and he thought she “had a demon inside her", so he threw the hammer at her and they began fighting.

But the judge dismissed that account as “nonsense” and said he had clearly carried out a “gratuitous attack” on his “defenceless wife”.