British woman who killed her parents and lived with their bodies is
sentenced to life
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[October 12, 2024]
By PAN PYLAS
LONDON (AP) — A British woman who murdered her parents and then lived
for four years alongside their bodies in makeshift tombs at the family
home was sentenced Friday to life imprisonment and told she won't be
eligible for parole for 36 years.
Virginia McCullough, who spent her parents' money and went to great
lengths to cover her tracks with family and friends through a web of
lies, had pleaded guilty to murdering her parents in June 2019 at a
previous hearing at Chelmsford Crown Court in southeast England.
Judge Jeremy Johnson said at the sentencing hearing that McCullough's
actions represented a “gross violation of the trust that should exist
between parents and their children.”
When Essex Police raided her house in the village of Great Baddow last
September, McCullough confessed that her parents’ bodies were in the
house and that she had killed them.
McCullough, 36, admitted to poisoning her father John McCullough, 70,
with prescription medication that she crushed and put into his alcoholic
drinks and that a day later she beat her 71-year-old mother Lois
McCullough with a hammer and fatally stabbed her.
“I did know that this would kind of come eventually,” she said while
handcuffed in body-worn footage captured by police that was released
Friday. “It’s proper that I serve my punishment.”
After McCullough was arrested on suspicion of double murder she told an
officer: “Cheer up, at least you’ve caught the bad guy,” adding that “I
know I don’t seem 100% evil.”
Further footage from a body camera shows McCullough at the police
station telling officers where they can find the hammer and kitchen
knife she used to kill her mother.
In the words of the prosecution, McCullough kept her father in a
“homemade mausoleum” in his ground floor bedroom and study, in a
structure that was “composed with masonry blocks stacked together.” She
had also wrapped the body of her mother in a sleeping bag in a wardrobe
on the top floor of the property.
In the years between the murders and her arrest, McCullough ran up large
debts on credit cards in her parents’ names and continued to spend their
pensions. The court heard she cancelled family arrangements and
frequently told doctors and relatives her parents were unwell, or away
on lengthy trips.
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This undated handout photo issued by Essex Police shows Virginia
McCullough who is to be sentenced on Friday Oct. 11, 2024 at
Chelmsford Crown Court after she murdered her parents then lived
alongside their bodies for four years while lying about their
whereabouts. (Essex Police via AP)
Statements from three unnamed siblings of the defendant were read in
court by prosecutor Lisa Wilding. One said that “our parents were
completely blameless victims” while another said, "Virginia always said
mum and dad were fine and made up lie after lie about their daily
activities."
Concerns for her parents' welfare were raised in September 2023 by a
doctor, and Essex County Council’s safeguarding team referred the
concerns to police.
Judge Johnson said McCullough maintained an “elaborate, extensive and
enduring web of deceit” over months and years and that he was sure there
was a “substantial degree of both pre-meditation and planning," given
that she had accumulated a large amount of prescription drugs and had
bought a knife and implements to crush and separate tablets.
Essex Police said documents found at the address built a picture of a
woman “trying desperately” to keep her parents from discovering the
parlous state of her finances while giving “false assurances” about her
employment and future prospects.
“She is an intelligent manipulator who chose to kill her parents
callously, without a thought for them or those who continue to suffer as
a result of their loss," said Detective Superintendent Rob Kirby. “The
details of this case shock and horrify even the most experienced of
murder detectives, let alone any right-thinking member of the public.”
Lawyer Christine Agnew, mitigating for McCullough, told the court that
the defendant understands that she has damaged her siblings to such an
extent that they are “unlikely to recover” and that she has said "I’m a
happier person in prison than I was outside."
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