070804
100-year-old man spared jail after killing wife
Needless to say this is a tragic
case BUT look How the media plays it....pro-euthanasia all the way
A 100-year-old man was spared prison today
after slitting his wife's throat in what the judge
said appeared to be an "act of love".
Bernard Heginbotham, of Preesall, near Blackpool, Lancashire,
pleaded guilty to the manslaughter of his wife Ida, 87, with whom he had
enjoyed 67 years of "joyous" marriage.
Retired butcher Heginbotham sobbed in the dock of Preston Crown
Court as Mr Justice Leveson spoke of the devoted husband who had cared
for his sick wife in the final years of her life.
Mrs Heginbotham was found by care home
staff with a single knife wound to the throat after a visit from her
husband on April 1 this year.
Prosecutor Hilary Banks said the couple had had 67 years of happy
marriage together and raised six children but Ida had become dependent
on her husband after she had been hurt in several falls.
Her condition deteriorated and she needed specialist care and was
moved between numerous care homes. Throughout this time Heginbotham had
visited her daily.
The court heard he had become very distressed and tearful after a
telephone call from his son Neville in which he learnt his wife was to
be moved to a respite home some distance away.
Ms Banks said: "He admitted that he went to the home with a weapon
and injured his wife which resulted in her death.
"He didn't want his wife to be moved again and didn't think she
was going to receive the care he wanted her to have."
Police arrested Heginbotham that day at his home, where he was
found to have attempted suicide.
When arrested by officers on the charge of suspicion of murder, he
said: "My poor Ida."
He later told interviewing officers he thought he must have gone
berserk.
Passing a 12-month community rehabilitation order on Heginbotham,
Mr Justice Leveson said: "Bernard Heginbotham, the killing of your wife,
to whom you had been married joyously for some 67 years, followed by
your attempt to take your own life, was an act of desperation carried
out in an effort to end her suffering while you were under intolerable
pressure.
"It was in truth an act of love and I have no doubt you suffered a
medical disorder at the time and the responsibility which you bear is
substantially reduced.
"It was, as you will well know, a terrible thing to do but I
accept entirely the circumstances in which you did it and your feelings
of guilt and remorse have been truly overwhelming."