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Axe attacker jailed for 13 years | Axe attacker jailed for 13 years |
(31 minutes later) | |
A man who tracked down his ex-wife and attacked her with an axe years after they split up has been jailed for 13 years. | A man who tracked down his ex-wife and attacked her with an axe years after they split up has been jailed for 13 years. |
Roland Cook, 59, severed Barbara Graham's spine when he struck her with an axe as she walked home from her job in an Edinburgh supermarket in June. | Roland Cook, 59, severed Barbara Graham's spine when he struck her with an axe as she walked home from her job in an Edinburgh supermarket in June. |
The 55-year-old mother-of-three's spine was cut in two and she will be in a wheelchair for the rest of her life. | |
Judge Lord Hodge said: "The attack was deliberate, savage and murderous." | Judge Lord Hodge said: "The attack was deliberate, savage and murderous." |
Cook, who was sentenced at the High Court in Edinburgh, admitted attempted murder. | |
Although later able to identify her attacker, Ms Graham did not know at the time that it was her ex-husband. | Although later able to identify her attacker, Ms Graham did not know at the time that it was her ex-husband. |
Telephone call | Telephone call |
The couple had met in 1978 and married a year later. | The couple had met in 1978 and married a year later. |
They moved to Livingston, West Lothian, in 1983 but parted four years later. | They moved to Livingston, West Lothian, in 1983 but parted four years later. |
There was a brief reconciliation in 1990 when they lived in England, but the couple split that year and Ms Graham returned to Scotland with her children. | There was a brief reconciliation in 1990 when they lived in England, but the couple split that year and Ms Graham returned to Scotland with her children. |
The only contact since then had been one telephone call, and they were divorced in 1995. | The only contact since then had been one telephone call, and they were divorced in 1995. |
Before the murder bid Cook had driven from England in a van with blacked out windows, so he could keep watch on his former wife without being seen. | |
The court heard that after the attack he spent time in the State Hospital in Carstairs. He was found to be sane and fit to plead, although suffering from a personality disorder. | |
Advocate depute Ashley Edwards, prosecuting, told how Cook had borne a grudge after his then wife accused him of assaulting her 20 years earlier. | |
He told police the allegation had "ruined his life". | |
Barbara Graham felt something sinking into her back and immediately had difficulty breathing Ashley EdwardsAdvocate depute | |
In 2006 he drove to Edinburgh, seeking out Ms Graham and their children, but he was unsuccessful and returned to England. | |
He returned in June this year, Miss Edwards said. | |
"He knew the addresses of Barbara Cook and his children by this stage, having carried out an investigation using the telephone directory and the electoral roll," she said. | |
"He slept in the van, parking it in various streets close to his ex-wife's home and he used the facilities at Waverley Station and elsewhere to wash." | |
On 19 June, Cook spotted Ms Graham as she headed for work and attacked her from behind on her return journey. | |
"He put the axe round her neck and used this to pull her to the ground," Miss Edwards said. | |
"He then struck her repeatedly on the head and body with the axe. | |
"Barbara Graham felt something sinking into her back and immediately had difficulty breathing." | |
'Covert surveillance' | |
Two hours later Cook walked into a police station and confessed. | |
Solicitor advocate Simon Collins, defending, said when Cook made earlier trips to Scotland he was not seeking to harm his wife, he merely wanted to see his children. | |
Mr Collins said that by the time of the attack, Cook had run out of money and was in despair because he had no means of continuing to stay in Edinburgh. | |
Lord Hodge told Cook: "You chose to return to Edinburgh to track down your former wife having prepared your van to allow you to carry out covert surveillance. | |
"When the opportunity arose you subjected her to a savage attack with an axe. | |
"This has had a devastating effect on her, severing her spine and leaving her paralysed." |
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