
Man who murdered Anita Rose while she was walking her dog on a Suffolk footpath jailed
Roy Barclay, 56, of no fixed address, attacked 57-year-old Anita Rose with "numerous kicks, stamps and blows" in Brantham, Suffolk, on July 24 last year.
Ms Rose, a mother of six, had left her house to walk her springer spaniel Bruce, and was later found unconscious and with serious head injuries by a passing cyclist at about 6.25am.
She died four days later at Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge.
Injuries similar to 'high speed car crashes,' says prosecutor
Barclay denied murdering Ms Rose, but was found guilty by a jury at Ipswich Crown Court on 9 July after around two-and-a-half hours of deliberation.
Christopher Paxton KC, prosecuting, told the court during the trial that Barclay "lived mostly in the countryside, wandering the fields and lanes, sleeping in various makeshift camps".
"He lived off-grid because for two years, Roy Barclay had been unlawfully at large," the prosecutor added.
"He had been on the run trying to avoid the police and authorities to try and avoid being recalled back to prison."
In his closing remarks on 2 July, Mr Paxton said jurors had heard evidence that the injuries to Ms Rose's brain were similar to those from "high-speed car crashes".
He added: "Her world collided with Roy Barclay's world, a desperate man on the run from police for two years, having been in prison for beating Leslie Gunfield's face to a pulp.
"Roy Barclay took Anita Rose's life in an explosion of violence. Blow after blow, stamp after stamp, and kick after kick."
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Barclay previously jailed for attack on 82-year-old
Jurors were told that Barclay had previously pleaded guilty, over a separate incident in 2015, to grievous bodily harm with intent over an attack on an 82-year-old man in Walton-on-the-Naze, Essex.
The pensioner, Leslie Gunfield, had told Barclay that he would inform security about him going through rubbish bins at a Co-op supermarket, the court heard.
Mr Gunfield was left with serious injuries to his head and required 10 titanium plates for fractures he suffered after being attacked by Barclay.
Barclay was released from prison for the attack on Mr Gunfield in February 2020.
In a victim impact statement read out before sentencing on Wednesday, Ms Rose's daughter Jessica Cox said: "He has put us through a nightmare which we can't wake up from.
"I don't feel he has shown any remorse," she added. "I believe he's cunning, and I believe he's enjoyed what he's done and the trial itself.
"He hasn't had to face us, he hasn't had to face the consequences of what he's done or what he's done to us."
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