26 August 2020

Priti Patel agrees to meet Pc Andrew Harper’s widow over new law to introduce life sentences for killers of emergency workers

The widow of Pc Andrew Harper is due to meet the Home Secretary next month in an effort to harness major political support for a new law meaning those who kill emergency workers are jailed for life.

Lissie Harper, 29, said she was contacted by the Home Office to arrange face-to-face talks with Priti Patel.

Mrs Harper, whose campaign has secured nearly half a million signatures, said she was ‘delighted’ that the Home Secretary had agreed to a meeting, and that her campaign is ‘vital and urgent’.

“We don’t just need warm words, we need action,” she said.

I plan ... to make his legacy about a positive change in our country for the people he was proud to serve alongside

Mrs Harper and her 28-year-old husband had been married for just four weeks when he and a Thames Valley Police colleague responded to a late-night burglary in Sulhamstead, Berkshire, in August last year.

Two of Pc Harper’s killers – 18-year-olds Albert Bowers and Jessie Cole – last week lodged applications with the Court of Appeal seeking permission to challenge their convictions and their 13-year prison sentences.

They were jailed alongside Henry Long, 19, who was handed a 16-year sentence.

All three were acquitted of murder during a trial at the Old Bailey but were sentenced for the lesser charge of manslaughter after Pc Harper got caught in a crane strap attached to the back of a car driven by Long, and was dragged to his death along dark country lanes.

Those sentences have also been referred to the Court of Appeal by Attorney General Suella Braverman for judges to decide whether they were too lenient.

Mrs Harper this week contacted unions for hundreds of thousands of emergency services workers in an attempt to secure their backing for Harper’s Law.

Police officer killed in Sulhamstead (PA Media)

In a statement on Wednesday, Mrs Harper said: “Our justice system is broken, and we need Harper’s Law to help fix it.

“I have witnessed first-hand the lenient and insufficient way in which the justice system deals with criminals who take the lives of our emergency workers.

“We need Harper’s Law to give the ultimate protection to our emergency services workers. They run towards danger to protect the public from harm.

“They go out every day and risk their lives to protect us. They deserve the ultimate protection in return.”

She added: “I plan to use the grief I have to endure to fuel this campaign and to create a legacy for Andrew that, instead of being about the way in which his life was taken and the people who stole it from him, is to make his legacy about a positive change in our country for the people he was proud to serve alongside.”

The law must be changed

Pc Harper’s Thames Valley Police Federation colleague, Sergeant Andy Fiddler, who has been supporting Mrs Harper, said: “Those in society who hurt those there to protect us should be dealt with with the full force of the law and judicial system.

“By creating a new Harper’s Law we hope those loved ones of all emergency services workers who sadly have to go through what Lissie has been through in the future will soon get the justice that they rightly deserve.

“The law must be changed. We want to work with the Government, politicians of all parties and the fantastic British public on this.”

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