Sir Richard Sutton: Partner's son gets life sentence for murder

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Sir Richard Sutton's wealth was valued at £301m in the 2020 Sunday Times Rich List

A man who killed one of the UK's richest men and paralysed his own mother in a "ferocious" knife attack has been given a life sentence.

Thomas Schreiber fatally stabbed 83-year-old Sir Richard Sutton at his home near Gillingham, Dorset, in April.

The 35-year-old also attacked his mother Anne Schreiber, who was Sir Richard's partner. He was convicted of murder and attempted murder.

He was jailed for a minimum of 36 years at Winchester Crown Court.

Armed police were called to Moorhill, Sir Richard's home in Higher Langham that he shared with both Anne and Thomas Schreiber, at 19:30 BST on 7 April.

Ms Schreiber was "barely conscious" when she was discovered in the kitchen, before being carried out by police officers to waiting paramedics.

Sir Richard was found dead outside his upstairs bedroom. He had suffered multiple stab wounds.

Image source, Dorset Police
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Thomas Schreiber had been living at the home Sir Richard shared with his mother Anne Schreiber

Prosecutor Adam Feest QC told the trial: "This was a ferocious and sustained attack on both victims."

The trial heard Schreiber was angry with his mother for "abandoning" his late father, who suffered from depression, to move in with Sir Richard.

He accused her of being a "gold-digger" and believed Sir Richard treated him unfairly compared to his two sisters.

This was despite Schreiber, an aspiring painter, receiving a £1,000 monthly allowance and £100,000 towards buying a house.

The trial heard he had earlier told a friend he "couldn't stand" Sir Richard, writing in a message: "My mind is consumed with hatred of the worst kind."

"I contemplate murdering them... I want them to suffer," he added.

Image source, Sutton family
Image caption,
Sir Richard and Ms Schreiber had been together since about 2003

Reading her victim impact statement in court, Schreiber's sister Rose McCarthy sobbed as she told him: "You took a knife to our world.

"In doing so you took away Richard, you took away the most innocent and kindest of men in the most brutal of ways.

"You also killed our mother, you took her life away and left her trapped in a body she can't use and is in constant pain."

Sir Richard's son, Sir David Sutton, also read a statement in which he said he felt "intense anger, sadness and distress" at the death of his father.

"It was so completely unnecessary," he said. "I feel robbed of the times we had discussed and planned."

Media caption,
Police were called to Sir Richard's Moorhill estate near Gillingham in Dorset

Passing sentence Mr Justice Garnham told Schreiber his actions had caused "utter devastation" in both families.

He added: "You treated Sir Richard's house and possessions as if they were your own.

"You showed neither him or your mother any respect, instead during your time in their home you displayed a breathtaking sense of entitlement, at times you left Sir Richard feeling like a prisoner in his own home."

He told Schreiber that on the night of 7 April: "You completely lost your temper", and subjected the couple to a "vicious attack".

Schreiber admitted manslaughter, as well as driving a Range Rover dangerously in a high-speed chase as he fled to London after the attack.

He was eventually detained by police on Chiswick High Road.

Image source, Metropolitan Police
Image caption,
Schreiber was pursued by police at speeds of up to 135mph as he fled towards central London

Sir Richard was listed at number 435 in the Sunday Times Rich List last year with an estimated family fortune of £301 million, an increase of £83 million on the previous year.

The guide said his company owned London hotels the Sheraton Grand Park Lane and the Athenaeum, plus three smaller venues.

He also had an extensive property and farming portfolio, including the 6,500-acre Benham Estate in west Berkshire and the Stainton Estate in Lincolnshire.

In a statement the Sutton family said Sir Richard was a "warm and compassionate" father-of-two and grandfather-of-five.

It said: "The British countryside has lost an amazing champion, who was above all an active and committed farmer."

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