PC Adrian Goldsmith was jailed for life on February 1 at
Stafford Crown Court after he was found guilty of killing his wife.
Goldsmith, 50, beat wife Jill, 49, with a mallet, paint pot and heavy
battery then stabbed himself to make it look like self-defence. He
tried to trick colleagues and a jury into thinking she had attacked him
first at their home close to Northants Police headquarters.
Goldsmith
also known as Otis, was arrested after his wife was found dead in March
last year. The lying policeman even made out Mrs Goldsmith had
“self-harmed” in the moments before her death.
But a jury at Stafford Crown Court dismissed his fantasy defence and found him guilty of murder. Judge
Paul Glenn who delivered the sentence said he must spend
at least 15 years behind bars before he can be considered for parole.
The officer, who has been dismissed from the force, showed no emotion as he was sentenced.
"You
set about establishing a defence in an attempt to avoid the
consequences of your actions. You lied repeatedly to the police, to the
doctors who were treating
you and to the prison chaplain some weeks later when you were on remand.
You had caused injuries to yourself to enable the defence you ran at
your trial to get off the ground."
Judge Glenn rejected Goldsmith’s claims that his wife had become violent and aggressive shortly before she died.
"Jill
Goldsmith was a mother, a daughter and a friend of many. No sentence
the court can impose can even begin to compensate for the loss and
anguish the family are feeling. The nature of this attack was such that
your victim would inevitably have suffered physically before she died.
There
were multiple blows, predominantly to the head. She must have been in
terror as she fought for her life, as I am satisfied she did."
Goldsmith,
also known as Otis, was a serving officer at the time of the offence
and had 28 years of service and a number of commendations. The officer,
of Wootton Hall Park, Northampton, denied murder. According to the
prosecutor, John
Lloyd-Jones, QC:
"Jill was undergoing
the menopause and the reduction in her sex drive annoyed and frustrated
the defendant."
The victim’s heartbroken son Charlie Bailey said
in an impact statement that his mother’s death means "there is a massive
part of me missing"
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