Accused ‘at home during shooting’

John CooperJohn Cooper denies four counts of murder and other separate charges, including rape
Related Stories

A man accused of two double murders in Pembrokeshire in the 1980s has told a Swansea Crown Court jury he was at home when a brother and sister were shot.

At the opening of his defence, John Cooper, 66, said he did not kill Richard and Helen Thomas at their house near Milford Haven in 1985.

He also told the jury he had “nothing whatsoever” to do with the deaths of Peter and Gwenda Dixon in 1989.

He looked after his granddaughter on weekday mornings at that time, he said.

Mrs and Mrs Dixon from Oxfordshire, were shot while they were walking the coastal path near Little Haven, on the last day of their holiday.

Richard and Helen Thomas were found dead at their house near Milford Haven in 1985. They had been shot.

Taking to the witness stand, Mr Cooper, of Letterston, told the jury he knew farmer Mr Thomas by sight.

He said that while working for another farmer, he had been to the yard at Scoveston Park where the Thomases lived, but had never been inside their house.

He told the court: “Farmers borrow things off each other. I remembered, on prompting, I had been there twice, three times.”

“I never said that many words to the man to fall out with him”

John Cooper

He was then asked by his barrister, Marc Evans QC, if he had ever quarrelled with Mr Thomas.

Mr Cooper replied: “I never said that many words to the man to fall out with him.”

He said on the night of 22 December 1985, when the Thomases were shot, he was at home.

The defendant denied having anything to do with their deaths or starting the fire that gutted their home.

Mr Cooper was also asked by his barrister whether he had anything to do with the deaths of the Dixons in late June 1989.

He replied: “Nothing whatsoever.”

He said around that time he would look after his one-year-old granddaughter on week days while his late wife, Pat, would go to work.

The prosecution say that a bank card that belonged to the Dixons was used to withdraw money from cash points at Milford Haven and Haverfordwest following their deaths.

The jury has heard from witnesses who gave descriptions of a man seen outside the bank.

Mr Cooper told the jury: “That was not me.”

Mr Cooper told the court he did sell a wedding ring to a jeweller in Pembrokeshire on 5 July just days after the Dixons were killed.

But he denied it belonged to them and said he had been trading in coins, gold and rings since the 1970s.

Mr Cooper is also charged with rape, sexual assault and the attempted robbery of five teenagers in a field near the Mount Estate in Milford Haven in March 1996.

He told the jury: “I’ve not been down that area for 30 to 40 years. I was not there.”

He said from 1993 he had suffered from arthritis, which by then restricted his movements.

The jury has heard that in 1998 Mr Cooper was tried and convicted for 30 burglaries and one count of robbery, crimes he still denies today.

He denies all charges and the trial continues.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *