Four jailed for plot to have man murdered in Sussex

Police say the victim was lucky to have survived

Author: Ryan BurrowsPublished 5th Mar 2024

Four people have been jailed for a combined 45 years after paying £3,000 to have a man murdered in West Sussex.

The 48-year-old suffered critical injuries after being stabbed in the driveway of his home in Harbolets Road in West Chiltington on December 21st, 2019.

He had been lured out to open the gate for his on/off partner Emma Giles, who said she wanted to meet, before being attacked and left for dead.

Sussex Police said he was lucky to have survived the attack, after getting back inside the home and contacting his neighbour, who contacted emergency services.

An investigation was launched which revealed the victim – who was then a man in his 40s – had been in a relationship with Giles, now 24, for a few months that summer. The pair rekindled their romance in December, 2019.

Emma Giles’ father, Mark Giles Snr, did not approve of the relationship and pressured the victim to end it through repeated threats of violence.

On 17 December, 2019, Emma Giles abruptly cut contact with the victim, but four days later agreed to meet him at his home, where the attack took place.

The subsequent investigation found Emma Giles had conspired with her father, Mark Giles Snr, brother – Mark Giles Jnr – and then-boyfriend Sam Millis, to lure the victim to a vulnerable location where a man they had paid could murder him.

The assailant, who was identified by police and forensically linked to the attack, is now deceased.

The conspirators had paid him £3,000 to carry out the murder.

Phone and vehicle data showed all four defendants were in the area at the time of the attack and had been in constant communication with eachother before, during and after. All four defendants’ phones stopped being used promptly after the attack.

Messages on the attacker’s phone in the aftermath showed he was discussing the police investigation, destroying evidence and frantically trying to contact Millis.

All four defendants were arrested and subsequently charged with conspiracy to murder.

After entering not guilty pleas, they were found guilty by a jury after a four-week trial, concluding on October 5th last year, at Lewes Crown Court.

At the same court on Friday, 23 February, Mark Giles Snr, 59, of Linfold Road in Billingshurst, was jailed for ten years.

Mark Giles Jnr, 37, of Adversane Lane in Billingshurst, was jailed for 14 years.

Sam Millis, 46, of Kingston Ridge in Lewes, was jailed for 14 years.

Emma Giles, 24, of Linfold Road, was jailed for seven years.

In her sentencing remarks, HHJ Christine Laing said ‘the extraordinary nature of this case, and the lack of motive, does suggest you are all very dangerous people’.

She added:

“The reason why you did so is unclear. but it does seem to revolve around the relationship between the victim and you, Emma Giles. It is inconceivable such a motive would lead to murder but that is the outcome you all wanted.

“It was a particularly poignant aspect of this case that amongst the victim’s first queries at the hospital was to ask had you Emma Giles turned up to see him as he hoped would have happened.

“His survival was miraculous and the long term effects show how serious this incident was and how it will have a long lasting impact.”

In a statement submitted to the court, the victim said:

"The mental impact of this has left me in such a bad way that I don’t think I will ever fully recover. I don’t sleep and when I do I have dreams about what happened.

"The whole incident and especially the worry to do with having to give evidence at court and relive what happened again and again has led to me having to take medication for anxiety.

“The offence committed against me has significantly impacted on my day-to-day life. I used to have an active social life in the local area but now I stay away in case I see anyone that was involved in doing this to me. I can no longer do the things I considered normal.”

"I just can’t understand why people arranged for this to happen to me. We used to be friends and I loved one of the people involved. All I keep thinking is all of this could have been sorted out in other ways."

Detective Sergeant Simon Smith said:

"This was an extremely complex investigation into the betrayal of a man by the woman he loved, whose family would clearly stop at nothing to end their relationship.

"The victim in this case is extremely fortunate to have escaped with his life.

"Proving an offence such as this is challenging, but thanks to the tireless work of the investigation team we were able to gather enough evidence to tie all four to the crime and secure these significant custodial sentences.

"Had the man they paid to carry out the attack been alive, I am confident he too would have faced justice for his crimes."

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