Emma Humphreys | |
---|---|
Born | Emma Clare Humphreys 30 October 1967 |
Died | 11 July 1998 | (aged 30)
Cause of death | Death by misadventure, overdose of chloral hydrate |
Nationality | British |
Criminal charge(s) | Murder of her boyfriend and pimp, Trevor Armitage |
Criminal penalty | Convicted on 4 December 1985 and sentenced to life |
Criminal status | Reduced to manslaughter on 7 July 1995, freed for time served |
Emma Clare Humphreys (30 October 1967 – 11 July 1998) was a Welsh woman who was imprisoned in England in December 1985 at Her Majesty's pleasure, after being convicted of the murder of her violent 33-year-old boyfriend and pimp, Trevor Armitage.[2][3][4]
Aged 17 when convicted, Humphreys spent a decade in prison before winning an appeal against the conviction, on 7 July 1995, on the grounds of long-term provocation. The Court of Appeal reduced the conviction to manslaughter, and she was released immediately.[5] The success of the appeal was significant because it supported the argument that courts should take long-term issues such as "battered woman syndrome" into account when considering a defence of provocation.[2][3][6][a] Humphreys was assisted in her defence by Justice for Women, a feminist law-reform group founded in 1991 by Julie Bindel and Harriet Wistrich.[8][9][10]
Three years after her release, Humphreys died, aged 30, of an accidental overdose of prescription drugs at her flat in Holloway, North London.[11]
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