Ex-criminal says he ‘deserved’ double gunshot wounds in Tony Martin farm robbery

Ex-criminal says he ‘deserved’ double gunshot wounds in Tony Martin farm robbery
Share:
Ex-criminal says he ‘deserved’ double gunshot wounds in Tony Martin farm robbery
Author: Sam Hall
Published: Feb, 08 2025 07:06

A reformed criminal has relived the night he thought he would be killed after he was shot by Tony Martin in 1999, following the farmer’s death this week. Martin was charged with murder following the death of 16-year-old would-be-thief Fred Barras and the wounding of 29-year-old Brendan Fearon with a shotgun. In an interview with the Daily Mirror, Fearon said he thought he would die that night at the hands of the then 55-year-old farmer.

Image Credit: The Standard

He said: “I thought I was going to die but I kept thinking of my kids and I had to get to safety.”. The reformed criminal told how he fled the Norfolk farm, escaping down the road where he found an elderly neighbour who phoned an ambulance. He said: “At the time I had no idea poor Fred (Barras) was dead. The farmer didn’t raise the alarm, he left me to my own fate. I deserved that.”. Fearon – who spent a total of 14 years of his life behind bars – told the paper that he did not “blame” Martin for his injury, or the death of his teenage accomplice.

Image Credit: The Standard

“It must have been scary for him with intruders, he’d been done so many times before, so you can’t blame him,” the now 54-year-old said. His comments come after the death of Martin on February 2. Martin served three years in prison after the shooting at his home in Emneth Hungate, Norfolk, in 1999. He was initially found guilty of murder, but this was reduced to manslaughter on appeal. Martin’s friend, Malcolm Starr, told the PA news agency that the Norfolk farmer had died in hospital on Sunday after suffering a stroke in December.

Image Credit: The Standard

The case provoked a national debate about the measures homeowners can take to defend their property. Mr Starr said Martin “deserves a light up on him”, adding that he initially found him to be “very eccentric”. He told PA: “I think his honesty got him incarcerated because he couldn’t lie. “Because if you go in that situation, you do everything you could probably to get out of it and say, this happened and they attacked me or something like that.

“But what I’m saying is he’s really a very straight guy from that point of view.”. Mr Starr, who handled Martin’s relations with the media, added: “I still maintain, how do you know how anyone would react until you’re faced with it?. “I don’t think you can predict how you’d act if someone came into your property.”. Mr Starr said Martin tried “to carry on as normal” after his release from prison.

“He tried to carry on as normal, whatever normal was to Tony. I think most of the farm, he sub-contracted. “He didn’t do much of that himself, but he just liked meeting people.”. Martin told PA in 2013 that he had once again confronted a burglar at the property. He said he caught the would-be burglar while checking on an outbuilding. They drove off when confronted and Martin decided not to attempt to stop him, saying: “I couldn’t face going through all that again.”.

Share:

More for You

Top Followed