Lee Nevins Wiki

                                          Lee Nevins Biography

Who is Lee Nevins?

Lee Nevins and his accomplice Mark Lang were jailed for life for the sadistic murder of Lee Jobling, a disabled 20-year-old, at his Gateshead home in 2006.

Less than two years into his life sentence, Nevins escaped while being taken from Frankland Prison in County Durham to Sunderland Royal Hospital to receive treatment for a hand injury.


He launched a huge manhunt and managed to spend a week on the run before finally being arrested in Scotland.

The violent criminal, now 39, is on the run again after breaking out of an open prison in Derbyshire, nearly 16 years after he was convicted of the murder.


A Prison Service spokesman said: “HMP Sudbury is working with police to recapture Lee Nevins quickly and if he is caught he will face more time behind bars.”

HMP Sudbury in Ashbourne is a category D prison, meaning it has a more relaxed regimen and houses prisoners defined as “those who can be reasonably trusted not to attempt an escape, and have the privilege of an open prison”.

Nevins and Lang beat Lee to death in his own home after crashing a party.


The horror murder came after years in which Lee beat the odds to survive a childhood blighted by tragedy.

He was only six years old when his mother Shirley, who was divorced from his father, died suddenly of a brain hemorrhage.

Lee and his two brothers went to live with their aunt and uncle, Angela and Garry Knotts, at his house on the Leam Lane estate in Gateshead.

Then, aged just 15, Lee suffered serious head injuries falling off a bridge while playing with friends and spent two weeks in a coma.

The accident left Lee with brain injuries, a limp and memory problems.

Family

With the support of his family, Lee continued to fight and, although he was not well enough to work in the months before his death, he had moved into his own apartment not far from his. his aunt.

On Saturday, April 8, 2006, Lee invited some friends to his flat in Cotemede for drinks.

They pleaded not guilty but, after a two-week trial at Newcastle Crown Court in which both killers tried to frame each other, they were both found guilty of the brutal crime.

Judge John Milford gave them both life sentences and ordered that Nevins, who had previous convictions for violence, serve a minimum of 17 years and Lang at least 16.

He told them: ‘For his own amusement, they intimidated him, pounced on him and tied his legs with wire.

‘Later you attacked him again, landing no fewer than 12 blows to the head.

The attack was prolonged and he was left in an appalling state.

You attacked him so you could take pleasure in his suffering and he suffered, I’m sure of that. I’ve watched you throughout this case. Neither of them has shown an iota of remorse.

He warned that they would only be released when it was deemed safe to do so and both would remain on life license.

After Nevins’ first escape in 2008, a damning report revealed a series of mistakes made by prison staff that allowed it to happen.

Investigation


A Prison Service investigation found that the guards did not search the killer or even secure the handcuffs or restraints.

Nevins was also able to smuggle her address book and paper clips out of his cell to aid in his escape.

Failed attempts to track him down meant he roamed the streets freely for almost a week.

The killer was also helped by the fact that he had been allowed to visit the hospital in civilian clothes, not in a prison uniform.

During the Nevins breakout days, Newcastle Central Station was locked down for 40 minutes after a notice turned out to be a false alarm.

A £1,000 reward was also offered for information leading to Nevins’s capture and several people were arrested.

However, Northumbria Police Superintendent Gordon Milward insisted that Nevins was not a danger to the general public.

He said: ‘My current assessment is that he is not a danger to the general public, but clearly there is a need to return him to prison.

We’re treating this as an emergency matter, and we’re specifically looking for people who were involved in his incarceration. I want to make sure there’s no direct threat.

We will take whatever action we deem necessary.

“And we’re doing everything we can to make sure he doesn’t leave the country.”

Nevins was eventually arrested after he was spotted by a police officer in Tillicoultry, near Stirling, in Scotland.

Police said he gave himself up without a fight and was taken to a police station in Scotland.

Superintendent Milward announced, “An officer saw him, identified him, and arrested him.”

Nevins later admitted escaping legal custody at Peterborough Crown Court and was given a 12-month prison sentence to run concurrently with his previous sentence.

Source: https://wikisoon.com/