Britain Moves Against Windfall for Rapist
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, Aug. 12, 2004
LONDON Home Secretary David Blunkett said Thursday he
planned to bar convicted felons from benefiting from financial
windfalls while behind bars after a jailed rapist won 7 million
pounds (US$12.6 million) on the national lottery.
Blunkett said that proposed legislation before parliament would
force offenders who won the lottery or other wealthy criminals to
contribute to a compensation fund for victims of crime.
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His comments follow public outrage in Britain over the lottery
win of convicted rapist Iorworth Hoare, who was on day release from
his low-security prison when he bought the winning ticket on
Saturday.
"There's no justice in a convicted rapist winning the lottery
while his victims still suffer from what he did to them," Blunkett
wrote in The Sun newspaper.
"We can't stop a prisoner or their family from buying a ticket,
but we can look closely at making sure they don't benefit from a
single penny while in prison," he added.
Hoare was jailed between 1973 and 1987 for a series of sex
attacks on women. He was returned to prison in 1989 for attempting
to rape a 60-year-old woman in a park.
Prison officials said Hoare has been moved to a closed prison
following his lottery win for his safety.
Neil Sugarman, a lawyer specializing in personal injury and
compensation claims, said some of Hoare's victims might be able to
claim a share of his newfound wealth.
"The biggest difficulty any claimant will face is the
limitation periods, and generally speaking ... you are looking at
three years," Sugarman said. "But someone assaulted before that
period may be able to say they didn't take any action at the time
because the offender had no money."
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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