Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 7
Court of Appeal Extends Robert Rhodes Murder Term to 33.5 Years After 4-Year Increase
Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 7

Court of Appeal Extends Robert Rhodes Murder Term to 33.5 Years After 4-Year Increase

3 articles · Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 7

Summary

  • A Court of Appeal panel added four years to Robert Rhodes' minimum term, raising it from 29-and-a-half years to 33 years and six months for murdering his wife Dawn.
  • The increase followed a referral by Solicitor General Ellie Reeves under the unduly lenient sentence scheme, after prosecutors argued the original term failed to reflect years of sustained cover-up.
  • Judges said Rhodes plotted the 2016 killing for months, cut Dawn Rhodes' throat in their Surrey home, and then manipulated their child into helping stage a false self-defence account.
  • That manipulation was described as a particularly abhorrent aggravating feature, with Lady Justice May calling the murder truly appalling and saying the court could hardly conceive of a more heinous plot.
  • Rhodes was acquitted of murder in 2017 after claiming self-defence, but a 2025 retrial ended in conviction after the child gave new evidence, leading to the life sentence now lengthened on appeal.

Insights

His lenient sentence was overturned. Are recent reforms enough to ensure justice in other complex cover-up cases?
He used his child to fake self-defence. How can justice unmask a monstrous lie when a child is the pawn?
After a father's ultimate betrayal, can an increased prison sentence ever truly heal the child he broke?