Michael Danaher is likely to die in prison for killing Adrian Greenwood after plotting to rob him of a rare copy of The Wind in the Willows
An unemployed father of two from Peterborough has been told he will serve at least 34 years in prison after being found guilty of the murder of a rare books dealer in Oxford.
Michael Danaher, 50, attacked and killed Adrian Greenwood, 42, in the hallway of his victimâs home on 6 April, after hatching a plan to rob him of a rare first edition of The Wind in the Willows that Greenwood had listed on eBay for ÂŁ50,000.
A jury at Oxford crown court heard that Danaher had also drawn up a âhit listâ of celebrities and wealthy business people he planned to rob and kidnap, and had researched the home addresses of others including Simon Cowell, Gary Lineker and Kate Moss.
Sentencing Danaher to life imprisonment, Judge Ian Pringle QC said the âsavage stabbingâ had involved âsignificant planning and premeditationâ.
He added: âDespite the fact that at 50 you had no previous convictions, warnings or cautions of any sort, itâs clear that during the course of 2015 you drew up this list â probably to rob or burgle people â or perhaps kidnap people and hold them to ransom, so as to gain funds for yourself.
âItâs clear from the timeline in this case you became almost obsessive about keeping up on famous celebrities.â
Greenwood suffered 33 stab wounds in the assault, including a deep puncture wound to his back, and multiple blunt force injuries. There were also numerous superficial puncture wounds, which a pathologist told a jury at Oxford crown court were consistent with having been tortured for information.
Danaher admitted killing the antiques dealer, but claimed it was self-defence, telling the court that Greenwood had suddenly attacked him with a knife after he made a bad joke. He said he had visited the dealer to discuss buying other cheap books.
Danaher said he had grabbed the blade of the knife to defend himself in the scuffle, but suffered only superficial scratches. He paused to take a selfie of a nick on his cheek as he left Greenwood dead or dying. The book dealerâs body was discovered by his cleaner the following day.
Over the course of a three-week trial, jurors heard that Danaher targeted the Oxford dealer after he listed the rare copy of the Kenneth Grahame childrenâs book â particularly valuable because it still had its original dust jacket â on eBay in August 2015.
Danaher, who weighed 25 stone, was estranged from his wife, ÂŁ13,000 in debt and unemployed after falling out with his boss at an engines company in Peterborough, and scraped a living by buying and selling low-value items on the auction site.
After the killing, police found an Excel spreadsheet on Danaherâs laptop that contained Greenwoodâs name alongside those of a number of other wealthy individuals Danaher planned to rob or kidnap for ransom. Against Greenwoodâs name, he had written: âExpected take: rare booksâ; âReason: tosserâ. Next to âModusâ, he wrote âAny!!â
Also included on the list, which Danaher called Enterprises, were the model Kate Moss and the Conservative peer Jeffrey Archer, along with a number of wealthy business figures, among them prominent Conservative party donors. Under âreasonâ, several were marked âToryâ or âscum Toryâ.
Danaher also searched for the home addresses of celebrities including Eamonn Holmes, Louise Redknapp and Michael Parkinson and other âpeople of meansâ. A floorplan of the home of the TV presenter Anthea Turner was also found on his laptop.
Danaherâs internet history showed he had looked up how to buy samurai swords, regulations on owning rifles, âopening locks without keysâ and âthe technique of silent killingâ.
In a bizarre defence, he attempted to claim it was not him but another man â whom he would not name for fear of âconsequencesâ â that had carried out the searches and drawn up the list. This man would come and go from his Peterborough flat at all hours of the day and night, Danaher claimed, and had full use of his mobile phone and laptop.
Occasionally, Danaher said, he would lend the man his phone and car, which he claimed explained why both had been traced to the home of the wealthy businessman Adrian Beecroft, when a man had tried to force his way in while disguised as a delivery driver. He fled when Beecroftâs wife screamed for help.
After the killing, Danaher took the copy of The Wind in the Willows back to his flat in Peterborough and showed it to his son, before listing it for sale on eBay just hours after the killing.
He was arrested after phone records and numberplate scanning traced Greenwoodâs mobile and Danaherâs CitroĂ«n Picasso car to Peterborough. The broken murder weapon and a pair of bloodied boots were found at his flat, along with a stun gun, disguised as an iPhone.
AP
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