Man jailed for 37 years for murdering university lecturer has conviction quashed

Undated handout file photo issued by Thames Valley Police of Peter Farquhar and Benjamin Field at their betrothal ceremony. Field, 28, will discover how long he will spend in prison after being convicted of murdering Mr Farquhar following a gaslighting campaign of physical and mental torture. PA Photo. Issue date: Friday October 18, 2019. See PA story COURTS Maids. Photo credit should read: Thames Valley Police/PA Wire
Benjamin Field (right) was accused of secretly giving Peter Farquhar (left) tranquiliser drugs and spiking his whisky (Picture: PA)

A church warden who was jailed for life for murdering a university lecturer has had his conviction quashed at the Court of Appeal.

Benjamin Field, 28, was found guilty in August 2019 of the murder of Peter Farquhar, 69, in the village of Maids Moreton, Buckinghamshire

The prosecution in Field’s trial said he had secretly given the pensioner tranquiliser drugs and spiked his whisky as part of a plot to kill him and inherit his house and money.

However, Field’s lawyers told a Court of Appeal hearing in March that there was ‘no evidence’ Mr Farquhar was ‘forced or deceived’ into taking the whisky or medication.

Benjamin Field (left) was jailed for life in 2019 for the murder of university lecturer Peter Farquhar (right) (Picture: PA)

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In a ruling on Thursday, three senior judges quashed the conviction and ordered a retrial.

Lord Justice Edis, sitting with Mr Justice Goose and Mr Justice Butcher, said that jurors had ‘not been properly directed’ and were given ‘defective’ directions on how to reach a verdict.

Lord Edis added: ‘The directions effectively withdrew from the jury the question of whether Mr Farquhar’s decision to drink the whisky had been voluntary.’

The judges will allow the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) to take the ‘unusual case’ to the Supreme Court before any retrial takes place.

Field, who will remain in prison while the Supreme Court appeal case is pending, was accused of befriending the dedicated churchgoer Mr Farquhar and persuading his target to add him to his will.

The church warden allegedly then plied the retired teacher with drugs and whisky in the hopes that his eventual death would look like an accident.

He was convicted by a jury at Oxford Crown Court of Mr Farquhar’s murder but he was acquitted of the attempted murder of Mr Farquhar’s close neighbour Ann Moore-Martin.

Benjamin Field
Field was given a life sentence for murder in 2019 (Picture: Thames Valley Police)

The Baptist minister’s son had pleaded guilty to defrauding Mr Farquhar of £160,000 from his will and of cheating Ms Moore-Martin of £4,000 to buy a car and £27,000 for a dialysis machine.

During the trial, Field denied murdering Mr Farquhar, claiming he could have died from taking his usual dose of flurazepam and drinking whisky.

‘This murder never happened. No-one killed anyone,’ he told jurors.

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