A man found guilty of murdering his estranged wife whilst she was on her way to work in Swindon has maintained his innocence and refused to reveal where her body is during a public parole hearing.
Glyn Razzell, 64, was convicted of the murder of his wife, Linda Razzell, 41, and sentenced to life imprisonment in 2003, with a minimum term of 16 years.
Mother-of-four Mrs Razzell disappeared on her way to work at Swindon College, Wiltshire, in March 2002 and no trace of her body has ever been found.
Razzell, from Somerset, became the first prisoner to be refused parole under the so-called Helen’s law in 2021, which aims to make it harder for killers to get parole if they refuse to reveal where they hid their victim’s body.
In a new hearing on Thursday - his third - Razzell told the Parole Board panel he could not say where his wife’s remains were as he does not even know if she is dead.
He said: “I don’t know where Linda’s remains are. I don’t know if she is dead for sure. I am sorry if that upsets people.
“I understand the anguish my children (feel) in particular. I understand the way they feel, if there was anything I could do to help with that, I really would, particularly for my children.
“I don’t know where the remains are. I don’t even know if she is dead.”
The Parole Board hearing is only the third to be open to the press and public. It is being held at the open prison where Razzell is serving his sentence with a live stream being relayed to a public gallery at the Royal Courts of Justice in London.
Razzell wished not to be seen on video but could be heard.
He was convicted based on bloodstains found in the boot of the car he drove the day of her disappearance but he has always maintained his innocence and even helped take part in appeals for his wife to come home.
In October 2021, he was refused parole under the Prisoners (Disclosure of Information About Victims) Act 2020, which was dubbed Helen’s Law after insurance clerk Helen McCourt, who vanished on her way home from work in 1988.
Razzell and his wife were embroiled in divorce proceedings when she went missing and his trial was told he faced a financial settlement he was not prepared to accept.
The court also heard how Mrs Razzell left her home in the village of Highworth, near Swindon, at 8.45am on March 19 with her children and boyfriend Greg Worrall.
She dropped off her boyfriend in Highworth and her children at school before being seen parking for work in Alvescot Road, as usual.
She is believed to have taken her usual route down an alleyway towards the college and her phone was found in a recess of the alleyway the next day during a police search.
Her boyfriend contacted police on the evening of her disappearance after she failed to pick up her children from their after-school club.
A decision on whether Razzell, who was recommended to serve a minimum term of 16 years in jail, will be released is expected within two weeks.
The hearing continues.
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