London police officer pleads guilty to murdering Sarah Everard
London — A London police officer has pleaded guilty to murdering Sarah Everard, a 33-year-old marketing executive who went missing while walking home from her boyfriend's house in London earlier this year. Metropolitan Police officer Wayne Couzens, 48, entered the guilty plea during a Friday hearing at London's Central Criminal Court, appearing by video link from the high-security prison where he's being held.
Couzens pleaded guilty to kidnapping and rape charges last month, but at that time he did not enter a plea on the murder charge. He is due to be sentenced at the end of September.
Everard's disappearance in early March triggered widespread protests against gender-based violence and heavy-handed policing. Her body was discovered in woodlands outside of the city a week after she went missing.
After Everard's body was found, hundreds of people, mainly women, gathered at an unsanctioned vigil at a park near where she was last seen. Police eventually moved into the peaceful crowd forcefully, arresting four people, including two teenagers. Permission to hold the vigil was initially denied by police because of coronavirus restrictions.
Protests then broke out across London and the United Kingdom, with demonstrators coming out against a proposed bill that would give police more power to limit public protests, but not do anything to address gender-based violence.
"We don't just want overpolicing and more police officers who abuse their powers towards women. We want actual action," a 25-year-old protester named Jennifer told CBS News in March. "We want money spent on women's services. We want there to be a cultural change that protects women and fights against misogyny and violence."
"At the heart of this is Sarah, and Sarah just wanted to walk home, and she wasn't able to do that by a patriarchal society, by male violence, and we have to change that," Zarah Sultana, a member of the British Parliament, told a crowd of protesters outside the legislature in March.
The Guardian newspaper reported that while he didn't enter a formal plea on the murder charge, Couzens did accept responsibility for killing Everard in court on Tuesday, but that psychiatric reports were still pending.