LONDON (AP) — A British aristocrat and her boyfriend were sentenced to 14 years in prison on Monday for killing their newborn daughter while on the run from authorities.
Constance Marten, 38, and her boyfriend Mark Gordon, 51, a convicted sex offender, were sentenced Monday after being found guilty of gross negligence manslaughter at London’s Central Criminal Court in July. They were previously convicted of perverting the course of justice, concealing the birth of a child and child cruelty. Gordon will serve a further four years on extended license.
Police launched a nationwide search after officers found a placenta on Jan. 5, 2023, in a burned-out car belonging to Marten and Gordon near Bolton in northwestern England.
The couple traveled across England and went off-grid, spending hundreds of pounds (dollars) on cabs to shuttle them around, and avoided using credit cards or anything that might identify them. They slept in a tent on the South Downs, a range of hills in southern England, where their baby, Victoria died.
The decomposed body of the infant was found by police in a shopping bag under garbage in a garden shed in Brighton in 2023, concluding a seven-week-long search.
During sentencing, the judge ruled that the baby died from hypothermia after being exposed to “significant cold stress,” rejecting the couple’s claims that she died in a “terrible accident.”
“It is clear throughout the period neither of you gave much or any thought for the care or love for your baby,” Judge Mark Lucraft told the defendants.
Marten secretly gave birth to Victoria after the couple’s other four children were taken by courts because they were at risk of harm.
After their arrest in Brighton on Feb. 27, the couple refused to say where the baby was.
While on the run, Victoria was only briefly glimpsed on CCTV footage in London wearing the onesie with teddy bear pattern she was later recovered in.
Detective Superintendent Lewis Basford said in a statement after sentencing that the couple knew that officers were looking for them and had plenty of opportunities “to do the right thing.”
“Speaking personally as a father, I find it hard to comprehend how, instead of providing the warmth and care their child needed, Mark Gordon and Constance Marten chose to live outside during freezing conditions to avoid the authorities,” he said.
“We were determined to seek justice for baby Victoria and honor her tragically short life,” Chief Crown Prosecutor Jaswant Narwal said. “No child should have had its life cut short in this preventable way. I hope today’s sentences provide a sense of justice and comfort to all those affected by this tragic case.”
Marten, who is from a wealthy, aristocratic British family, was reportedly a drama student when she met Gordon. He had served 20 years in prison in the United States after being convicted in Florida of kidnapping and sexual battery, according to U.S. law enforcement records. He was deported from the U.S. after his release.
This court artist sketch by Elizabeth Cook shows Mark Gordon and Constance Marten appearing at the Old Bailey in London, Monday Sept. 15, 2025, where they've been sentenced to 14 years in prison on Monday for killing their newborn daughter while on the run from authorities. (Elizabeth Cook/PA via AP)
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — A hard-right former lawmaker and admirer of U.S. President Donald Trump held the upper hand as Chile headed to a polarizing presidential runoff against a member of Chile's Communist Party representing the incumbent government.
José Antonio Kast, an ultraconservative lawyer opposed to abortion and same-sex marriage, appears to be in pole position after nearly 70% of votes went to right-wing candidates in Sunday's first round, as many Chileans worry about organized crime, illegal immigration and unemployment in one of Latin America’s safest and most prosperous nations.
Kast is a surprise front-runner who speaks fondly of aspects of the country's period of dictatorship and broke with the traditional conservative party to found his own Republican Party.
He came in second with nearly 24% of the vote after campaigning on plans to crack down on crime, build a giant border wall and deport tens of thousands of undocumented migrants.
Jeannette Jara, a former labor minister in President Gabriel Boric’s left-wing government, eked out a narrower-than-expected lead with 27% of the vote. She wants to expand Chile's social safety net and tackle money laundering and drug trafficking.
Neither contender received more than 50% of the overall vote count, sending the poll to a second round of voting on Dec. 14.
The mood was ebullient at Kast's campaign headquarters early Monday, where young Chileans wrapped in national flags drank beer and rolled cigarettes as workers took down the stage where Kast had proclaimed a radical transformation in the country's security.
“We needed a safe candidate, someone with a firm hand to bring economic growth, attract investment, create jobs, strengthen the police and give them support,” said Ignacio Rojas, 20. “Chile isn't safe anymore, and he'll change that.”
The results seemed set to extend a growing regional shift across Latin America, as popular discontent with the economy simmers and right-wing challengers take over from leftist politicians who shot to power in the wake of the pandemic on lofty promises of social change and more equitable distribution of wealth, but largely failed to deliver.
"Economies are not growing, there are no new jobs, and people remember that 10 years ago they used to pay lower prices for almost everything,” said Patricio Navia, a Chilean analyst and professor at New York University.
“Voters are upset with governments all over the region,” he added.
Conservatives led the pack in Chile's eight-candidate field, with populist businessman and celebrity economist Franco Parisi surprising pundits by securing 20% of the votes and third place. Like Kast, he ran a tough law and order campaign, vowing to plant land mines along Chile’s porous northern border to prevent people from crossing.
Another 14% of the votes went to Johannes Kaiser, a libertarian congressman and a former YouTube provocateur who campaigned as an even more radical alternative to Kast.
Chile’s traditional center-right coalition landed in fifth place, with establishment candidate Evelyn Matthei winning 12.5% of the vote.
Not all of the divided right is guaranteed to go to Kast. Several Kaiser and Matthei voters interviewed at polling stations on Sunday — including members of the LGBTQ community, women and atheists — said they'd refuse to support Kast, citing his deeply conservative Christian values.
But it's also unlikely that voters who supported Kaiser's plans to deport undocumented migrants to prison in El Salvador, or Matthei's plans to consider bringing back the death penalty, would vote for a lifelong member of Chile's Communist Party.
There were no other left-wing front-runners, as all six parties in Chile's governing coalition threw their weight behind Jara.
After learning of the election results late Sunday, Matthei rushed to Kast's party headquarters to profess her support for her right-wing rival. “Chile needs a sharp change of direction,” she said.
Kaiser also promised to back Kast, saying his libertarian party would "ensure that a sound doctrine and defense of freedom are not abandoned.”
Parisi voters run the gamut, eschewing elites on the left and right. The political outsider was coy after the results came out, saying, “We don’t give anyone a blank check."
“The burden of proof lies with both candidates,” he said. “They have to win people over.”
Economic travails and fervent anti-incumbent sentiment appear to have fueled a gradual pendulum swing away from the left-wing leaders who were ascendant across the region just a few years ago.
In Argentina, radical libertarian President Javier Milei, elected in late 2023 on a vow to break with years of left-leaning populism, has dramatically cut public spending, doubling down on his close bond with Trump and reshaping Argentina's foreign policy in line with the U.S.
Elections over the last year in Ecuador, El Salvador and Panama have kept right-wing leaders in office, while in Bolivia, restive voters outraged over a currency crisis punished the Movement Toward Socialism party and elected a conservative opposition candidate for the first time in nearly 20 years.
The right’s gains could buoy the U.S. as it competes for regional influence with China, some analysts say, with a new crop of leaders keen for American investment. Chile is the world’s largest copper producer and home to vast reserves of other minerals key to the global energy transition.
Like many hopeful leftists four years ago, President Boric, a young former student activist elected on the heels of Chile's 2019 mass protests over widening inequality, pledged to raise taxes on the rich and adopt one of the world’s most progressive constitutions, ran into major legislative opposition.
That won't be the case for Kast if he wins.
As results from parliamentary elections crystalized early Monday, it appeared that right-wing parties would hold a decisive majority in the 155-member lower house of Congress, a body that has skewed left since Chile's 1990 return to democracy.
Presidential candidate Jeannette Jara of the Unidad por Chile coalition addresses supporters after early results in the general elections in Santiago, Chile, Sunday, Nov. 16, 2025. (AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko)
Presidential candidate Jose Antonio Kast of the Republican Party, and his wife Maria Pia Adriasola, wave to supporters after early results in the general elections in Santiago, Chile, Sunday, Nov. 16, 2025. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
Presidential candidate Jose Antonio Kast of the Republican Party, waves to supporters after early results in the general elections in Santiago, Chile, Sunday, Nov. 16, 2025. (AP Photo/Esteban Felix)
Presidential candidate Jose Antonio Kast of the Republican Party, addresses supporters after early results in the general elections in Santiago, Chile, Sunday, Nov. 16, 2025. (AP Photo/Cristobal Escobar)