Willoughby says women should not be made to feel unsafe as plotter found guilty
The TV presenter thanked an undercover officer for understanding the ‘imminent threat’ to her life.
TV presenter Holly Willoughby has said women “should not be made to feel unsafe … in our own homes” after a security guard was convicted of masterminding a plot to kidnap, rape and murder her.
The Dancing on Ice star thanked an undercover officer who helped foil Gavin Plumb’s plans and for understanding the “imminent threat” to her life.
Plumb developed an “obsession” with Ms Willoughby over a number of years and assembled an “abduction kit” – complete with handcuffs and metal cable ties – to help carry out his attack.
The jury took 12 hours and 19 minutes to unanimously convict him of soliciting murder and inciting rape and kidnap.
As the verdicts were returned, Plumb slowly shook his head and stared at the floor of the dock.
He then began to weep as he was sent down to the cells, sniffling as he tried to hold back tears.
“I will forever be grateful to the undercover police officer who understood the imminent threat, and to the Metropolitan and Essex police forces for their swift response.
“Thank you to the Crown Prosecution Service, the Rt Hon Mr Justice Murray, Alison Morgan KC, the members of the jury and all involved in this case for ensuring that justice was done and that the defendant will not be able to harm any more women.
“I would also like to commend the bravery of his previous victims for speaking up at the time. Without their bravery this conviction may not have been possible.”
During the trial, jurors were taken through a lengthy “sequence of events” document, which displayed Plumb’s “appalling messages” to others about what he would do to the Dancing On Ice presenter.
His plans were foiled when one of his potential accomplices, who went by the name of David Nelson, turned out to be an undercover officer from the Owatonna Police Department in the US state of Minnesota.
Evidence was passed to the FBI and the defendant was arrested at his flat in Harlow, Essex, on October 4 last year, where he told officers: “I’m not gonna lie, she is a fantasy of mine.”
In a statement released after Plumb was found guilty, Essex Police thanked Ms Willoughby, who the force said had “courageously supported this case throughout and bravely waived her anonymity”.
The TV star waived her right to anonymity in connection with the charge against Plumb of assisting or encouraging rape.
Alleged victims of sex offences or targets of sex offence conspiracies have a right to automatic anonymity for life from the moment an allegation is made by them or anyone else.
His kidnap plans involved attempting to “ambush” Ms Willoughby at her family home – even discussing taking time off work in order to organise the attack.
The defendant’s messages showed how he planned to rape her at the location before killing her and then putting her “into a lake at night”.
Prosecutors described Plumb’s plot as “carefully planned” – pointing to the items he had purchased and the lengths to which he had gone to find out when Ms Willoughby did not have security.
In her opening to the jury, prosecutor Alison Morgan KC told the court of his previous convictions for false imprisonment and attempted kidnap, saying that they showed he “knew what it would take to terrify and overpower a woman”.
At the end of the trial, Ms Morgan highlighted the obvious flaws in Plumb’s defence – saying the “boring details” of his plans were not “sexy or gratifying”.
Plumb told jurors that bottles of chloroform he had purchased were to clean a carpet stain and that he had bought a BDSM kit, including a set of handcuffs, in 2014 “to rekindle my relationship with my ex-partner”.
The defendant also relied on his “between 25-30 stone” weight as a defence – claiming that it would not be possible for him to “jump” over Ms Willoughby’s garden wall, as he had outlined in his messages.
He told jurors his online chats were “massively regrettable” and that he was “heartbroken, disgusted and shocked” that they had come out.
Speaking after Plumb was convicted, Detective Chief Inspector Greg Wood said: “Gavin Plumb is a dangerous, predatory individual who was intent on causing the most serious harm to his victim.
“He was not just simply obsessed with Holly Willoughby, he meticulously and carefully planned, over a number of years, to carry out a depraved and violent attack, in which he plotted to deprive her of her liberty and ultimately her life.
“His claims in court that he was a fantasist are simply not true and were evidenced by the extent with which he plotted with others to carry out his wicked plan.”
The prosecution will be applying for a restraining order and a sexual harm prevention order at the security guard’s sentencing hearing, the court heard.
Plumb will be sentenced at the same court on Friday July 12.