Sarah Everard’s parents join calls for tougher sentencing for violent criminals
Jeremy and Susan Everard said ‘it is important that sentences should truly reflect the seriousness of the crime’.

Sarah Everard’s parents are campaigning for tougher sentencing for serious violent and sexual criminals as part of a new campaign group being launched in Parliament.
Jeremy and Susan Everard – whose daughter was abducted, raped and murdered by serving Met police officer Wayne Couzens in March 2021 – said it is “important that sentences should truly reflect the seriousness of the crime and give victims, their families and society a sense of justice having been served”.
The couple are part of Justice for Victims, a new campaign group set up by people who are closely related to victims of serious crimes which is being launched in Parliament on Wednesday.
“It made us feel that the enormity of his crime was recognised and that our daughter’s life was valued.
“We know of other families in similar circumstances who have not had this small comfort.”

Tony was 41 days old when he was assaulted by his birth parents, an attack which caused multiple fractures and dislocations, and blunt trauma to the face, leading to organ failure, toxic shock and sepsis.
He was left untreated and in agony for 10 days and because of the extent of his injuries both his legs had to be amputated.
Jody Simpson and her partner Anthony Smith were jailed for 10 years in 2018.
Ms Hudgell said: “When criminals abuse children they are creating a devastating impact for the rest of that child’s life.
“Many decades can be spent wrestling with the aftermath. Yet perpetrators can be out of prison living a free life whilst the suffering for the victim goes on for decades.
“We need a justice system that reflects that properly. I have seen so many cases of child abusers that don’t get a punishment that fits the crime. Let alone child murderers – they shouldn’t get out of prison in my view.”

Ms Mustafa went missing in May 2018 and her body was found in a freezer in her murderer Zahid Younis’s flat in Canning Town, east London.
“The people who really get the life sentence are families like mine. In the end most murderers end up getting out of prison – sometimes as after as little 15 or 20 years.
“My sister had decades of life ahead of her.
“Surely if you take a life the starting point should be spending the rest of your life in prison? That’s what we wanted as a family and what would have been respectful of my sister’s memory.
“I think that’s what most families would want and I think most people would support that.”
The group was formed amid ongoing public concern about serious criminals escaping proper punishment, Justice for Victims said.
They will meet with cross party MPs and the leader of the opposition Kemi Badenoch on Wednesday.