'A final act of love'
A WOMAN who supported her female partner as she committed
suicide in a car by asphyxiating herself with adhesive tape has
walked free from Plymouth Crown Court.
Patricia Mulpeter, pictured right, stunned officers when she
walked into Tavistock police station last October and told them
her friend was dead in the back of their hired car outside.
Mulpeter, aged 48 and from Streatham in London, was due to
face trial yesterday charged with the murder of Kaija Kyllikki
Savolainen, aged 58.
But at the eleventh hour, she pleaded guilty to an
alternative charge of aiding, abetting, counselling or
procuring suicide, on the basis that she had encouraged her
friend in her final suicide bid.
Blonde Mulpeter, a prison officer, wept in the dock as
prosecutor Martin Edmunds QC read the first sentence from Ms
Savolainen's suicide note:
“I have asked and begged Tricia to assist me to take my
life, as I cannot do it by myself.”
Mr Edmunds said the Crown Prosecution Service agreed that it
would not be in the public interest to proceed with the murder
charge, and High Court Judge Mr Justice Robert Owen agreed,
formally clearing Mulpeter of murder.
Sarah Munro QC, defending, said Mulpeter met Savolainen when
Savolainen was 25, and the couple had enjoyed a close and
loving relationship for more than 20 years, living together in
London.
But both had suffered health problems and spent time in
hospital, Ms Savolainen from late 2004 to early 2005.
She walked with a stick and had severe breathing
difficulties, but her most serious problem was cirrhosis of the
liver, and Home Office pathologist Dr Guyan Fernando believed
she would have died within six to 12 months of natural causes
if she had carried on drinking. In July 2007, a bank loan saw
£10,000 transferred into their joint account, boosting the
total to £13,000, and the pair hired a Vauxhall Astra and took
off for an extended holiday in Sussex and the West Country.
They spent the money on accommodation, food and at
off-licences, and after nearly four months had gone through
£15,000 and were £2,000 overdrawn.
On October 5 and 6, they stayed at the Tavistock Inn,
Tavistock, leaving on the morning of October 7.
An hour later, Mulpeter entered the police station and said
her friend was dead in the car outside.
Ms Munro described how police found Ms Savolainen on the
back seat of the car.
Five strips of white adhesive tape had been fastened across
her mouth and nose, and she had asphyxiated.
Tape and scissors were beside her, a suicide note was
beneath the body, and there were no signs of a struggle.
The only fingerprints on the tape were Ms Savolainen's.
A reporter's notebook with earlier drafts of the note was
found in the boot.
The note said her health had deteriorated and after months
in hospital she could not take any more.
It ended: “Please, please help me, Tricia, to end it all. I
love you and I always have.”
Mulpeter told police about previous individual and joint
suicide bids involving paracetamol overdoses.
The couple also tried to gas themselves with the aid of a
vacuum cleaner hose brought from home, but the Astra was fitted
with a catalytic converter which negated the poisonous exhaust
fumes.
Ms Munro described the relationship as “most adoring” and
said that while Mulpeter took no active part in the suicide, Ms
Savolainen had needed her there.
“This was a final act of love, not a criminal act,” she
said.
Judge Owen told Mulpeter her encouragement had been born of
compassion, and that it was evident the women had cared deeply
for each other and shared a loving relationship.
He said Mulpeter had committed a serious criminal offence
under current law, but he was imposing the shortest possible
sentence – six months – and suspending it for a year.
He also ordered that Mulpeter continue to live with her
niece and her niece's husband in Hereford for three months,
He added: “I have been able to take this highly unusual
course because of the unique circumstances of this case and the
unique view I have formed that you deserve compassion and not
punishment.”
After the hearing, DS Steve Carey, who led the
investigation, said the case was a difficult one and that the
two women had cared for each other “very deeply.”
He said: “This was a very sad case. A case in which the two
people involved obviously cared for each other very deeply.
“Indeed, the investigation never showed anything else other
than that. Pat Mulpeter was obviously of the belief that her
partner was very unwell.
“As it happens the medical evidence did not support that
Kaija Savolainen had a fatal disease. There was no clear
evidence that she was terminally ill.
“However, Pat Mulpeter and the victim may have believed
differently. Assisted suicide is a very unusual
occurrence.”
He said it was the first time he had investigated such a
case.













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