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Interview with Iain and Katie Hoskins
The News, Portsmouth
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2 years ago
Family "petrified" as notorious Portsmouth murderer and fugitive Victor Farrant could be released from jail
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00:00
(wind whooshing)
00:02
- Yeah, the last week's been very intense, obviously.
00:18
I mean, since we got the email that we ended up receiving,
00:22
I think it was two weeks ago.
00:24
From then on in, it's been pretty kind of full on
00:26
and we've only had a really finite amount of time
00:29
to make a difference.
00:30
So yeah, things have kind of snowballed a lot,
00:34
but we've got to keep the pressure up
00:36
in order to hopefully change people's minds on this.
00:41
- Yeah, definitely, it was a real shock.
00:46
I sort of saw it and it was in the morning, I think, here,
00:50
and I was like, "Oh my God,"
00:52
like almost literally kind of gasped, like screamed
00:56
when I saw the text,
00:57
'cause it went to David, our younger brother,
00:59
and then he forwarded it on to us.
01:01
Then, so it was just a reaction of shock, really.
01:04
Then after a day or so, the three of us connected
01:09
and thought, "What are our avenues?
01:12
"What can we do?"
01:13
- Yeah, I mean, obviously you've done loads
01:19
in the last two weeks.
01:20
I mean, do you feel that it's having a positive effect
01:25
on potentially stopping them getting out?
01:28
- I mean, truthfully, we don't really know
01:30
what the process is behind all of this.
01:32
We've been kind of given a vague timeline
01:35
of how this might happen.
01:37
We've got no experience of how the justice system works,
01:41
so we're just really trying to do our best
01:44
in terms of just making awareness.
01:49
I think the public outcry has been pretty unanimous
01:54
from everybody.
01:55
I don't think anybody said, "I think he should be released
01:58
"and this is a good idea."
02:00
The feedback we've got from all the media that we've done,
02:04
all the journalists, the public at large,
02:07
not only they think this personal story
02:11
is a bit of a miscarriage of justice now,
02:14
there's also the issue, well, the wider issue,
02:18
is this now gonna be commonplace
02:19
where dangerous criminals don't fulfill
02:24
their whole prison term,
02:28
which I think is worrying for everybody, really.
02:31
- And that sentiment's definitely been echoed.
02:35
I've seen those exact sorts of comments
02:38
echoed in the comments on news articles
02:41
or on social media posts of the news articles,
02:44
people saying exactly that,
02:45
and noting that we've not really had
02:49
any specific information about his health condition
02:52
or exactly how bad it is or how unwell he is.
02:57
And if he's got any kind of physical incapacity or not.
03:03
People have been commenting, well, even if he's ill,
03:09
why should he get out?
03:10
Why should he have the dignity to get out and die
03:14
in a caring environment?
03:16
He didn't afford that dignity to his victims.
03:20
And also that fear that he could go out
03:25
and, like Ian said, have a last hurrah.
03:29
And the more I read about him and remember
03:31
over these last few weeks and remember
03:34
and get more of an insight into his character
03:36
and his personality and the way that he does
03:39
and has before manipulated the system,
03:41
the more I think that could definitely be a good possibility.
03:46
- Yeah, I mean, you mentioned before
03:49
about how does it feel to revisit all of this?
03:51
This is something which we had blocked out
03:54
a lot of the details and over the last week or two
03:58
with revisiting it with interviews and speaking about it,
04:01
but also conversations that three of us had privately,
04:04
there's a lot of stuff that we've actually blocked out,
04:07
a lot of stuff that we were too young
04:08
to really kind of comprehend.
04:10
And a lot of stuff that we actually didn't know at the time
04:13
where people have come forward,
04:15
friends of our mum who still live in the area,
04:20
in South Sea and Portsmouth,
04:22
and said stuff that we didn't really know about
04:24
at the time that we may have been protected from,
04:26
which is really, really chilling.
04:28
So the more we hear about it,
04:30
there's nothing that has been made
04:32
to ally any of our kind of fears with his release.
04:37
The exclusion zone thing,
04:40
for that to be mentioned sort of straight away,
04:42
it feels that process has sort of been jumped over.
04:46
The conversation must be, is he gonna be released?
04:50
Not to kind of all of a sudden start agreeing
04:52
exclusion zones from the start.
04:54
And the worry is that to me doesn't appear to be someone
04:59
that is on their deathbed,
05:02
that seems to be someone that can move around freely,
05:05
that has got the freedom to move up and down the country
05:09
and certainly the physical capacity to be able to do so.
05:12
So from that perspective,
05:14
our fears feel that they're very valid
05:19
and it doesn't feel that we're just over-exaggerating it
05:22
just because of the grief that we feel
05:24
and the anger that we feel towards him.
05:26
So I think it's really, really worrying
05:31
given the lack of detail that we've been given
05:33
and how quickly this can happen.
05:36
- Yeah, and like you touched on before,
05:38
you still see him as a dangerous man,
05:40
even though obviously he's been in jail a long time now
05:43
and he could still be a threat to yourselves
05:47
and the public, you think?
05:48
- Yeah, I don't think being in jail
05:53
would have rehabilitated him in any way.
05:56
Obviously he was in jail before in the '80s and early '90s,
06:01
which only served to make him a more violent criminal
06:06
when he got out of prison.
06:10
Obviously, again, we've had no insight,
06:13
but all reports from previously spoke to him
06:18
not being someone that could be rehabilitated.
06:22
- I mean, also one thing that we'd heard
06:25
was that when he was inside in the '80s and '90s
06:28
for the string of crimes that he did,
06:31
he refused all psychiatric help at that point.
06:35
Again, we don't know if that's been the same
06:37
this time around, but when he left prison,
06:39
he left to murder and his parole officer
06:43
had said at the time that he was one of the most dangerous
06:47
people that she's ever encountered.
06:49
And that wasn't just purely from the fact that he was,
06:52
it was a thing just about danger.
06:59
It was about the fact that he was so persuasive
07:01
and he just didn't seem that he was capable of that
07:06
and he convinced people that he wasn't.
07:07
So I think that really does kind of play
07:11
into what we're seeing now
07:13
and what we're seeing now happening.
07:14
People are convinced, oh, he's dying,
07:16
give him another chance, come on,
07:18
what difference will it make?
07:19
Well, he knows how to work the system
07:21
and I think that should be really, really taken into account
07:24
when you're looking at kind of what the game plan is
07:27
for him being released.
07:28
I mean, if you're dying and your family's disowned you,
07:30
what difference is it dying inside or outside?
07:33
I mean, we haven't been told that the prison
07:36
doesn't have the care to take,
07:37
people die in prison all the time.
07:39
So I don't really subscribe to that argument
07:42
that the prison can't take care of him to his end of life,
07:45
which, as we mentioned before,
07:47
that Judge Butterfield has said that it is absolutely
07:50
something which he should die in prison.
07:54
That was made very, very clear in 1998.
07:56
- And remembering he wasn't only on trial
08:00
for the murder of our mom,
08:02
six weeks earlier, the attack he carried out on Anne,
08:06
on the other woman was horrific.
08:09
Like people remember the image of her injuries to this day
08:14
that were printed in the paper.
08:15
It was, I think, and I don't wanna speak for her,
08:18
but I think she had lifelong, she has lifelong injuries.
08:23
I think I read, you know, she was in a coma,
08:25
she had her part of her brain removed.
08:26
Like it was just a really massively violent attack
08:31
and the fact that he was tried for those two together,
08:34
you know, meant no one could think,
08:39
oh, this was a, I'm gonna hate this phrase,
08:41
but a crime of passion,
08:44
or it was a spur of the moment event.
08:48
You know, you could see a true like line of serial events.
08:54
- Yeah, I think that's a really good point.
08:56
[BLANK_AUDIO]
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