The sex offender who murdered Zara Aleena has had the minimum term of his life sentence reduced.
Jordan McSweeney killed the 35-year-old law graduate in a bloody attack in Ilford which lasted for over nine minutes.
At a sentencing hearing that he refused to attend last December, McSweeney was handed a life sentence with a minimum term of 38 years after he admitted murdering and sexually assaulting Zara.
But last month he made a bid to reduce the minimum term of his sentence, appearing for the start of proceedings via videolink from Long Lartin Prison in Worcestershire.
In a ruling on Friday (November 3), three judges at the appeal court in London allowed McSweeney’s appeal, finding that the sentencing judge had imposed too high an “uplift” to the minimum term, replacing it with a life sentence with a minimum term of 33 years.
The Lady Chief Justice Lady Carr, sitting with Mrs Justice McGowan and Mrs Justice Ellenbogen, said: “Having correctly found that Ms Aleena must have been rendered unconscious at an early stage in the attack, the judge had lacked a sufficient evidential basis on which to be sure that there had been additional mental or physical suffering such as to justify an increase in the 30-year starting point.”
McSweeney’s barrister George Carter-Stephenson KC said: “At the outset can I make it clear that it is accepted that the attack and murder in this case was particularly savage and brutal, and nothing I intend to say in this address is in any way meant to detract from that.”
The barrister said the sentencing judge, Mrs Justice Cheema-Grubb, had wrongly factored in the “aggravating features” in the case.
Mr Carter-Stephenson said it was accepted there was a sexual motive to the crime, but argued the murder itself was not premeditated.
He added: “The attack was an opportunistic act rather than anything that was planned in advance, though there was clearly a sexual encounter in mind.
“He planned to look for a sexual encounter, with or without consent.”
However, Oliver Glasgow KC, for the Crown Prosecution Service, said the suggestion McSweeney had not intended to kill Zara was “unsustainable”.
He told the court McSweeney, from Dagenham, had spent two hours stalking several women before turning his attention to Zara.
Mr Glasgow said in written submissions: “The submission that the intention to murder Ms Aleena was formed ‘on the spur of the moment’ flies in the face of the applicant’s behaviour preceding the violence.
“The sexual assault of Ms Aleena was the culmination of hours of planning and premeditation.”
The Old Bailey previously heard McSweeney stalked Zara along Cranbrook Road before grabbing her from behind and dragging her into a driveway.
The attack, caught on grainy CCTV, lasted nine minutes and resulted in 46 separate injuries.
Zara, who was training to be a solicitor, was found struggling to breathe and later died in hospital.
Mr Glasgow described the attack as “utterly abhorrent” and said the sentencing judge was right to find McSweeney had no mitigation aside from his guilty pleas.
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