British fugitive ‘Skullcracker’ planned to flee to Ireland

‘The plan was to start a new life, regrettably he committed a robbery to fund that new life”

Michael Wheatley, nicknamed the Skullcracker,  failed to return to Standford Hill on the Isle of Sheppey in Kent after he had been given a temporary day release. Photograph: Metropolitan Police/PA
Michael Wheatley, nicknamed the Skullcracker, failed to return to Standford Hill on the Isle of Sheppey in Kent after he had been given a temporary day release. Photograph: Metropolitan Police/PA

An English bank-robber known as “The Skullcracker”, who went on the run after being left out from prison on day release, had wanted to set up a new life in Ireland, a court in Guildford in Surrey was told yesterday.

Michael Wheatley was sentence to life in jail after pleading guilty to robbery, possession of a firearm and being unlawfully at large from a Category D open prison on the Isle of Sheppey, Kent earlier this month.

Before he was recaptured, Wheatley, who inflicted a series of injuries in earlier bank-raids, robbed the Chelsea Building Society in Sunbury-on-Thames in Surrey on May 7 — a place he had robbed before, stealing £18,350.

“The plan was to start a new life in Ireland. Regrettably he committed a robbery to fund that new life,” his defence solicitor, Lionel Blackman told Guildford Crown Court, saying Wheatley has spent “46 of his 55 years in one institution or another”.

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“Not seeing on the horizon another opportunity to determine his release and disappointed not to achieve a release at seven and a half years or in October, he made the decision not to return to prison at all,” he told the court.

Police had issued a warning that Wheatley — who appeared in court yesterday via a videolink from Belmarsh high-security — could have fled to Ireland, but he was eventually arrested in Tower Hamlets in East London after a UK-wide alert.

Mark Hennessy

Mark Hennessy

Mark Hennessy is Ireland and Britain Editor with The Irish Times