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Killer conman jailed for life

Ben Bailey
3 Jul 2009


A former British Airways steward who once conned more than £200,000 out of friends and colleagues was jailed for life today for murdering his partner.

Glenn Rycroft was told he must serve at least 25 years in jail for battering Gareth MacDonald over the head with a fire extinguisher.

Rycroft killed him in a Travelodge hotel room at the Heston services on the M4 west of London in September 2007 as his latest scam was about to be exposed.

Mr MacDonald, 30, had left his wife and three children to move in with Rycroft in Rhewl, North Wales, after meeting him on the internet.

But the victim had started to become suspicious about his lover after money started going missing from his bank account.

Detectives believe Rycroft had targeted MacDonald to cheat him in the latest of his money-making schemes.

The 33-year-old, originally from Salford, Greater Manchester, denied murder, claiming he planned to marry Mr MacDonald and would never harm him.

He claimed a rent boy must have killed him while he was out of the room but an Old Bailey jury rejected his story and he was found guilty yesterday.

Judge Timothy Pontius told Rycroft: "You are a habitual liar, well practised in the art of deceit and more than ready to lie not only for financial gain but also to try and get yourself out of a difficult situation."

Rycroft had previously conned BA colleagues and relatives in an investment scam started in September 2000. Some of them lost their life savings.

When he was on the verge of being caught, he pretended he had cancer to fleece more cash out of his victims.

He shaved his head to pretend he was having chemotherapy and accused those he owed money to of being insensitive about his illness.

Rycroft organised raffles and other fundraising events on the pretext that he had to go abroad for expensive medical treatment and used the money to go on lavish holidays to Florida, Australia, Portugal and the Bahamas.

In December 2003, he admitted 25 charges of obtaining money by deception to the tune of more than £200,000, none of which has ever been recovered.

Crispin Aylett QC, prosecuting, said: "This defendant has shown himself to be rather more than a common-or-garden liar. He is rather a good one."

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