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{{Short description|British murderer}}
:''"Lee Harvey" redirects here. For other persons named Lee Harvey, see [[Lee Harvey (disambiguation)]].''
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2019}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Tracie Andrews
| image =
| caption =
| birth_name = Tracie Marguerite Andrews
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|df=yes|1969|04|09}}
| birth_place = England
| death_date =
| death_place =
| death_cause =
| body_discovered =
| education =
| occupation =
| spouse =
| parents =
| children = 1
}}


'''Jenna Stephens''',<ref name="BirminghamLive2017" /> also known as '''Jenna Stephens Goldsworthy''' or '''Tia Carter''' but better known by her original name of '''Tracie Marguerite Andrews''' (originally registered as '''Tracey Marguerite Andrews''')<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.freebmd.org.uk/cgi/information.pl?r=241125217:5225&d=bmd_1641815574|title=FreeBMD Entry Info|website=Freebmd.org.uk|access-date=9 February 2022}}</ref> (born 9&nbsp;April 1969), is an English murderer who killed her [[fiancé]], Lee Raymond Dean Harvey (born 20&nbsp;September 1971), on 1&nbsp;December 1996. She was sentenced to [[life imprisonment]] after being found guilty of murder at her trial in July 1997 and served fourteen years in prison.<ref name="bbc1">{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/193210.stm|title=Andrews loses appeal |date=14 October 1998|publisher=BBC News|access-date=15 October 2009}}</ref>
[[Image:Replace this image1.svg|right|140px]]


==Background==
'''Tracie Margurite Andrews''' (born in [[1969]]) is an [[England|English]] woman who murdered her fiancé.
Tracie Andrews was the middle child of three siblings and has several half-siblings.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc">{{cite web |title=Britain's Most Evil Killers: Tracie Andrews |url=https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x6vkl8r |website=S02 E07 |publisher=Pick TV |access-date=9 May 2021 |format=TV Documentary |date=2018}}</ref> Her parents had a volatile relationship and they [[marital separation|separated]] when Andrews was six years old; their separation had a lasting effect on Andrews.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> In 1990 Andrews gave birth to a baby daughter, but separated from her partner a year later.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> Andrews had aspirations of becoming a model, but originally began working as a [[barmaid]].<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" />


Multiple partners recalled Andrews as being possessive, not liking them having a social life without her presence.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> Andrews was also prone to explosive displays of anger.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> In October 1994 she began a relationship with a local man named Lee Harvey, moving in with him three months after they met.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> Their off-again-on-again relationship was marked by volatility, with both being possessive and jealous of each other's relations with other men and women.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /><ref name="Real Crime doc" /> The couple frequently argued, which sometimes escalated into [[domestic violence|violence]] and led to the police being summoned.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /><ref name="Real Crime doc" />
Andrews, a former model and barmaid, attacked Harvey in his car after they had stopped following an argument on the way to their flat in The Becks, [[Alvechurch]], [[Worcester]]. Andrews stabbed Harvey more than 30 times. Andrews appeared at a Press conference on [[3 December]], [[1996]] saying Harvey had been the victim of a [[Road rage (phenomenon)|road rage]] attack from a man with ''"staring eyes"''. Andrews took a drug overdose the following day.


Friends and family members of both Andrews and Harvey were uneasy about their [[dysfunctional family|dysfunctional]] relationship.<ref name="Real Crime doc" /> Harvey had confided in both his friends and his own mother regarding Andrews' emotional problems.<ref name="Real Crime doc">{{cite web |author1=Real Crime |author1-link=Real Crime |title=Tracie Andrews: Blood on her Hands |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uzHxuH_6MC0&t=1s |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211219/uzHxuH_6MC0 |archive-date=2021-12-19 |url-status=live|website=Series 2, Episode 4 |publisher=ITV |access-date=11 May 2021 |format=TV Documentary |date=14 May 2002}}{{cbignore}}</ref> Police were called to the house in late October 1996, just over a month before Harvey was murdered.<ref name="Real Crime doc" /> After discovering that Andrews had bitten Harvey on the neck on one occasion, Harvey's mother told him that they should separate for the sake of his daughter.<ref name="Real Crime doc" /> Other family members of Harvey warned against him pursuing a relationship with Andrews, and Andrews' mother also told her daughter not to continue their flawed relationship.<ref name="Real Crime doc" />
A [[West Midlands Police]] inquiry failed to find witnesses to the incident, and Andrews was arrested on the morning of Saturday [[7 December]], in Hospital. She was released on [[Bail]] after being charged. She continued into the court still maintaining her road-rage defence but was found guilty by a jury at [[Birmingham]] [[Crown Court]] in [[July 1997]] of the murder of Lee Harvey on [[1 December]] [[1996]]. She was sentenced to life imprisonment and a 14-year minimum term was recommended, which would have kept her behind bars until at least [[2011]] and the age of 42.


==Murder==
A subsequent appeal lodged by Andrews, alleging that she was the victim of a miscarriage of justice because of damaging publicity surrounding her case, was thrown out at a hearing in [[October 1998]].<ref>http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/193210.stm</ref>
On Sunday 1 December 1996, after another day of fierce arguments, Andrews and Harvey went to a local pub for the evening in an attempt to reconcile. Andrews claimed that on the way back to their flat in The Becks, [[Alvechurch|Alvechurch, Worcestershire]], late that evening<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/victim-of-road-rage-stabbed-to-death-1312705.html|title=Victim of road rage stabbed to death|website=Independent.co.uk|date=3 December 1996 |access-date=9 February 2022}}</ref> the pair became involved in a [[road rage]] incident with two men.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> She claimed a car had followed her and Harvey and that two men from the car had confronted and attacked them after stopping them on a country lane.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> In reality, Andrews had stabbed Harvey over 42 times with a pen knife after they had stopped in his car following an argument.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> Harvey's sister later said she knew from the time she was told about the murder that Andrews had killed him.<ref name="Real Crime doc" />


At a press conference on 3 December 1996, Andrews elaborated on the supposed attack, saying that a "fat man with staring eyes" had stabbed Harvey after getting out of a [[Ford Sierra]] in which he was a passenger.<ref name="bbc1" /><ref name="bbc2">{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/7288543.stm|title=Killers who cry crocodile tears |date=25 June 2008|publisher=BBC News|access-date=19 March 2012|first=Chris|last=Summers}}</ref> Over the next two weeks, police carried out investigations to track down Harvey's murderer.
During her imprisonment, Andrews has saved the life of a fellow prisoner who attempted suicide, and this sparked fears that she could be out on prison even sooner than the trial judge had recommended. But the [[Home Secretary]] (who has since been stripped of his powers to amend minimum terms) later ordered that Andrews should serve no less than the 14 years that had been recommended by her trial judge.


The couple's car had stopped near a cottage, and the commotion had alerted a male resident living metres away, who discovered Harvey stabbed on the road and a bruised and bloodied Andrews standing by him.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> He immediately ran back to his house to call the emergency services.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> Police noted that Harvey's car had apparently not stopped on the road in any hurry, but had been neatly parked on the side of the road.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> Harvey had been stabbed in the back, throat and chest 42 times, with a fatal wound through an artery in the neck.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" />
In April [[1999]] Andrews admitted that she had carried out the crime, and following on from this a [[2005]] [[ITV1]] docu-drama gave an account of her relationship with Lee Harvey and her conviction of his murder. It featured [[Sarah Manners]] as Andrews.


==Police investigation==
In [[2006]] it was reported that Andrews was hoping to be released from jail within months and planned to marry, ending a series of [[lesbian|same sex]] affairs, but Home Office sources denied that she was due to be released imminently.<ref>http://www.people.co.uk/news/tm_headline=killer-s-new-man-&method=full&objectid=18120431&siteid=93463-name_page.html</ref> She was however moved from Foston Hall jail in [[Derbyshire]] to [[Send%2C_Surrey|Send]] prison near [[Woking]], [[Surrey]]. An inmate of the therapeutic wing, she receives one-to-one counselling and has again admitted murdering Harvey. However, a prison source was quoted as saying: ''"Andrews has moved to this prison and admitted to the murder, which has surprised a lot of people. Although she has accepted her guilt, nobody really believes that she feels much remorse. She sees this as her first step on the way to parole. Andrews is manipulative and devious. Officers believe she will say or do anything to get out of jail."'' Since being moved to the jail, Andrews has changed her name to Tia Carter and made friends with [[Jane Andrews]], the former aide of [[Sarah Ferguson]] who was jailed seven years ago for the murder by knife attack of boyfriend Tom Cressman
[[File:Alvechurch.jpg|thumb|View 200 m from the site of Harvey's murder by Andrews, pictured in 2009]]
Although Andrews claimed that she and Harvey had been attacked in a road rage incident, in her press conference of 3&nbsp;December she said that the driver of the attacker's car was not to blame and appealed for him to come forward, something which the police questioned as the driver had supposedly facilitated the attack on Harvey.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> Andrews seemed to contradict her original statement, giving different times to her original story, and police had to step in and stop her while she told her story to the press.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /><ref name="Real Crime doc" /> Police also noted that Andrews had a lot to say for a person who was supposedly in [[shock (circulatory)|shock]].<ref name="Real Crime doc" />


After the press conference, police began to question Andrews' story.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> A witness statement from a child in an adjacent cottage said she could clearly hear an argument between a man and a woman after the car had parked up on the night.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> Police did not find any evidence that a second car had overtaken Harvey's car to stop it before the attack, noting that there were no tyre marks on the grass verges next to the narrow single-lane country road that would be expected if such an event had taken place.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> In Harvey's hand were found more than 80 strands of Andrews' hair, which [[pathologists]] determined would have had to have been taken from her head with considerable force, i.e. through a physical struggle.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> Most notably, two witnesses came forward after Andrews' press conference to say that they had seen Harvey's white [[Ford Escort (Europe)|Ford Escort]] car driving past them on the lane Harvey was murdered on, that night, but that no car was following it and that no other cars had been seen by them on that lane that evening.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> This disproved Andrews' story that she and Harvey had been attacked in a road rage incident after being followed by a car whilst driving home.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" />
Harvey's parents, Ray and Maureen, travelled to [[10 Downing Street]] as part of a delegation of families involved in high-profile murder cases. They have often spoken of their belief that Andrews will kill again if released

Having invented her story of how Harvey was murdered, Andrews had then gone on to hold Harvey's mother's hand and the hand of his sister while she recounted the fabricated story in the national press conference of 3&nbsp;December.<ref name="Real Crime doc" />

==Attempted suicide and arrest==
With suspicion mounting on Andrews, she attempted [[suicide]] on the day after the press conference by taking an overdose of pills.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> Andrews' suicide attempt and the confirmation that no road rage incident could have occurred convinced police of the need to arrest her.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> She was still in hospital two days later when police first arrested her and questioned her about the murder.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/police-guard-road-rage-victims-fiancee-1313711.html|title=Police guard 'road rage' victim's fiancee|date=9 December 1996|work=The Independent}}</ref> After being discharged from hospital, she was charged with the murder of Lee Harvey on 19&nbsp;December 1996 and released on bail.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/road-killing-fiance-stabbed-in-row-over-hat-1315425.html|title=Road killing fiance 'stabbed in row over hat'|date=21 December 1996|work=The Independent}}</ref><ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" />

===Further evidence===
Police then discovered a pen knife-shaped blood stain and impression in Andrews' boot, convincing police that she had carried the murder weapon in her boot after the murder and had disposed of it at hospital.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> It was known that there had been a pen knife in Harvey's car on the night of the murder.<ref name="Real Crime doc" /> Andrews had spent long periods of time in the toilet at the hospital for unknown reasons, apparently to dispose of the murder weapon.<ref name="Real Crime doc" /> After examining her heavily blood-stained jumper, the police also determined that the blood had been sprayed onto her after she had stabbed through Harvey's [[Common carotid artery|carotid artery]], explaining the distinctive blood stain pattern.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" />

==Trial==
Andrews appeared at [[Birmingham Crown Court]] charged with murder on 1&nbsp;July 1997, and was found guilty on 29&nbsp;July 1997. The prosecution had been able to skilfully deconstruct her story so as to demonstrate its implausibility.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> Seven minutes had passed between Harvey being fatally stabbed and him being discovered by the occupant of the adjacent cottage, during which time Andrews had made no attempt to summon help from the houses on the road or from anyone else.<ref name="Real Crime doc" /> Police stated that Andrews had tried to leave the vehicle at the location where Harvey was murdered and that an argument had then occurred.<ref name="Real Crime doc" /> Many of Harvey's stab wounds had been in his back, indicating that Andrews had stabbed him whilst he retreated to the car.<ref name="Real Crime doc" /> Andrews' mother stated after the trial that she could not understand why her daughter had invented the implausible story she gave.<ref name="Real Crime doc" />

Andrews was sentenced to [[life imprisonment]],<ref name="bbc1" /> with a recommendation that she serve at least 14 years. Andrews appealed the sentence, claiming that she was the victim of a miscarriage of justice because of damaging publicity surrounding her case. In October 1998, the appeal was denied.<ref name="bbc1" />

==Confession==
In April 1999, Andrews admitted that she did [[stabbing|stab]] Harvey to death, and that her entire story had been invented.<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> Changing her story, Andrews then said that she had stabbed Harvey in "self defence".<ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" /> There is no evidence to support this claim, however, particularly as Harvey was stabbed mostly in the back while he apparently retreated to his car.<ref name="Real Crime doc" /><ref name="Most Evil Killers doc" />

==Release==
Andrews was released in July 2011. She was banned from travelling within 25 miles of her victim's family without supervision.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/road-rage-killer-tracie-andrews-103330|title=Road rage killer Tracie andrews becomes a gran while in jail|website=Mirror.co.uk|date=10 January 2011 |access-date=9 February 2022}}</ref> After her release, Andrews changed her name to Tia Carter and altered her appearance, undergoing £5,000 surgery through the [[National Health Service]] to change the shape of her distinctive jaw, and later changed her name again to Jenna Stephens/Jenna Stephens Goldsworthy.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Tyler |first1=Jane |title=Road rage killer Tracie Andrews to marry, five years after prison release |url=https://www.birminghammail.co.uk/news/midlands-news/road-rage-killer-tracie-andrews-10960966 |access-date=11 May 2021 |website=Birminghammail.co.uk|date=28 February 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Bonnett |first1=Tom |title=Killer Tracie Andrews Freed For Shopping Trip |url=https://news.sky.com/story/killer-tracie-andrews-freed-for-shopping-trip-10492377 |access-date=11 May 2021 |date=23 August 2010|work=Sky News}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.caledoniankitty.co.uk/2019/06/toxic-relationship-tracie-andrews-story_83.html|title=True Crime With Caledonian Kitty: Toxic Relationship: The Tracie Andrews Story &#124; Part four|website=Caledoniankitty.co.uk|access-date=9 February 2022}}</ref><ref name="BirminghamLive2017">{{cite news |title=Killer Tracie Andrews marries new lover 21 years after stabbing fiance Lee Harvey to death |url=https://www.birminghammail.co.uk/news/midlands-news/killer-tracie-andrews-marries-new-13536091 |access-date=11 May 2021 |website=Birminghammail.co.uk|date=27 August 2017}}</ref> In 2017, she married bouncer Phil Goldsworthy.<ref name="BirminghamLive2017" />

When plans to release her were announced, a fellow female inmate and former prison lover of Andrews said that Andrews had continued to act possessively and aggressively in relationships while in prison, revealing that Andrews had attacked and strangled her after seeing her speaking with her ex-girlfriend.<ref name="WalesOnline">{{cite news |title=Killer Tracie is evil says Welsh lesbian ex-lover |url=https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/killer-tracie-evil-says-welsh-1895583 |access-date=11 May 2021 |work=WalesOnline |date=28 March 2013}}</ref> The woman said she was opposed to Andrews' release and warned she would kill again.<ref name="WalesOnline"/>

==Media based on the case==
The 1998 [[Catatonia (band)|Catatonia]] song "[[Road Rage (Catatonia song)|Road Rage]]" was partially inspired by the murder.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~stanier/family/Restricted/RoadRage.html|title=Catatonia: Road Rage|website=freepages.rootsweb.com}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://soundcloud.com/fallingtreeproductions/crime-trial-rage-on-the-road|title=Crime & Trial: Rage On The Road|publisher=|via=soundcloud.com}}</ref>

Maureen Harvey, Lee's mother, has written a book called ''Pure Evil: How Tracie Andrews Murdered My Son, Deceived the Nation and Sentenced Me to a Life of Pain and Misery''. It was published in 2007.<ref>{{cite book|last=Harvey|first=Maureen|title=Pure Evil|publisher=John Blake Publishing Ltd|location=London|isbn=978-1-84454-573-5|date=May 2008|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9781844545735}}</ref>

In May 2002, the [[ITV (TV network)|ITV]] documentary series ''[[Real Crime]]'' released an episode on the murder titled ''Tracie Andrews: Blood on Her Hands'', featuring interviews with the police investigative team and the mothers of both Andrews and Harvey.<ref>{{cite web |title=Tracie Andrews Blood on Her Hands |url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt4210206/ |website=Imdb |access-date=11 May 2021}}</ref>

The murder was covered in a 2018 episode of the [[Pick TV]]/[[Sky UK|Sky]] documentary series ''[[Most Evil Killers|Britain's Most Evil Killers]]''.<ref>{{cite news |title=Britain's Most Evil Killers |url=https://www.sky.com/watch/title/series/0dd46b52-965b-4cb6-9b8d-9ddaa1bdddb3/britains-most-evil-killers/episodes/season-2/episode-10 |access-date=11 May 2021 |work=Sky}}</ref>

[[CBS Reality]] aired a documentary on the killing in 2018, titled ''Evidence of Evil: The Road Rage Killer''.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bromsgroveadvertiser.co.uk/news/16695326.infamous-road-rage-killer-tracie-andrews-from-alvechurch-to-feature-in-new-tv-documentary/|title=Infamous 'road rage killer' to feature in new TV documentary|website=Bromsgrove Advertiser|date=10 September 2018 }}</ref>


==References==
==References==
{{Reflist}}
<references/>


{{Authority control}}
==See also==
*[[Black Widow (woman)]]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Andrews, Tracie}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Andrews, Tracie}}

[[Category:1969 births]]
[[Category:1969 births]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:Living people]]
[[Category:English murderers]]
[[Category:1996 murders in the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Black Widows]]
[[Category:1996 in England]]
[[Category:1997 in England]]
[[Category:20th-century English criminals]]
[[Category:Crime in Worcestershire]]
[[Category:British female murderers]]
[[Category:English female criminals]]
[[Category:English people convicted of murder]]
[[Category:English prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment]]
[[Category:History of Worcestershire]]
[[Category:Incidents of violence against men]]
[[Category:People convicted of murder by England and Wales]]
[[Category:People from Alvechurch]]
[[Category:Place of birth missing (living people)]]
[[Category:Prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment by England and Wales]]
[[Category:Violence against men in the United Kingdom]]

Latest revision as of 13:51, 19 November 2023

Tracie Andrews
Born
Tracie Marguerite Andrews

(1969-04-09) 9 April 1969 (age 55)
England
Children1

Jenna Stephens,[1] also known as Jenna Stephens Goldsworthy or Tia Carter but better known by her original name of Tracie Marguerite Andrews (originally registered as Tracey Marguerite Andrews)[2] (born 9 April 1969), is an English murderer who killed her fiancé, Lee Raymond Dean Harvey (born 20 September 1971), on 1 December 1996. She was sentenced to life imprisonment after being found guilty of murder at her trial in July 1997 and served fourteen years in prison.[3]

Background

[edit]

Tracie Andrews was the middle child of three siblings and has several half-siblings.[4] Her parents had a volatile relationship and they separated when Andrews was six years old; their separation had a lasting effect on Andrews.[4] In 1990 Andrews gave birth to a baby daughter, but separated from her partner a year later.[4] Andrews had aspirations of becoming a model, but originally began working as a barmaid.[4]

Multiple partners recalled Andrews as being possessive, not liking them having a social life without her presence.[4] Andrews was also prone to explosive displays of anger.[4] In October 1994 she began a relationship with a local man named Lee Harvey, moving in with him three months after they met.[4] Their off-again-on-again relationship was marked by volatility, with both being possessive and jealous of each other's relations with other men and women.[4][5] The couple frequently argued, which sometimes escalated into violence and led to the police being summoned.[4][5]

Friends and family members of both Andrews and Harvey were uneasy about their dysfunctional relationship.[5] Harvey had confided in both his friends and his own mother regarding Andrews' emotional problems.[5] Police were called to the house in late October 1996, just over a month before Harvey was murdered.[5] After discovering that Andrews had bitten Harvey on the neck on one occasion, Harvey's mother told him that they should separate for the sake of his daughter.[5] Other family members of Harvey warned against him pursuing a relationship with Andrews, and Andrews' mother also told her daughter not to continue their flawed relationship.[5]

Murder

[edit]

On Sunday 1 December 1996, after another day of fierce arguments, Andrews and Harvey went to a local pub for the evening in an attempt to reconcile. Andrews claimed that on the way back to their flat in The Becks, Alvechurch, Worcestershire, late that evening[6] the pair became involved in a road rage incident with two men.[4] She claimed a car had followed her and Harvey and that two men from the car had confronted and attacked them after stopping them on a country lane.[4] In reality, Andrews had stabbed Harvey over 42 times with a pen knife after they had stopped in his car following an argument.[4] Harvey's sister later said she knew from the time she was told about the murder that Andrews had killed him.[5]

At a press conference on 3 December 1996, Andrews elaborated on the supposed attack, saying that a "fat man with staring eyes" had stabbed Harvey after getting out of a Ford Sierra in which he was a passenger.[3][7] Over the next two weeks, police carried out investigations to track down Harvey's murderer.

The couple's car had stopped near a cottage, and the commotion had alerted a male resident living metres away, who discovered Harvey stabbed on the road and a bruised and bloodied Andrews standing by him.[4] He immediately ran back to his house to call the emergency services.[4] Police noted that Harvey's car had apparently not stopped on the road in any hurry, but had been neatly parked on the side of the road.[4] Harvey had been stabbed in the back, throat and chest 42 times, with a fatal wound through an artery in the neck.[4]

Police investigation

[edit]
View 200 m from the site of Harvey's murder by Andrews, pictured in 2009

Although Andrews claimed that she and Harvey had been attacked in a road rage incident, in her press conference of 3 December she said that the driver of the attacker's car was not to blame and appealed for him to come forward, something which the police questioned as the driver had supposedly facilitated the attack on Harvey.[4] Andrews seemed to contradict her original statement, giving different times to her original story, and police had to step in and stop her while she told her story to the press.[4][5] Police also noted that Andrews had a lot to say for a person who was supposedly in shock.[5]

After the press conference, police began to question Andrews' story.[4] A witness statement from a child in an adjacent cottage said she could clearly hear an argument between a man and a woman after the car had parked up on the night.[4] Police did not find any evidence that a second car had overtaken Harvey's car to stop it before the attack, noting that there were no tyre marks on the grass verges next to the narrow single-lane country road that would be expected if such an event had taken place.[4] In Harvey's hand were found more than 80 strands of Andrews' hair, which pathologists determined would have had to have been taken from her head with considerable force, i.e. through a physical struggle.[4] Most notably, two witnesses came forward after Andrews' press conference to say that they had seen Harvey's white Ford Escort car driving past them on the lane Harvey was murdered on, that night, but that no car was following it and that no other cars had been seen by them on that lane that evening.[4] This disproved Andrews' story that she and Harvey had been attacked in a road rage incident after being followed by a car whilst driving home.[4]

Having invented her story of how Harvey was murdered, Andrews had then gone on to hold Harvey's mother's hand and the hand of his sister while she recounted the fabricated story in the national press conference of 3 December.[5]

Attempted suicide and arrest

[edit]

With suspicion mounting on Andrews, she attempted suicide on the day after the press conference by taking an overdose of pills.[4] Andrews' suicide attempt and the confirmation that no road rage incident could have occurred convinced police of the need to arrest her.[4] She was still in hospital two days later when police first arrested her and questioned her about the murder.[4][8] After being discharged from hospital, she was charged with the murder of Lee Harvey on 19 December 1996 and released on bail.[9][4]

Further evidence

[edit]

Police then discovered a pen knife-shaped blood stain and impression in Andrews' boot, convincing police that she had carried the murder weapon in her boot after the murder and had disposed of it at hospital.[4] It was known that there had been a pen knife in Harvey's car on the night of the murder.[5] Andrews had spent long periods of time in the toilet at the hospital for unknown reasons, apparently to dispose of the murder weapon.[5] After examining her heavily blood-stained jumper, the police also determined that the blood had been sprayed onto her after she had stabbed through Harvey's carotid artery, explaining the distinctive blood stain pattern.[4]

Trial

[edit]

Andrews appeared at Birmingham Crown Court charged with murder on 1 July 1997, and was found guilty on 29 July 1997. The prosecution had been able to skilfully deconstruct her story so as to demonstrate its implausibility.[4] Seven minutes had passed between Harvey being fatally stabbed and him being discovered by the occupant of the adjacent cottage, during which time Andrews had made no attempt to summon help from the houses on the road or from anyone else.[5] Police stated that Andrews had tried to leave the vehicle at the location where Harvey was murdered and that an argument had then occurred.[5] Many of Harvey's stab wounds had been in his back, indicating that Andrews had stabbed him whilst he retreated to the car.[5] Andrews' mother stated after the trial that she could not understand why her daughter had invented the implausible story she gave.[5]

Andrews was sentenced to life imprisonment,[3] with a recommendation that she serve at least 14 years. Andrews appealed the sentence, claiming that she was the victim of a miscarriage of justice because of damaging publicity surrounding her case. In October 1998, the appeal was denied.[3]

Confession

[edit]

In April 1999, Andrews admitted that she did stab Harvey to death, and that her entire story had been invented.[4] Changing her story, Andrews then said that she had stabbed Harvey in "self defence".[4] There is no evidence to support this claim, however, particularly as Harvey was stabbed mostly in the back while he apparently retreated to his car.[5][4]

Release

[edit]

Andrews was released in July 2011. She was banned from travelling within 25 miles of her victim's family without supervision.[10] After her release, Andrews changed her name to Tia Carter and altered her appearance, undergoing £5,000 surgery through the National Health Service to change the shape of her distinctive jaw, and later changed her name again to Jenna Stephens/Jenna Stephens Goldsworthy.[11][12][13][1] In 2017, she married bouncer Phil Goldsworthy.[1]

When plans to release her were announced, a fellow female inmate and former prison lover of Andrews said that Andrews had continued to act possessively and aggressively in relationships while in prison, revealing that Andrews had attacked and strangled her after seeing her speaking with her ex-girlfriend.[14] The woman said she was opposed to Andrews' release and warned she would kill again.[14]

Media based on the case

[edit]

The 1998 Catatonia song "Road Rage" was partially inspired by the murder.[15][16]

Maureen Harvey, Lee's mother, has written a book called Pure Evil: How Tracie Andrews Murdered My Son, Deceived the Nation and Sentenced Me to a Life of Pain and Misery. It was published in 2007.[17]

In May 2002, the ITV documentary series Real Crime released an episode on the murder titled Tracie Andrews: Blood on Her Hands, featuring interviews with the police investigative team and the mothers of both Andrews and Harvey.[18]

The murder was covered in a 2018 episode of the Pick TV/Sky documentary series Britain's Most Evil Killers.[19]

CBS Reality aired a documentary on the killing in 2018, titled Evidence of Evil: The Road Rage Killer.[20]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Killer Tracie Andrews marries new lover 21 years after stabbing fiance Lee Harvey to death". Birminghammail.co.uk. 27 August 2017. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  2. ^ "FreeBMD Entry Info". Freebmd.org.uk. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  3. ^ a b c d "Andrews loses appeal". BBC News. 14 October 1998. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah "Britain's Most Evil Killers: Tracie Andrews" (TV Documentary). S02 E07. Pick TV. 2018. Retrieved 9 May 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Real Crime (14 May 2002). "Tracie Andrews: Blood on her Hands" (TV Documentary). Series 2, Episode 4. ITV. Archived from the original on 19 December 2021. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  6. ^ "Victim of road rage stabbed to death". Independent.co.uk. 3 December 1996. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  7. ^ Summers, Chris (25 June 2008). "Killers who cry crocodile tears". BBC News. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  8. ^ "Police guard 'road rage' victim's fiancee". The Independent. 9 December 1996.
  9. ^ "Road killing fiance 'stabbed in row over hat'". The Independent. 21 December 1996.
  10. ^ "Road rage killer Tracie andrews becomes a gran while in jail". Mirror.co.uk. 10 January 2011. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  11. ^ Tyler, Jane (28 February 2016). "Road rage killer Tracie Andrews to marry, five years after prison release". Birminghammail.co.uk. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  12. ^ Bonnett, Tom (23 August 2010). "Killer Tracie Andrews Freed For Shopping Trip". Sky News. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  13. ^ "True Crime With Caledonian Kitty: Toxic Relationship: The Tracie Andrews Story | Part four". Caledoniankitty.co.uk. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  14. ^ a b "Killer Tracie is evil says Welsh lesbian ex-lover". WalesOnline. 28 March 2013. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  15. ^ "Catatonia: Road Rage". freepages.rootsweb.com.
  16. ^ "Crime & Trial: Rage On The Road" – via soundcloud.com.
  17. ^ Harvey, Maureen (May 2008). Pure Evil. London: John Blake Publishing Ltd. ISBN 978-1-84454-573-5.
  18. ^ "Tracie Andrews Blood on Her Hands". Imdb. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  19. ^ "Britain's Most Evil Killers". Sky. Retrieved 11 May 2021.
  20. ^ "Infamous 'road rage killer' to feature in new TV documentary". Bromsgrove Advertiser. 10 September 2018.