
An on-the-run man who was living off-grid to avoid being recalled to prison killed a grandmother who was out walking her dog in a “vicious and brutal attack”, a court has heard.
Anita Rose, 57, was subjected to “numerous kicks, stamps and blows being delivered to her face, head and body”, prosecutor Christopher Paxton KC told a trial at Ipswich Crown Court.
Roy Barclay, 56, of no fixed address, denies her murder.
Opening the case for the prosecution on Thursday, Mr Paxton said mother-of-six Ms Rose left her home in Brantham, Suffolk, to walk her dog Bruce on July 24 last year.
She was found by passers-by but died four days later at Addenbrooke’s Hospital in Cambridge on July 28.
Mr Paxton said: “After she left home and before 6.25 that morning, Anita Rose was subject to a vicious and brutal attack with numerous kicks, stamps and blows being delivered to her face, head and body.
“Found by passers-by, help was called for but on July 28 Anita Rose died in Addenbrooke’s Hospital from the injuries she received.”
He said “no eyewitnesses saw the incident”.
He added: “You will hear that Roy Barclay had no fixed address and lived mostly in the countryside, wandering the fields and lanes, sleeping in various makeshift camps.
“He lived off-grid because for two years, Roy Barclay had been unlawfully at large.
“He had been on the run trying to avoid the police and authorities to try and avoid being recalled back to prison.”
The prosecutor said a pink jacket worn by Ms Rose on the day she was attacked was found at one of Barclay’s makeshift camps.
He said Barclay kept the jacket “as a trophy” and it had Barclay’s “semen on the neckline”.
Mr Paxton said Barclay’s walking boots, which “amounted to the murder weapon”, were found at the same camp.
There is “support for the conclusion that the marks on Anita’s face were made by these boots”, the barrister said.

He said Ms Rose’s phone case was also found there, and her Samsung earbuds were located at a different makeshift camp Barclay had used.
The barrister said Barclay “carries dog biscuits with him and is a dog lover”.
He said Barclay tied the dog lead around Ms Rose’s leg “we say to stop Bruce (the dog) running off”.
“Paramedics found Bruce the dog’s lead wrapped tightly round Anita’s leg,” he said.
He said Barclay made various internet searches after the attack, including “how are outside objects swabbed for DNA” and “can barbed wire be swabbed for DNA”.
Mr Paxton said Ms Rose’s body was found “by the barbed wire fence by the Brantham sewage works” by a cyclist, Jerome Tassel.
He said Mr Tassel, who called emergency services at 6.26am, had been cycling to Manningtree train station.
The prosecutor described Barclay as “cunning and resourceful”.
He said the sewage works had washing facilities and a toilet for those who work there and that was why the location was of “particular significance” to Barclay who was living off-grid.
Mr Paxton said Ms Rose’s “long-term partner” Richard Jones was a lorry driver who worked away during the week.
He said Ms Rose and Mr Jones “would speak frequently”, and the last time that Mr Jones spoke to her was in a three minute 42 second phone call made to her at 5.24am on July 24 when all was well.
Mr Paxton said the “force used and generated” in the attack resulted in the type of brain injuries “often seen in high-speed car accidents”, and Ms Rose died of traumatic head injuries.
The defendant, who wore glasses, a grey prison-issue tracksuit and has a grey beard and long, thinning grey hair, listened to proceedings from the secure dock of the court.
Relatives of Ms Rose listened from the public gallery.
The trial, which is due to last eight weeks, continues.