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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Marcello Mega & Kirsty Feerick & Kelly-Ann Mills

Man who abused wife taunts her with 'I'm back' message' as he gets out of jail

A scared victim of domestic abuse is now living in fear after a court ordered her husband to be freed from jail four months early as he launches an appeal.

Linda Miller was in tears when she revealed her husband Kevin, who “terrifies” her, has been released and is not subject to electronic tagging or any curfew.

After his release, Miller sparked fear in Linda by posting on Facebook a picture of actor Arnold Schwarzenegger with the words: “I’m back.”

Arnie coined the phrase” “I’ll Be Back,” in his Terminator movies.

Linda, 48, told the Daily Record : “I don’t feel safe. I’m terrified to leave the house. What is the point of going through the ordeal of going to court when the sentence is meaningless?"

Linda says she is terrified (Daily Record)

Police visited her to break the news and to provide her with an alarm to be used if Miller, who she is divorcing, approaches her.

A five-year order not to harass Linda is still active but would be open to challenge if his appeal succeeded.

Miller, 50, was sentenced last year to 34 months for assaulting and stalking Linda and would have been freed in mid-October after serving half his sentence.

Kevin was released from jail early (Daily Record)

But a judge granted him leave to appeal against conviction and sentence and a plea to free him pending his appeal was accepted on Tuesday.

Linda said: “The police explained when they provided the alarm that interim liberation gives him greater freedom.

“He is not tagged, he’s not subject to a curfew and can roam around freely.

“He’s also been allowed to use our home address as his bail address, when I am just waiting for lockdown to end to be able to sell it and help me get the divorce completed.

Linda says she has been given an alarm by police (Daily Record)

"Everything is in his favour.”

Linda, who had written to the authorities in advance of the decision to free her ex, pleading with them not to release him, was also angry police had not been notified of the move to free him.

She added: “If I had not found out about it and told the police, they’d have had no idea.”

Miller’s legal team, which has won the first stage in the process, did not respond to a request for comment.

Dr Marsha Scott, chief executive of Scottish Women’s Aid said: “The release of perpetrators of domestic abuse – on appeal or otherwise – is always of concern to us.”

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