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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Maya Oppenheim

Married Home Office manager ‘covertly tried to drug lover with abortion pill to induce miscarriage’

Getty Images/iStockphoto

A married Home Office manager covertly slipped abortion drugs into a lover’s drink in a deliberate attempt to induce a miscarriage, a court has heard.

Darren Burke is accused of placing broken down tablets of Mifepristone, an abortion pill which doctors prescribe, into a glass of orange juice for Laura Slade.

But Ms Slade did not drink the juice - claiming she discovered the remnants of powder around the edge of the glass.

Isleworth Crown Court heard Mr Burke has known Ms Slade for about 15 years but they began an affair in late 2020.

Mr Burke, who is the deputy director of the Emergency Services Mobile Communications Programme, has denied dishing out the drug in order to induce a miscarriage.

After being arrested in February 2021, the 43-year-old, who has one child, said he purchased the abortion pills on the internet in case Ms Slade wanted them. Ms Slade is said to have discovered Mr Burke discarding the orange juice down her kitchen sink after she did not drink it.

Prosecutor Paul Jarvis said: “On 5 December 2020 Laura Slade called police to report something suspicious about a drink her ex-partner had made her the day before.

“She said there was a residue around the edge of the glass and she suspected at the time he had laced it with poison.

“Her ex-partner had wanted her to take a termination but she refused. The prosecution case is that he laced the drink with the intention of terminating the pregnancy.”

Ms Slade sent Mr Burke a message on WhatsApp to inform him she was pregnant after learning she was expecting in November 2020.

“There was some discussion about the possibility of Ms Slade having a termination and it is clear from messages that Mr Burke did not want her to have the baby,” Mr Jarvis said.

“She described herself as feeling numb and wanting to think without Mr Burke being in her head.

“She was told she couldn't have the baby because it would affect everyone. She took the view that he was thinking of himself.”

By 15 November, Ms Slade had decided to have the baby but was told by Mr Burke that it would destroy his family life if she did so, jurors heard.

The pair arranged to meet at Ms Slade's home on 4 December and Mr Burke went to the kitchen and returned with two glasses of orange juice.

“He had a cup of tea himself and they talked about whether his name would appear on the birth certificate and how much money he would contribute,” said the prosecutor.

“However Mr Burke's main interest was making sure that Ms Slade drank that orange mixture.”

Ms Slade later messaged him to ask what had been in the glass, Ms Jarvis said.

“He said nothing, asking her if she trusted him.”

When she made it clear to him that she did not want to have an abortion during their conversation, Mr Burke said he made the decision to wash the drugs down the sink, the court heard.

"He must have used that glass to crush them and rinse them away, which is how residue must have ended up on the glass,' said Mr Jarvis.

“The prosecution case is that these explanations are fantasies. He bought the tablets and found a way to trick Ms Slade into taking them to create a miscarriage.

“His plan was to break the tablets down into a drink where the grains would not be obvious to Ms Slade. His plan failed.

“His motive was obvious. If Ms Slade had kept the baby then his double life would have come crashing down around him because there was no way he could have kept that child a secret from his wife.”

Mr Jarvis told jurors Ms Slade did have a miscarriage, three weeks later on Christmas Day, but he did not link that to Mr Burke's actions.

The trial continues.

Additional reporting by wires

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