Man convicted of murdering widow, 86, after DNA found on her nail clippings
David Newton was found guilty of the murder of Una Crown in 2013 after a trial at Cambridge Crown Court.
![Una Crown](https://www.expressandstar.com/resizer/v2/https%3A%2F%2Fcontentstore.nationalworld.com%2Fimages%2Fc71a36c8-33de-47c2-bc00-302762f7c1fa.jpg?auth=18054434088e7a4ece2452f67ec16a0054bab085e6f12455e4107abd24258d84&width=300)
A 70-year-old man has been found guilty of the murder of 86-year-old widow Una Crown in 2013 after DNA which matched his profile was found on her nail clippings.
Retired postmistress Mrs Crown was found with her throat cut, stab wounds to her chest and her clothing set on fire in her bungalow in Wisbech, Cambridgeshire, on January 13 2013.
Police did not initially consider her death suspicious and there was a two-day delay in preserving the scene because of what prosecutor John Price described as a “grave error of judgment by police officers who went to the house”.
Former kitchen installer David Newton, of Magazine Close in Wisbech, was charged last year with murdering Mrs Crown.
He denied the offence at her home in Magazine Lane on January 12 2013, but was found guilty after a trial at Cambridge Crown Court.
![David Newton, 70, of Magazine Close, Wisbech, who was found guilty of the murder of 86-year-old widow Una Crown in 2013 (Cambridgeshire Police/ PA)](http://content.assets.pressassociation.io/2025/02/05163239/9ad4d0ad-0e76-44d4-af01-510b1211d93e.jpg)
Newton appeared open-mouthed and glanced at the jury as the foreman returned their verdict of guilty, by a majority of 10 jurors to two.
This followed 29 hours and 13 minutes of deliberations.
Detective Superintendent Iain Moor of Cambridgeshire Police said afterwards that “mistakes were made during the initial investigation in 2013, for which we have apologised to Una’s family”.
Mr Moor, who became the senior investigating officer in the case, said it was looked at again “as part of our normal review processes in October 2022”.
“Vital evidence was retained from the 2013 crime scene, in the form of DNA under the fingernails of Una Crown’s right hand,” he said.
“It was through pioneering new techniques, testing for male DNA only, that gave the evidence breakthrough which has been so crucial.
“This DNA testing technique was not available in 2013.
“The DNA allowed us to cast doubt on David Newton’s claims that he hadn’t seen Una on the day, or days, before her death and place him at the scene of her murder.
“For more than a decade he thought he had gotten away with this most horrendous crime, but today’s result shows you cannot hide forever.”
Mr Moor said he hoped that the guilty verdict “gives Una’s family the closure they deserve and the answers they have longed for”, adding: “My thoughts are very much with them at this time.”
Mrs Crown’s body was found in her hallway on January 13 by John Payne, the husband of her niece Judith Payne, who had driven to collect her to take her for Sunday lunch at their house.
Prosecutors said she had been killed the day before and that DNA evidence was the “nucleus of the case”.
Mr Price told jurors when opening the case that “male DNA, the profile of which matches that of David Newton”, was discovered by scientists in 2023.
![Una Crown with her late husband Jack](http://image.assets.pressassociation.io/v2/image/production/4c8c332b9423fc2e30433114e7ab6832Y29udGVudHNlYXJjaGFwaSwxNzM4ODY4NTUw/2.75895444.jpg?w=640)
He said this was “on nail clippings, which had been taken from the fingers and thumb of the unburnt right hand of Una Crown”.
He said the clippings had been taken at a post-mortem examination in 2013.
The barrister said the reason why Newton “went to her house on that night and as to why he then did to her what he did, these are not matters that the prosecution need prove”.
But he said the defendant was on state benefits in 2013 and they were his only source of regular income.
Mr Price said money was missing from Mrs Crown’s handbag and Newton was “spending freely” on January 13, playing a fruit machine on two visits to Wisbech Ex-Servicemen’s Club on January 13.
The prosecutor said there was evidence that Newton had been drunk on the night of January 12 and had been “pestering elderly women on the telephone”.
The judge, Mr Justice Neil Garnham, warned Newton: “The sentence for murder is life in prison but I have to determine the minimum period to be served.”
The sentencing is due to take place at the same court on February 14.
Following conviction, Matthew Golby of the Crown Prosecution Service said: “For more than a decade, David Newton thought he could get away with murder. Today’s verdict proves otherwise.
“For reasons only known to himself, he inflicted truly horrendous injuries to Una Crown who should have been safe in her own home.
“Working closely with police, advancements in DNA technology provided us with the compelling forensic link which would finally ensure Newton face the full consequences of his actions.
“We were determined to achieve justice for Una, no matter how long it took, and our thoughts remain with her family and loved ones who we hope can find some comfort in today’s verdict.”