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CCTV shows aristocrat Constance Marten and her lover strolling in to bus station on frigid January night 'with the naked newborn daughter they are accused of killing hidden up her coat' after their car went up in flames on M61

This is the moment aristocrat Constance Marten and her lover walk calmly into a bus station with her baby allegedly hidden under her coat just after their car burst into flames.

CCTV shown to jurors shows Marten, 36, and her boyfriend Mark Gordon, 49, entering Bolton bus interchange as the aristocrat appears to be concealing the newborn beneath her coat.

The pair are accused of killing their newborn baby Victoria by taking her on the run to prevent her being taken away by social services.

Marten and Gordon abandoned their car, which was later found burning on the M61 near Manchester, and fled with their unclothed baby, a court heard today. They then asked a local resident to give them a lift into Bolton town centre and from there used Marten's trust fund payments to take a 270-mile taxi from Liverpool to Essex.

They allegedly spent hundreds of pounds on taxis and lived off-grid before their arrests in East Sussex on February 27 last year.

On March 1, the baby was found dead in a Lidl bag covered in rubbish inside a disused shed, the Old Bailey has heard.

CCTV footage taken on January 5 shown to the jury shows the couple strolling into Bolton bus interchange. Pictures also show the charred remains of the couple's car on the M61 - with debris scattered throughout the vehicle and the body of the car blackened by flames after it exploded and the fire was extinguished.

The baby's placenta was found in the car on the Manchester motorway - sparking a huge police hunt as the couple traversed the UK trying to find a port from which to escape, the Old Bailey heard.

New video released by police shows the couple strolling into Bolton bus interchange as Marten appears to be concealing the newborn beneath her puffer jacket

A pictures shows the inside of the couple's burnt out car. The baby's placenta was found in the vehicle, the Old Bailey heard

The couple's burnt out car on the M61. The car was found burning on the M61 near Manchester

Aristocrat Constance Marten is said to have given birth in secret and decided to go 'off-grid'

Constance Marten (left) and Mark Gordon both deny manslaughter by gross negligence

An image dated January 5, 2023 from the Metropolitan Police of Mark Gordon and Constance Marten's burning Peugeot 206 on the M61, which was played in court during their trial

Marten and Gordon spent nearly two months camping in a blue tent in the bitterly cold South Downs near Brighton before the baby, wearing only a onesie, allegedly froze to death.

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The couple deny the manslaughter of Victoria by gross negligence, concealment of the birth of a child, cruelty to a person under 16 and perverting the course of justice by disposing of the body.

The couple met in 2016 and had four children in quick succession who were all taken into care after Marten gave birth to her first child using a fake Irish accent pretending to be a traveller, jurors have heard. 

Marten comes from a wealthy aristocratic family and her father was a page to Queen Elizabeth II.

The couple had escaped the burning car near Manchester at around 6pm, running up the muddy bank and climbing over a fence before dumping most of their belongings in a playing field, the court was told.

They then allegedly turned up outside the home of a man named Wai Wai Balash and asked for a lift.

In a statement read to court, Mr Balash said he came out of his home to take his son to football practice.

'I walked out and was shocked to see a lone female stood approximately five metres in front of my house. I could see she was carrying something in her hands.

He said Marten approached and said her car had broken down and asked for a lift to 'the nearest town.'

Gordon was standing further down the road under a street light, he said.

'It seemed to me she didn't know the area at all. She was very calm and confident.

'I thought it was strange the female was asking me for a lift and the male didn't speak.

'I saw the female had small baby in a blanket in her arms, I would say one or two months old at most.

'It was making noises throughout the journey but hadn't cried.'

He gave them a lift to Bolton town centre, where they asked where they could find hotels.

The couple then took a taxi from Bolton to Liverpool.

At 9pm, just three hours after leaving their burning vehicle the couple flagged down a taxi driven by Ali Yaryar.

Giving evidence by video link, Mr Yaryar said the first thing Marten did when she got into the car was ask him to put the heating on.

'She was cold, for that time of year she had not much clothes on. You could see she was shivering.'

Marten's brother Tobias Marten and mother Virginie de Selliers at the Old Bailey last Thursday

Marten asked to go to Harwich, Essex, which Mr Yaryar had not heard of so he asked her to put a postcode in his phone.

'I said this is a long journey - we go to Heathrow Airport from Liverpool for £500 but this is a quiet night - I can go there if you want for £400.'

He said he offered to drive home and change into his personal Audi vehicle which he said would be warmer and more comfortable.

He said he noticed Marten was hiding a baby under her jacket which she was breastfeeding during the journey.

He offered to get a car seat but Marten said the baby was too small.

Gordon paid him £400 in £20 notes. He said the baby was wearing no clothes except a nappy. Gordon slept while Marten also tried to sleep, he said. They arrived at Harwich around 2.15am.

A court artist's sketch of prosecutor Tom Little KC making his opening statement while being watched from the dock by defendant Mark Gordon at the Old Bailey in London last Thursday

'I think it was near the sea somewhere. I offered them my phone I said do you want to call anyone. They didn't know where they are.'

John Femi-Ola, KC, representing Gordon, suggested the baby did have clothing on but was being changed when Mr Yaryar saw her just in a nappy.

However, Mr Yaryar replied: 'I think the baby had no clothes.'

Marten received nearly £19,000 in payments into her account from a trust fund while she was on the run, the court heard.

Jurors were earlier told Marten and Gordon went to Liverpool and Harwich as they were looking for a port to escape from.

This afternoon, the court heard that the couple arrived at a Premier Inn in Harwich just after 3am on January 6 with their baby asking for a room claiming they had broken down.

They checked in using the surname 'Thomas' and appeared 'quite distressed'.

A CCTV image from January 7, 2023 showing Mark Gordon and Constance Marten in London

Marten said they had broken down and had to take a long taxi journey from Liverpool.

Receptionist Taylor Roy said: 'I asked whether she would need a cot set up and she said that wouldn't be necessary as the baby would be staying with her.'

When the card machine lit up, Marten said 'oh no, we've got to pay cash'.

The receptionist explained they had to check ID for anyone paying in cash.

He said: 'She said 'we don't have it, we don't have it' and looked as if she was going to cry.

'I suggested she could just stay in reception and she looked at me as if it was below her and said 'please can we just have a room.'

Marten said: 'Please, we don't have anywhere to go, or anything.'

A photo issued by the Metropolitan Police of a messy hob at a holiday cottage in Northumberland, which was shown in court during the Marten and Gordon trial

He said as the couple seemed desperate and had a baby he decided to let them stay.

Marten then went outside to get Gordon, who walked through the lobby hiding his face, the court heard.

Rae Robson, who works at the hotel, told the court that Marten came downstairs at 12.20pm the next day, 20 minutes after check out time, and asked to extended their stay.

She said she asked Marten to pay by card or give ID but Marten said she didn't have any so she told them they could not stay and gave them ten minutes to leave the hotel.

After ten minutes she went with her manager to knock on the door, and Marten and Gordon came out.

'She had a big coat on and it seemed like something was underneath it,' Ms Robson said.

Ms Robson then went into the room and noticed a smell.

'A really, really bad smell almost like rotting flesh - if you know what piercings or infected piercings smell like it was that amplified.

'I couldn't stay in that room for very long, I had to go in, open the window and leave.'

A court sketch of Marten (left) and Gordon with a dock officer in the middle in March 2023

Half an hour later Marten and Gordon were still in the restaurant in the Premier Inn, she said.

The couple then went to another hotel the next night, where Gordon again stayed silent as Marten spoke to staff, the court was told.

Gordon attended court today wearing a light blue shirt and tie while Marten was not in court but the jury was told a link was available for her to join.

The wealthy family lived at Dorset estate Crichel House during Marten's youth and her grandmother was a playmate of Princess Margaret and goddaughter to the Queen Mother.

Marten and Gordon deny manslaughter by gross negligence, concealment of the birth of a child, cruelty to a person under 16 and perverting the course of justice.

They also deny causing or allowing the death of a child. The charges date between January 4 and February 27, 2023. The trial is set to last six weeks.

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