Fred West committed suicide on New Year's Day 1995 while on
remand at
HM Prison Birmingham. At the time of his death, he had been charged with twelve murders, and his wife with nine. Rosemary West was brought to trial before
Mr Justice Mantell at
Winchester Crown Court on 3 October 1995. She was charged with ten murders, including that of Lucy Partington in addition to those of her own daughter, Heather, and stepdaughter, Charmaine. All the murders for which she was tried had been committed between 1971 and 1987, and almost all—including Partington's—had been committed with an evident
sexual motive. Partington's murder was discussed in depth at Rosemary West's trial, with prosecutor
Brian Leveson describing her as "a gentle and
chaste girl" who would have been unwilling to voluntarily accompany the Wests to their home. In reference to the extensive and prolonged sadomasochistic abuse inflicted upon Partington prior to her death, Leveson stated she had been restrained for the Wests' "hideous purposes", adding she had been used as a "sexual plaything" by the couple. On 21 and 22 November 1995, Rosemary West was
unanimously convicted of each murder for which she had been brought to trial and sentenced to life in prison, with Mr Justice Mantell informing her at her sentencing: "If attention is paid to what I think, you will never be released. Take her down." Lucy Partington's body was reburied in Hailes, Gloucestershire, on 16 February 1995. Her body was reburied alongside two of her childhood teddies and a blanket she had also cherished as a child, plus a section of
heather and wool. Partington's close friend, Helen Render, died of
natural causes in 1976 at the age of 21. Marian Partington later became deeply active within—and an advocate for—
The Forgiveness Project; a UK-based charitable organization which explores the concepts of
forgiveness and reconciliation as alternatives to enduring hatred and desires for revenge via authentic case studies of both victims and perpetrators of violent crime. Via her work with The Forgiveness Project, she has spoken in both schools and prisons and—in 2012—at the project's annual lecture. Marian also wrote about the impact of her sister's life, disappearance, and death in her 2012 memoir,
If You Sit Very Still. The book builds on a previous essay she had written and which had been published in May 1996 titled
Salvaging the Sacred. Partington's first cousin,
Martin Amis, formally dedicated his 2005 novel
The Information to her memory; he also wrote extensively about her life and death in his memoir
Experience. ==See also==