A church warden who inherited the home of a university lecturer he had seduced, defrauded and tried to drive to suicide has been jailed for life with a minimum of 36 years.
Ben Field, 28, was described as "evil and calculating" by police after he was found guilty of Peter Farquhar's murder in August this year.
At trial he admitted that he befriended and later became engaged to the 69-year-old, gave him drugs to confuse him, and then inherited his home when he died in October 2015.
But he had denied murdering him at his home in the village of Maids Moreton in Buckinghamshire.
Field, the son of a baptist minister, was a student when he met Mr Farquhar in April 2011 and realised that the English teacher was conflicted about his homosexuality.
Advertisement
He set about befriending him and the two men became engaged.
At the time of the conviction Mark Glover, the senior investigating officer for Thames Valley Police, told Sky News: "Peter had wanted somebody to love all his life and he was now 68 and this wonderful young man came into his life and he had no reason to disbelieve him."
More from UK
Field laced his food and drinks with alcohol and drugs to confuse him, and the elderly man suffered several falls which required medical treatment during a campaign of mental and physical torture.
Mr Glover said: "Peter had a mobile phone. He would go to his mobile phone and for some reason all his contacts had been deleted and he couldn't explain it.
"He would go to get his house keys or his car keys and could not find them. Items went missing all the time. Pictures got moved, all kinds of things. It was a bit like having a poltergeist in your house, I suppose."
![Peter Farquhar would fall over after taking drugs](https://e3.365dm.com/19/07/768x432/skynews-peter-farquhar_4714946.jpg?20190710211009)
![Police released a graphic of how Mr Farquhar was found after he died](https://e3.365dm.com/19/07/768x432/skynews-peter-farquhar-ben-field_4714945.jpg?20190710210903)
Mr Farquhar was found dead in his home in October 2015 – he was slumped on the sofa next to a half empty bottle of whiskey and an inquest concluded that the death was alcohol-related.
Field had killed him and successfully made it look like he had drunk himself to death, with police not treating it as murder until March 2017.
Before the killing, Field had tried to drive Mr Farquhar to suicide by drugging him and encouraging him to drink.
He also gave him "10 Battle Raps" as a Christmas present – a collection of "extremely insulting" rhymes about the retired academic that he found deeply upsetting.
In response, Mr Farquhar wrote a poem in which he described Field as "laughably vain", "deceptive and disloyal", and as having a "poisoned head".
![Ann Moore-Martin lived three doors away from Peter Farquhar](https://e3.365dm.com/19/07/768x432/skynews-ann-moore-martin-ben-field_4714941.jpg?20190710210604)
Field – who grew up in Market Harborough, Leicestershire – collected £160,000 from Mr Farquhar's estate soon after his death.
Within a year he turned his attention to 83-year-old retired headteacher Ann Moore-Martin, who lived three doors away, and persuaded her that he loved her and she gave him £30,000.
![Peter Farquhar's home (L) and Ann Moore-Mitchell's home (R) were three doors away from each other](https://e3.365dm.com/19/05/768x432/skynews-maids-moreton-buckinghamshire_4655875.jpg?20190501152426)
She died in hospital of natural causes in May 2017, soon after the plot to defraud her was uncovered.
Despite a 55-year age gap, he Read More – Source