Stepdad of Gemma Simpson jailed for arson attack on neighbour's flat
Christopher Umpleby was locked up for five years after two women were “seconds from disaster” when he torched a neighbour’s flat.
Leeds Crown Court heard the incident, on Boxing Day last year, happened at a time when Umpleby had separated from Gemma’s mum Linda.
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Hide AdTheir marriage became strained after years of coping with Gemma’s disappearance.
Gemma’s body was found buried near to Brimham Rocks, near Harrogate, in 2014, 14 years after she disappeared from her home in Harehills, Leeds.Her dismembered body was discovered at the beauty spot after her killer, Martin Bell, walked into a police station and confessed to the killing.
Umpleby’s barrister, Stephen Welford, said the defendant suffered from depression and abused alcohol as a result of the distress of his stepdaughter’s disappearance and subsequent discovery of her body.
Mr Welford said: “The years passed without her body being found.
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Hide Ad“One can only imagine the shadow that cast over the lives of this defendant and his wife and the wider family.”
The barrister added: “Mr Umpleby has been his wife’s rock throughout that time.”
Mr Welford explained how the marriage became strained and in
2018 Umpleby moved out of their home to a flat in the Cross Green area of Leeds.
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Hide AdProsecutor Richard Walters told the court Umpleby had been drinking heavily before making repeated attempts to torch his neighbour’s flat at the property on Cross Green Crescent.
He put a burning newspaper onto the carpet inside the flat as the woman who lived there was about to go to sleep.
The woman stamped out the fire but Umpleby returned to the flat when she was inside the property with her friend.
Umpleby then put some lit cardboard under the door. He said: “By the time they get here we will all be ******* dead.”
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Hide AdThe defendant also set fire to carpet outside the second-floor flat.
The women used water to put out the fire.
Police and firefighters were called to the scene and Umpleby was arrested. He pleaded guilty to arson with intent to endanger life.
-> Judges uphold killer's sentenceThe court heard the two victims had suffered psychological harm as a result of the incident.
One of the women described how she felt they were “saved from disaster by a mere matter of seconds”.
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Hide AdMr Welford said Umpleby did not remember much about the incident as he had been drinking since Christmas Day, which he had spent with his wife and family members.
Jailing Umpleby, judge Simon Phillips, QC, said: “The consequences of your actions could have been horrific.”