Terry hicks delighted with high court decision to let jailed husband back into UK after four decades in prison

Terry hicks delighted with high court decision to let jailed husband back into UK after four decades in prison

Hickman (56) had his case heard at the High Court in London

She was jailed for 12 years after a trial at Manchester Crown Court, pictured

The court heard how her first-floor flat had a roofless third floor

She claimed that her husband had been in prison on charges of killing two children and that she felt her life was in danger

A former British spy jailed for life in America has been released after receiving a controversial decision from the UK’s highest court which allowed his family로투스 홀짝 access to freedom.

Hickman, 56, had his second trial in New York in October and his former wife Julie Hickman (55) was jailed for 12 years.

The court heard how they had bought their London flat at 3 King’s Street, London, when they had an eight-year-old child on a tight budget.

He was on licence when they moved there, but they discovered him having an affair with a colleague.

He was then taken to a mental institution after complaining of stress issues and had a short stint at the John Radcliffe Hospital, Sheffield, before being released in June.

He told the court that after five years of incarceration he was returning home to marry the 골목woman who had taken him in.

He has now left prison and travelled to meet Julie Hickman at the High Court in London on Thursday.

Julie Hickman had claimed that after her husband had been locked up in the US for almost 20 years she began feeling’very vulnerable’. She said she wanted to know if her marriage was ‘at risk’ because of how far her husband had gone through his time in prison.

‘I was complete슬롯 머신ly devastated when I realised that it had all been for naught… That he (Hickman) had been in prison for 20 years, he is out of prison now,’ she said.

‘What I’m very angry about is to see that you have been given a very minor, minor sentence for such a high-profile offence.’

After receiving the decision, former SAS officer Hickman went into an impromptu rendition of the famous hit song from the musical Harry Potter to Julie.

When he returned to his living room, he put his hands in the air, took off his sunglasses, walked into his garden and began to play a cover of the Beatles hit: Love Me Do.

‘I just felt very sick a