Naval officer shot as he tackled rating with gun
A ROYAL Navy officer was shot in the head as he attempted to tackle a junior rating who went on a murderous rampage onboard a nuclear-powered submarine, an inquest has heard.
Lieutenant Commander Ian Molyneux would have fallen unconscious immediately after he suffered the gunshot wound in the incident on HMS Astute while it was docked at Southampton, on April 8 2011, the inquest heard.
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Able seaman Ryan Donovan, 23, was jailed for life to serve a minimum of 25 years after pleading guilty at Winchester Crown Court to the murder of Lt Cdr Molyneux.
The navigator yeoman also pleaded guilty to attempting to murder Lieutenant Commander Christopher Hodge, 45, who he shot in the stomach.
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The crown court heard that his real targets, who he also admitted to attempting to murder, were Petty Officer Christopher Brown, 36, and Chief Petty Officer David McCoy, 37.
Donovan's attack was only stopped when the leader of Southampton City Council, Royston Smith, and its chief executive, Alistair Neill, heroically wrestled the weapon from him.
The inquest, which resumed at Southampton today, heard that Lt Cdr Molyneux, 36, suffered a single gunshot wound to the top of his head, six inches above his right earhole.
Home Office pathologist Dr Basil Purdue said: "It would have caused instantaneous unconsciousness followed very, very shortly by death.
"The lieutenant commander would have known nothing about it."
The inquest heard that Lt Cdr Molyneux was heard to be breathing, making a "snoring" sound, as he lay on the floor after being shot.
Dr Purdue said: "It's upsetting and emotionally distressing that someone horribly injured is still breathing but they are beyond help at that stage.
"As soon as he received that wound, he would have been out of it completely."
Dr Purdue said that the position in which Lt Cdr Molyneux was found lying face down on the floor was consistent with him rushing forward to tackle the gunman.
He added that, at 6ft 2in, Lt Cdr Molyneux was a tall man and would have had to lower his head forward in order to suffer the injury to the top of his head.
He said: "It's not an unreasonable presumption that he's throwing himself, rushing forwards, moving towards him with his head down."
Dr Purdue added that because of gunpowder residue found on the injury, it would have been suffered at very close range.
Mark Mastaglio, a forensic firearms expert, said that from tests to replicate the residue, the shot would have been fired 5cm from the wound and the rifle would have been fired from waist level.
He said that the weapon used was a SA80 military high velocity rifle which fires rounds at 940 metres per second and when in automatic mode can fire 800 rounds a minute.
A total of seven shots were fired during the incident, the inquest heard.
The crown court sentencing hearing was told that Lt Cdr Molyneux, a father-of-four, known as Molly, had bravely tried to tackle Donovan after hearing previous shots from the SA80. His widow Gillian, who attended the hearing, has said previously that nothing could ever replace her soulmate and father of Jamie, Arron, Bethany and Charlie and "the heartbreaking sadness for the loss of Ian".




Comments
by glasshalffull
Thursday, January 03 2013, 12:14PM
“Having just re-read my comment now that it has appeared, I in no way meant to belittle the article above - a very sad case indeed.”
by glasshalffull
Thursday, January 03 2013, 11:59AM
“Oops - is there a mistake here? Having just read the Herald, the photograph above actually went with a different article about a poor man who was swept away.”