A Gift, a Jump and a Terrifying Descent
Victoria had agreed to make the jump after her husband arranged and paid for it. Emile was present for her jump; he also brought their two children, then an infant and 3 years old, to watch.
On the day of the jump—April 5, 2015—witnesses at the drop zone observed that Victoria’s main canopy did not inflate properly after deployment. She cut it away, as trained, and deployed her reserve parachute. But that canopy also malfunctioned.
Expert witnesses later testified that crucial components known as “slinks”—fabric connectors attaching the canopy lines to the harness—were missing from both parachutes, compromising their ability to open correctly.
During the police investigation, forensic specialists determined that the slinks had been deliberately removed from both the main and reserve canopies. And as detectives examined the couple’s circumstances, they uncovered evidence of an earlier attempt to kill Victoria just days before the skydive.
On March 29, 2015, a gas valve at the family’s home in Amesbury had been loosened, allowing gas to fill the property while Victoria and the couple’s two young children were inside. Prosecutors later alleged that Emile was trying to cause a fatal explosion to kill them all.
A Husband Under Suspicion
At trial, prosecutors presented evidence that he had taken his wife’s parachute rig into a bathroom at the airfield the day before the jump, including witness testimony. Investigators also showed that he had recently completed an advanced parachute packing course, giving him the technical knowledge required to interfere with the rigging.
Financial records revealed that Emile was heavily in debt. Prosecutors said he stood to gain approximately £120,000 from life insurance policies if his wife died. They also presented evidence of multiple extramarital relationships, including with his ex-wife and a woman he met on a dating app. They theorized that he planned to begin a new life free of financial pressure and marital obligations.
Emile denied the charges, and his first trial, in 2017, ended with a hung jury.
Retrial, Conviction and Sentencing
In May 2018, following the retrial at Winchester Crown Court, a jury convicted Emile of two counts of attempted murder—one for the parachute sabotage and one for the gas valve incident—as well as reckless endangerment.
On June 15, 2018, Justice Nigel Sweeney sentenced Emile to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 18 years before he could be eligible for parole. As he handed down the sentence, the judge described Emile’s crimes as “wicked” and “of extreme gravity.”
Survival and Scars
In interviews following the trial, Victoria said she initially struggled to process that her fall had been deliberate. She described feeling shock at the evidence laid out in court.
She has also spoken about the difficulty of explaining what happened to her children, explaining to The Daily Mail, she told them their father “did a bad thing.”
She told reporters that surviving the fall forced her to rebuild her life in ways she had never anticipated. The couple eventually divorced, and after that, Victoria told Channel 4, “I just felt free. Like a big weight had been lifted off me. That was the end for me.”
Victoria remarried in 2024, nine years after her fateful fall.