Man jailed for four years for attempting to steal 'priceless' version of Magna Carta

Mark Royden, from Canterbury, Kent, was convicted of using a hammer to smash the security case holding the historic document at Salisbury Cathedral on October 25, 2018. - PA
Mark Royden, from Canterbury, Kent, was convicted of using a hammer to smash the security case holding the historic document at Salisbury Cathedral on October 25, 2018. - PA

A 47-year-old man has been jailed for four years for attempting to steal a "priceless" version of Magna Carta which he believed was a fake.

Mark Royden, from Canterbury, Kent, was convicted of using a hammer to smash the security case holding the historic document at Salisbury Cathedral on October 25, 2018.

He was found guilty at Salisbury Crown Court of attempted theft of Magna Carta and criminal damage to the display case costing £14,466 to repair.

The trial heard that Royden scoped the cathedral for a route avoiding CCTV cameras and came equipped with a hammer, gloves and safety goggles.

Before smashing the security case in the Chapter House holding the artefact, Royden turned a CCTV camera in a failed bid to avoid being recorded by it and set off a fire alarm as a distraction, the court heard.

After his attack on the case, he was pursued by "good-spirited" members of the public including a pair of American tourists, cathedral staff and stone masons who detained him in a works yard outside.

Sentencing Royden, Judge Richard Parkes QC said: "Magna Carta is a document of huge importance to our country and many other countries that share our democratic traditions."

He added: "This was a determined attempt on a document of huge historical importance."

The judge praised the "courageous" acts of visitors and staff who apprehended Royden including tourists Matthew and Alexis Delcambre from New Iberia, Louisiana, USA.

He called on the High Sheriff of Wiltshire, Major General Ashley Truluck, who attended the hearing, to award Mr Delcambre an award of £1,000 and £500 to cathedral employee Gary Price.

He said: "This is a story of a few good people acting alertly and bravely and they deserve our sincere thanks."

Rob Welling, prosecuting, said that Royden made an "odd prepared statement" to police during which he "doubted the authenticity" of Magna Carta.

Mr Welling said that Royden has 23 previous convictions covering 51 offences including theft and criminal damage including against items "of the establishment".

These included spray painting the doors of Exeter police station, attacking council benches with an angle-grinder and putting a concrete block through the windows of a solicitor's firm.

Nicholas Cotter, defending, said that a serious car accident in 1991 had "tragically" affected the defendant causing him brain damage and leading him to be subject of a court of protection order over his finances and requiring a carer.