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British Monarchy Posthumously Pardons Last Woman Executed in UK

British Monarchy Posthumously Pardons Last Woman Executed in UK
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The British monarchy granted a posthumous conditional pardon on Wednesday, July 8, 2026, to Ruth Ellis, the final woman executed in the United Kingdom.

The decision follows a decades-long campaign by her family, who argued that the justice system failed to consider domestic abuse during her 1955 murder trial.

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Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy announced the royal decision, which commutes Ellis's death sentence to life imprisonment due to systemic failures to consider domestic abuse in her case.

Ellis was convicted of murdering her lover, racing driver David Blakely, whom she shot outside a London pub on April 10, 1955.

She was executed by hanging at Holloway Prison on July 13, 1955.

Official records from BBC News show that Blakely severely abused Ellis physically and emotionally during their volatile relationship, causing a miscarriage after punching her in the stomach shortly before the shooting.

Lammy noted that the decision does not signify innocence but rectifies a historic judicial oversight regarding coercive control and severe trauma.

"For 70 years, the family of Ruth Ellis have fought for her story to be heard.

We cannot change what happened 70 years ago, but we can recognise that this was an exceptional case.

Today's conditional pardon is an act of mercy. We hope it brings some measure of peace to Ruth's family," said Lammy.

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The legal action was propelled by Ellis's grandchildren, who sought to highlight how the justice system historically ignored the severe domestic violence that drove women to extreme actions.

R
Editors Team
Author: Rika Dwi Firnanda
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