Vincent Agar, aged 80, has been sentenced to 19 years imprisonment at Durham Crown Court for historic violent offences against women in Middlesbrough. Agar, a former resident of the area, was extradited from Thailand in 2025 following a six-year police investigation.
The charges relate to sadistic assaults and false imprisonment committed between 1998 and 2000. The case came to light during an investigation into three historic murders in Middlesbrough, known as Operation Pandect, which uncovered evidence of extreme violence by Agar.
Two women gave testimony in court describing how they were imprisoned in Agar’s flat, which was rigged with a trap door designed to prevent escape. They detailed suffering knife cuts, beatings with a hammer, a belt, and a glass bottle.
The victims also endured burns caused by a kettle, an iron, and cigarettes. One woman managed to escape after witnessing another tied to a radiator and hearing threats of further violence. Their accounts revealed a disturbing pattern of Agar’s sadistic behaviour over separate incidents spanning two years.
After leaving the UK, Agar was located on Koh Samui island in Thailand. Authorities worked closely with Thai officials and Interpol to secure his extradition, as Agar declined to return voluntarily. Upon his arrival in 2025, he faced charges including grievous bodily harm with intent, false imprisonment, actual bodily harm, threats to kill, and supplying Class A drugs.
During sentencing, Judge Richard Bennett stated, “Your offending has now caught up with you,” before imposing the 19-year prison term. The trial lasted over three weeks, during which Agar denied all charges.
Originally published by UKNIP.