A 23-year-old man has been jailed for life and is expected to serve a minimum of 25-and-a-half years for the murder of an elderly woman in Norwich.

Eastern Daily Press: CCTV image of Miss King taken at the Co-op store in Earlham Road on Friday, February 20. Picture: Norfolk PoliceCCTV image of Miss King taken at the Co-op store in Earlham Road on Friday, February 20. Picture: Norfolk Police (Image: Archant)

Alexander Kerry, of Kinghorn Road in Norwich, was sentenced at Ipswich Crown Court after pleading guilty at an earlier hearing.

The court heard that Kerry carried out a sustained and vicious assault on 82-year-old Pauline King when he burgled her home in The Avenues in February, including attacking the frail pensioner with a knife and hammer.

He was found later the same day by concerned members of the public wandering nearby streets covered in blood.

A trail of evidence led police to Miss King's home and the discovery of her body and Kerry was promptly arrested.

Eastern Daily Press: CCTV image of Alexander Kerry taken at The Plough public house on St Benedict’s Street, where he was seen drinking the night before Miss King’'s body was found. Picture: Norfolk PoliceCCTV image of Alexander Kerry taken at The Plough public house on St Benedict’s Street, where he was seen drinking the night before Miss King’'s body was found. Picture: Norfolk Police (Image: Archant)

Police released images of the last known movements of the victim during a trip to her local grocery store on the Friday before her death.

Prosecutor Andrew Jackson said the killer, desperate for money, had broken into the dilapidated home of the 'reclusive spinster' in February this year and beat her to death with two hammers.

The court heard he had been left deeply damaged after his father murdered his mother as he and his brother slept at their home in 2002.

Jailing him, Mr Justice Stuart-Smith said he acted with 'animal brutality' to murder Miss King and sexually abuse her dying body in an 'act of desecration'.

Eastern Daily Press: CCTV image of Miss King taken at the Co-op store in Earlham Road on Friday, February 20. Picture: Norfolk PoliceCCTV image of Miss King taken at the Co-op store in Earlham Road on Friday, February 20. Picture: Norfolk Police (Image: Archant)

He added: 'This wasn't your first experience of violent death because when you were 10 years old your father murdered your mother while you slept in the house.

'Although it was thought at the time you coped well with that tragedy it is quite clear that it remained with you and affected you ever since.

'But nothing begins to explain what you did to Pauline King on that night. She must have suffered terribly.

'She was a poor, elderly, defenceless and no doubt terrified lady who had done nothing except have the misfortune to be burgled by you.'

Eastern Daily Press: 28 The Avenues, home of Pauline King.28 The Avenues, home of Pauline King. (Image: Archant)

His father Scott Kerry, then 35, was found guilty of murder and jailed for life in December 2002 after a jury heard he strangled his wife Heather Kerry, 33, to death in May that year.

The trial heard a fight had started at the family's home in Toftwood, Norfolk, because he believed she was having an affair with a policeman.

Describing the impact of the killing on the couple's two sons, Mr Jackson said: 'This must have had a profound effect on both of them.'

He said Alexander Kerry had a criminal record including violence and disorderly behaviour dating back to his teens.

Eastern Daily Press: CCTV image of Alexander Kerry taken at The Plough public house on St Benedict’s Street, where he was seen drinking the night before Miss King'’s body was found. Picture: Norfolk PoliceCCTV image of Alexander Kerry taken at The Plough public house on St Benedict’s Street, where he was seen drinking the night before Miss King'’s body was found. Picture: Norfolk Police (Image: Archant)

The court heard Miss King lived alone and her house in The Avenues, Norwich, was an easy target for burglars.

She confronted Alexander Kerry, who had recently been released from a psychiatric unit, as he broke in through a rear window in the early hours of February 22.

'Using two hammers he found in the kitchen he launched a brutal and sustained attack,' Mr Jackson said.

Afterwards he dragged her through the house and carried on the attack with a kitchen knife.

Eastern Daily Press: CCTV image of Alexander Kerry taken at The Plough public house on St Benedict’s Street, where he was seen drinking the night before Miss King'’s body was found. Picture: Norfolk PoliceCCTV image of Alexander Kerry taken at The Plough public house on St Benedict’s Street, where he was seen drinking the night before Miss King'’s body was found. Picture: Norfolk Police (Image: Archant)

When police arrived they found blood smeared across the downstairs and her body curled up in a fireplace.

Forensic examinations found Miss King suffered 80 separate injuries, including 27 to her head and face.

Mr Jackson said there was forensic evidence Miss King had been sexually assaulted. Alexander Kerry denied the sexual assault and this charge was left to life on file.

The night before the murder he had had drunk large amounts of beer and whisky, eventually running out of money and leaving the city's Plough pub with 'an urgent need to steal'.

After killing Miss King, he ransacked the house before making off with low-value items such as decorative teaspoons, playing card and a jewellery box.

He then tried to set fire to the house to destroy the evidence, Mr Jackson said.

Later that day he phoned his brother and said: 'I'm in trouble and I'm covered in blood.'

He then returned to the area where residents, alarmed at his blood-splatted appearance and erratic drunken behaviour, called the police.

Paramedics and police were initially called to Christchurch Road shortly after 10am on Sunday, February 22 over concerns for the safety of a man, later identified as Kerry. Witnesses described him as covered in blood, jumping in front of cars and talking incoherently. He was subsequently detained under the Mental Health Act and taken to the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital (NNUH) for treatment.

Later that day, officers received another phone call from a member of the public who saw Kerry drop items of property in Christchurch Road. The items, which included a bloodied glove, a dark Parka-style jacket and a number of household items, were retrieved. On inspection, police concluded some of the items appeared to have been stolen and found among them a letter addressed to the victim's address.

At about 5.30pm, a neighbourhood PCSO was dispatched to check on the property and, on finding blood at the scene, raised the alarm. The body of Pauline King was found by police officers in the fireplace of her drawing room.

Kerry was arrested in connection with the murder at hospital at around 6pm and was taken into police custody on Sunday night for questioning. He was charged three days later.

On Monday, October 5, at the start of his two-week trial, Kerry changed his plea and admitted murdering Miss King. He pleaded not guilty to a second offence of sexual assault which was ordered to lie on file.

Prosecuting lawyer Richard White said: 'Kerry has shown no remorse for his actions which took the needless life of an elderly and defenceless woman in her own home. His attack was malicious, unrelenting and horrific and we are pleased he has been brought to justice.'

Jonathan Goodman, mitigating, said his client had 'self-medicated' through alcohol and drugs following the almost 'unimaginable' events of his childhood.

He had been provisionally diagnosed with an acute psychotic episode after setting fire to a van in Cornwall in January but was discharged into the community.

'He struggled to come to terms over a considerable period with the changes in the dynamics of his family which have haunted them,' Mr Goodman said.

He thought the house was abandoned and did not expect anybody would be inside, he added.

Senior Investigating Officer Detective Superintendent Paul Durham from the Norfolk and Suffolk Joint Major Investigation Team, which led the investigation, described it as a 'vile murder' which 'sent a shudder of fear' through the community.

Speaking after the hearing, he said: 'Kerry carried out a prolonged and ferocious attack on a frail, vulnerable and elderly woman in her own home where she lived alone and which should have been her sanctuary.

'We know Kerry broke into the house with the intention of stealing, but we don't know - and may never know - why it escalated. One thing is for certain and that is that Pauline King, who lived a reclusive life, did not deserve to meet her end in this appalling way.

'Kerry is a danger to the public and will now be behind bars, where he belongs, for a very long time.'

Det Supt Durham thanked the public for their assistance throughout the investigation, adding: 'The case, at the time, naturally generated a great deal of public anxiety but it must be underlined that incidents such as this are thankfully very rare in Norfolk and indeed generally.'