Security guard Gavin Plumb has been sentenced to life in prison after his plot to to kidnap, rape and murder the TV presenter Holly Willoughby which left her with a ‘life changing’ impact.

He has been jailed for life with a minimum of 16 years after being unanimously convicted of soliciting murder and inciting rape and kidnap following an earlier trial at Chelmsford Crown Court and was sentenced today (Friday).

He faces a lengthy prison sentence for his ‘depraved and vile’ plans, with the judge telling the court that although his offences concern only one woman, he poses a serious risk to all women.

The judge added that Plumb, if released after the minimum term of 16 years – minus the 280 days he spent on remand, taking the total to 15 years and 85 days – would be subject to a permanent licence condition.

Mr Justice Edward Murray told him: ‘There is no doubt that if you had genuinely found one or more accomplices who were seriously interested in and had been willing to join you in carrying your plan through then you would have put this plan into action.’

Continuing to give his reasons for imposing the prison term, he continued: ‘Over a number of years, you pursued an unhealthy sexual obsession with Holly Willoughby that led you ultimately to plan over that period to kidnap, to rape and to murder her.

‘You intended to harm her husband and her children as part of your plan.

A picture of Gavin Plumb
Gavin Plumb has been sentenced today after being found guilty of masterminding a plot to kidnap, rape and murder Holly Willoughby (Picture: Essex Police/PA Wire)

A picture of Holly Willoughby
Plumb was convicted of soliciting murder and inciting rape and kidnap Holly Willoughby (Picture: Kieron McCarron/ITV/Shutterstock)
‘You discussed with Marc and David Nelson and no doubt others in hideous and revolting detail the prolonged sexual violence that you intended to inflict on Ms Willoughby once you abducted her and had her under your control.

‘You had previously been convicted of terrifying offences involving the threat of sexual violence against four different young women – I found you to be dangerous.’

Gavin Plumb, who wore a grey prison-issue jumper, stood as the sentence was read out, and initially showed no reaction but as he was led to the cells he made the comment to the dock officer and made an exasperated gesture raising both his hands.

The 37-year-old was snared after a US undercover police officer infiltrated an online group called Abduct Lovers and became so concerned about Plumb’s posts that evidence was passed to the FBI.

US law enforcement in turn contacted police in the UK, and when Essex Police officers raided Plumb’s flat in Harlow they found bottles of chloroform and an ‘abduction kit’ complete with cable ties.

Ms Wass continued: ‘He was devastated to be the cause of such pain to her as she described in that very detailed statement (which Ms Willoughby chose to submit to the court privately).’

She said Plumb ‘remains embarrassed and ashamed’, and said he ‘always expected’ the online conversations that formed the focus of the trial ‘would remain private’.

Plumb wept after he was convicted of soliciting murder and inciting rape and kidnap following an earlier trial at Chelmsford Crown Court.

Former This Morning star Willoughby, 43, issued a statement shortly after, saying: ‘As women we should not be made to feel unsafe going about our daily lives and in our own home.’

Thanking the undercover police and the Crown Prosecution Service ‘for ensuring that justice was done and that the defendant will not be able to harm any more women’, she went on: ‘I would also like to commend the bravery of his previous victims for speaking up at the time. Without their bravery this conviction may not have been possible.’

Ahead of the hearing, a former victim of Plumb, who chose to remain anonymous in their interview with the BBC, spoke of being ‘frozen and scared’ when he attempted to kidnap her.

She said: ‘He had a rope and replica gun on him.

‘As I read that note it was only then I looked at him. My first impression was that: he is huge, I have no chance.

‘There was this moment when I was frozen and scared.

‘But it was also disbelief, I thought maybe he is joking, it is absurd, but he started approaching me with his hands, he held his hand on my knee and he was indicating that ‘we are going to go’.

‘After the initial freeze and disbelief I realised what’s going on and I was frightened, that feeling was growing because I started realising that this massive man wants to get me off the train and I knew the next station is in a small village.’

Plumb’s victim added: ‘I had all the worst scenarios cooking in my head. And I thought if I get off that train, he can do anything and so my thought was not to get off that train at any cost.’

A picture of Holly Willoughby
Willoughby released a statement saying: ‘As women we should not be made to feel unsafe going about our daily lives and in our own home.’ (Picture: Dave J Hogan/Dave J. Hogan/Getty Images)
Asked if she felt a prison sentence could have prevented future attacks, the woman told the BBC: ‘I believe so, I believe that lack of punishment was only encouragement.

‘He could go unpunished doing whatever he did, if he got away with it – why not try again?’

She continued: ‘Potentially every man can be a perpetrator and I understand that so many women think along the same lines. A large man sitting right next to a girl: that is a potential danger.

‘It is really sad but that is one of those takeaways from that unfortunate story for me.

‘When I look at men I very often do that quick judgement, what level of danger are they?’

Addressing Willoughby, the woman told the BBC: ‘I do feel for Holly because obviously she had to go through it in the spotlight, it must be difficult.

‘You do not want your name to be attached to a person like Gavin Plumb and this is one reason I want to remain anonymous. I do not want to be associated with him in any way.’

A picture of Gavin Plumb
Gavin Plumb wept after he was convicted (Picture: Julia Quenzler / SWNS)
The trial last week was told that Plumb’s plans were foiled when a potential accomplice who he spoke to online turned out to be an undercover officer from the Owatonna Police Department in the US state of Minnesota.

Plumb told the officer, who was using the pseudonym David Nelson, that he was ‘definitely serious’ about his plot to kidnap Willoughby, leaving the officer with the impression that there was an ‘imminent threat’ to her.

When Plumb was arrested on October 4 last year and officers told him that the allegations concerned Willoughby, the defendant told them: ‘I’m not gonna lie, she is a fantasy of mine.’

Plumb’s kidnap plans involved attempting to ‘ambush’ Willoughby at her family home – even discussing taking time off work in order to organise the attack.

He told others he would then take the presenter to another location, which he suggested would be a ‘dungeon’-type room.

Plumb had described silencing Willoughby’s TV producer husband Dan Baldwin, and restraining her with handcuffs, as well as ‘getting rid of the body’.

Prosecutors described Plumb’s plot as ‘carefully planned’ – pointing to the items he had purchased and the lengths to which he had gone to find out when Ms Willoughby did not have security.

In her opening to the jury, prosecutor Alison Morgan KC told the court of his previous convictions for false imprisonment and attempted kidnap, saying that they showed he ‘knew what it would take to terrify and overpower a woman’.

Plumb had argued in his defence that it was just online chat and fantasy.

The court also heard about previous kidnap attempts that Plumb had carried out, including tying up a 16-year-old girl’s hands with rope and tape in 2008.

Two years later, he attempted to force two different women off a train with him with the threat of a gun.

Asked what she now thought of her past attacker, the anonymised victim told the BBC: ‘I feel like he lost his life, anybody has capacity to have a wonderful life ahead of them.

‘He has in my eyes, he has nothing in life. It makes him in a way more dangerous, you know a person who has nothing to lose.