TV auctioneer Charles Hanson ‘promised not to lay finger on wife before arrest’

By Sophie Robinson, PA

Bargain Hunt star Charles Hanson promised his wife he would “never lay a finger” on her “ever again” in a message days before he was arrested, a court has heard.

Hanson, 46, is on trial at Derby Crown Court accused of pushing, grabbing, scratching and holding his wife Rebecca Hanson in a headlock during an alleged decade of violence which began in 2012, two years after they married.

The television auctioneer, of Ashbourne Road in Mackworth, Derby, was charged with controlling or coercive behaviour, assault occasioning actual bodily harm and assault by beating after he was arrested on June 14 2023.

Charles Hanson court case
Charles Hanson is also accused of controlling or coercive behaviour. Photo: Jacob King/PA. Photo by Jacob King

WhatsApp messages between Hanson and his wife from June that year leading up to his arrest in which he told her he would “never lay a finger” on her “ever again” were read to the court by prosecutor Stephen Kemp on Tuesday.

On June 5th of that year, Hanson messaged Mrs Hanson and said: “I promise now I will never ever lay a finger on you … ever again. Let’s just give it a go, we have been through a lot in 13 years.”

He added: “Let me have one more chance and let me show you what a good husband … I can be.”

One of Mrs Hanson’s responses said: “Fed up with this, you will never change.”

Her husband said in a message days later: “I know if I do anything with laying hands on again I will have to walk.

“I really do want to try and make it work, I love you and realise what I need to do. Can we not give it a two week cooling off and see where we are? I did not sleep last night thinking about everything.”

 

Mrs Hanson responded in another message: “I’m past that point I’m afraid.”

A few days before Hanson was arrested, Mrs Hanson told him in a text that she wanted to separate after he “pushed (her) too far”.

He said in messages to his wife earlier that month: “Please don’t say you are done, it’s like a knife through my heart. Please give me one more chance. I promise I will change and I know I can. ”

Mrs Hanson’s mother Jacqueline Ludlam told the court that the couple’s relationship began as “quite a normal marriage” before Hanson’s “outbursts” became more frequent.

She told the court: “She had been telling me she was scared of him and she had got to get away from him. It was not very practical for her to leave.”

Mrs Ludlam told the jury Hanson was “desperate” to try anything and agreed to go to marriage counselling, which the jury had heard the couple attended one session of in May 2023.

The trial continues.