Every third day, in our #EveryThreeDays campaign, I write about a woman killed by a man. Previously in this campaign, which started on the 2nd of May 2021, I have remembered 103 women, the last being Jessica McGraa.

Today we remember Maria Byrne.

The BBC reported: 

A woman killed after discovering her “spoilt” and “selfish” husband was having an affair was the victim of gaslighting, her family told a review. Maria Byrne, 35, was murdered by Darren Byrne at the couple’s home in Theydon Bois, Essex, on 13th February 2016. Gaslighting is a form of psychological abuse that causes victims to question their own feelings and sanity. A Domestic Homicide Review into Mrs Byrne’s death found it could not have been foreseen or prevented.

Former stockbroker Byrne hit his wife over the head before dousing her body in white spirit and turning on a gas hob, in the hope her body would catch fire, his trial heard. He then went out for a walk. Byrne had told paramedics his wife had been making him a bacon sandwich and when he returned home she was dead. He denied both murder and arson but was convicted by a Chelmsford Crown Court jury and sentenced to life with a minimum of 24 years. 

A report into the mother of two’s death commissioned by Epping Forest Community Safety Partnership said that “no friend or relative ever considered her to be at risk in her personal life”. It added her family members have since reflected on the relationship and believed Byrne to be “controlling” and “not happy unless he had [her] full attention and that she was doing what he believed was his priorities”.  In May 2015 she had discovered “flirtatious messages” on his phone and he told her it was “all in her mind and that she was imagining things”. Her family said he “would come home deliberately late if he knew that she was going out and that he would deliberately make things difficult for her”. While there were no known instances of violence, the family told the report authors that on one occasion Byrne “deliberately made [her] fear for her life [by] driving up the motorway 100mph eating and drinking” which they believed to be a “controlling mechanism”

Maria Byrne

#EveryThreeDays

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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(Pronouns - she/her) - Steph Richards is a 73-year-old 'post-op' trans woman with a Gender Recognition Certificate and works as a human rights activist. She was the elected Women's and LGBT Officer at Portsmouth Labour Party 2021 - 2024, CEO of Translucent.Org.UK, winner of the LGBT Organisation of the Year at the National Diversity Awards in 2022, co-founder of Women's Action Network (Portsmouth) and a volunteer at a Women's health charity. Steph was shortlisted as a "Gender Role Model" at the National Diversity Awards in 2025. Steph has been platformed live on BBC Radio 4 three times, including Women's Hour. She has also appeared on Times Radio, LBC Radio, GB News and Channel 4 News. In 2023, Steph debated trans human rights at an American university event alongside Harvard biologist and author Carole Hooven, PhD. Steph (an intersectional feminist) is passionate about the inclusion and acceptance of trans people in society. She advocates for women in prison, specifically pregnant women and calls out the mounting concern that abortion rights are at risk in the UK. She was the recipient of an Inspirational Women of Portsmouth Award in March, 2023.

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