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Jessica Gilbert

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Jessica Gilbert

Birth
England
Death
26 Jul 2006 (aged 19)
Pardubice, Czech Republic
Burial
Burial Details Unknown Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Brought up in Woldingham, Surrey to Angela and Ian Gilbert, her father was a career manager with the Royal Bank of Scotland. Gilbert's parents had separated in 2003, and Jessica was living in Reigate with her mother and siblings; while her father had remarried lawyer Sally, and lived in Hackney, East London.

Jessica Gilbert had represented England in every major chess competition from the age of 12, and came to prominence when she won the Women's World Amateur Chess Championship in 1999. Such was her achievement, she was even mentioned in a parliamentary debate by the then sports minister, Tony Banks, who said: "We are extremely proud of what Jessie Gilbert has achieved for chess and for this country."

She also gained the Woman FIDE Master (WFM) title from the game's governing body, FIDE. In recognition of her achievement, the Brain Trust charity and Swedish health care company Bure provided Gilbert with a bursary of £4000 so that she could travel to America to study with grandmaster Edmar Mednis in New York.

Gilbert had won a place at Oxford University to study medicine from September 2005, but decided to take a gap year in order to spend time focused solely on chess. In the space of only a few months in early 2006, Gilbert achieved three "norms" in major chess tournaments.

On the night of July 26, 2006, she fell from the eighth floor of the Hotel Labe, in Pardubice, Czech Republic, where she was playing at the Czech Open. Following her death she was posthumously made an International Master.

Some of her acquaintances came forward to claim that Jessica was a sleepwalker, and that she could have fallen to her death through the window, which would have been left open due to the hot weather in Europe at the time. But the authorities and the Czech Open organizer Jiri Petruzalek pointed to suicide as the cause. Jessica was said to be taking anti-depressants, and it was later revealed that she had a history of self-harm and had tried suicide previously using paracetamol tablets. On the evening of her death, it was reported she had consumed beer and vodka from the room's minibar. Jessica also shared the room with her 14-year-old friend and fellow chess-player. Her friend got up to visit the bathroom sometime in the early morning. When she returned, Jessica was missing, and she assumed that she had gone for a walk.

Two days following her death, it emerged that her father, Ian Gilbert, had been charged with seven counts of rape and two of indecent assault. The charges were said to relate to more than one victim. British police would not name the alleged victims, but confirmed that one of them was dead. On 29 July 2006, the British press began to name Jessica Gilbert as one of the victims.

Mr Gilbert had at the time of the charge to enter a plea. If he were to plead not guilty, it would have raised the prospect of Jessica having to give evidence against her father, and being cross-examined by his barrister. Mr Gilbert was released on bail, pending his case starting at Guildford Crown Court on 21 August 2006. On 31 July 2006, the Crown Prosecution Service said that they would be reviewing the case in the light of the media coverage of Jessica Gilbert's death.

When the trial started, he entered a plea of not guilty. On 7 November 2006 the prosecution played a tape recording of Jessica in interview with Surrey police. She told officers of the first attack by her father when she was eight: "I was asleep and he sat on my bed and I woke up. He didn't say anything. I did not scream or anything because he had his hand over my mouth and I was really scared." She said there were at least another eight such attacks over the next five years: "He'd come in and I'd close my eyes and pretend it was not happening. He would tell me "Don't say anything or I'll kill you." " She also told the officers her father tried to strangle her by wrapping a computer lead around her neck, and would walk into the bathroom at their home in Woldingham, while she was having a shower. Jessica said she had nightmares about him every night and saw a psychiatrist because of the alleged abuse.

On December 14, 2006, Mr Gilbert was found not guilty of all charges against him. Two days later it was reported that Angela Gilbert had been arrested on suspicion of threatening to kill her ex-husband, although she was later released and the Crown Prosecution Service decided not to proceed with the case.

(Information from Wikipedia)
Brought up in Woldingham, Surrey to Angela and Ian Gilbert, her father was a career manager with the Royal Bank of Scotland. Gilbert's parents had separated in 2003, and Jessica was living in Reigate with her mother and siblings; while her father had remarried lawyer Sally, and lived in Hackney, East London.

Jessica Gilbert had represented England in every major chess competition from the age of 12, and came to prominence when she won the Women's World Amateur Chess Championship in 1999. Such was her achievement, she was even mentioned in a parliamentary debate by the then sports minister, Tony Banks, who said: "We are extremely proud of what Jessie Gilbert has achieved for chess and for this country."

She also gained the Woman FIDE Master (WFM) title from the game's governing body, FIDE. In recognition of her achievement, the Brain Trust charity and Swedish health care company Bure provided Gilbert with a bursary of £4000 so that she could travel to America to study with grandmaster Edmar Mednis in New York.

Gilbert had won a place at Oxford University to study medicine from September 2005, but decided to take a gap year in order to spend time focused solely on chess. In the space of only a few months in early 2006, Gilbert achieved three "norms" in major chess tournaments.

On the night of July 26, 2006, she fell from the eighth floor of the Hotel Labe, in Pardubice, Czech Republic, where she was playing at the Czech Open. Following her death she was posthumously made an International Master.

Some of her acquaintances came forward to claim that Jessica was a sleepwalker, and that she could have fallen to her death through the window, which would have been left open due to the hot weather in Europe at the time. But the authorities and the Czech Open organizer Jiri Petruzalek pointed to suicide as the cause. Jessica was said to be taking anti-depressants, and it was later revealed that she had a history of self-harm and had tried suicide previously using paracetamol tablets. On the evening of her death, it was reported she had consumed beer and vodka from the room's minibar. Jessica also shared the room with her 14-year-old friend and fellow chess-player. Her friend got up to visit the bathroom sometime in the early morning. When she returned, Jessica was missing, and she assumed that she had gone for a walk.

Two days following her death, it emerged that her father, Ian Gilbert, had been charged with seven counts of rape and two of indecent assault. The charges were said to relate to more than one victim. British police would not name the alleged victims, but confirmed that one of them was dead. On 29 July 2006, the British press began to name Jessica Gilbert as one of the victims.

Mr Gilbert had at the time of the charge to enter a plea. If he were to plead not guilty, it would have raised the prospect of Jessica having to give evidence against her father, and being cross-examined by his barrister. Mr Gilbert was released on bail, pending his case starting at Guildford Crown Court on 21 August 2006. On 31 July 2006, the Crown Prosecution Service said that they would be reviewing the case in the light of the media coverage of Jessica Gilbert's death.

When the trial started, he entered a plea of not guilty. On 7 November 2006 the prosecution played a tape recording of Jessica in interview with Surrey police. She told officers of the first attack by her father when she was eight: "I was asleep and he sat on my bed and I woke up. He didn't say anything. I did not scream or anything because he had his hand over my mouth and I was really scared." She said there were at least another eight such attacks over the next five years: "He'd come in and I'd close my eyes and pretend it was not happening. He would tell me "Don't say anything or I'll kill you." " She also told the officers her father tried to strangle her by wrapping a computer lead around her neck, and would walk into the bathroom at their home in Woldingham, while she was having a shower. Jessica said she had nightmares about him every night and saw a psychiatrist because of the alleged abuse.

On December 14, 2006, Mr Gilbert was found not guilty of all charges against him. Two days later it was reported that Angela Gilbert had been arrested on suspicion of threatening to kill her ex-husband, although she was later released and the Crown Prosecution Service decided not to proceed with the case.

(Information from Wikipedia)

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