Liam Middleton-Gomm, 36, broke into Thames Wharf Studios in west London on June 30 and stole about £5,000 of goods.

A man jailed for burgling one of Damien Hirst’s studios was caught by police who traced the movements of his GPS-enabled ankle tag, a court has heard.

Liam Middleton-Gomm, 36, broke into Thames Wharf Studios in west London on June 30 and stole about £5,130 of goods including electronic items, clothing and a pram.

Middleton-Gomm, of no fixed abode, smashed the window beside a fire exit and reached in to activate its shutter and enter the building, prosecutor Paul Andrews told Kingston Crown Court on Thursday.

The burglar, who has dozens of previous convictions, attended the studio on two occasions that evening and went to his father’s property with some of the stolen goods, the court heard.

It is understood Middleton-Gomm stole multiple leather jackets that were being embellished, as well as trousers, embroidered shirts, and a Dior pram with silver skulls on the wheels. Some of the property was sold on and has not been recovered.

His father, Leslie Gomm, 62, of Fulham, west London, previously pleaded guilty to handling stolen goods for his son’s benefit and was given a one-year conditional discharge on Thursday. He had been in custody for three-and-a-half months before his sentencing.

The prosecution said Middleton-Gomm visited his father’s property twice that evening but Gomm did not know the studio was being burgled.

Police charged the burglar after examining data from his GPS ankle tag and DNA at the scene, Mr Andrews told the court.

Damien Hirst at the opening of an exhibition of his work in 2007
Damien Hirst at the opening of an exhibition of his work in 2007 (Cathal MacNaughton/ PA Archive)

Judge Martyn Barklem sentenced Middleton-Gomm to 32 months in prison and said: “You were actually wearing a GPS tag that was part of your licence conditions when you were carrying out these offences.”

He added: “Your appalling previous record is of course a serious aggravating factor”.

The court heard Middleton-Gomm has 39 previous convictions involving 83 offences including multiple house burglaries.

Kathleen Mulhern, defending Middleton-Gomm, said her client had a “significant fall” in 2023 that caused injuries to his spine and pelvis and lasting pain that is treated by a “quite strong” painkiller.

Judge Barklem confirmed that the fall happened “while running away from police, resulting in a metal pole in his back”.

Middleton-Gomm, of no fixed abode, had pleaded guilty to two counts of burgling Hirst’s riverside studio.

He was also sentenced for two house burglaries on July 9 and July 17, as well as the attempted burglary of a property on July 9.

Bristol-born, Leeds-raised artist Hirst came to attention in 1988 when he was a student at Goldsmiths, University of London, where he conceived and curated the group exhibition Freeze.

Hirst’s best-known artwork includes a pickled shark, a rotting cow’s head and diamond-encrusted skull.

He won the Turner Prize in 1995 for his formaldehyde-preserved cow and calf, called Mother And Child, Divided.

More from Perspective

Get a free copy of our print edition

News

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Fill out this field
Fill out this field
Please enter a valid email address.
You need to agree with the terms to proceed

Your email address will not be published. The views expressed in the comments below are not those of Perspective. We encourage healthy debate, but racist, misogynistic, homophobic and other types of hateful comments will not be published.