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Category Archives: Child Killer

Teresa Sheldon – Dartford

19 Monday Jul 2021

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July 2021

Killer mum released from mental health services

A mum who strapped her five-year-old son in a car and then set it ablaze has been RELEASED from the care of mental health services.

Teresa Sheldon of Dartford, Kent was detained under a hospital order in July 2015 after she pleaded guilty to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility for the death of son Tommy.

He was injured in the blaze in his mother’s silver Ford Fiesta in Merdon Castle Lane, Hursley, Hampshire, in August 2014 and died a fortnight later in hospital.

Sheldon, (then aged 38), set the car on fire with a cigarette lighter after sprinkling the inside with a can of petrol

Sheldon from Dartford, Kent, also pleaded not guilty at Winchester Crown Court to the attempted murder of another person, who cannot be identified for legal reasons. The second person managed to escape.

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Brian Penn – Ayr

16 Wednesday Jun 2021

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June 2021

Scots monster who killed newborn son and tried to blame baby’s mum jailed for 12 years

A dad who killed his seven-week-old baby boy has been caged for 12 years.

Brian Penn, 30, carried out the fatal attack on tiny Kaleb Penn at his home in Ayr on November 1, 2017.

He had pinned the blame on the boy’s mum Kelly Ann Cope.

Penn violently shook Kaleb and inflicted an unknown blunt force trauma on him.

The stricken child was found to have suffered a skull fracture, a bleed to the brain, a serious brain injury and fractured ribs.

Penn initially claimed to medics the boy had suffered a “choking episode” but he died two days later in hospital.

Penn was found guilty at the High Court in Glasgow of culpable homicide and a separate charge of assault to Kaleb’s severe injury and danger of life.

He had originally been charged with murder and a further allegation of attempted murder.

Judge Lord Weir told Penn at today/yesterday’s sentencing that Penn inflicted wounds on a “vulnerable baby lost forever to his family forever.”

The judge added: “When Kaleb was born he could have expected without realising it the loving parental care and nurture so vital to such helpless infants.

“The jury were satisfied that you inflicted blunt force trauma injuries to his head and body to sufficient seriousness fractures appeared on an x-ray.

“The physical assaults you carried out were the antithesis for the care Kaleb looked to you for and his life was tragically cut short.”

Kaleb’s mum Kelly-Ann Cope, 31, told jurors in evidence Penn woke her up on the morning of his death asking her to phone 999.

Miss Cope said: “He said the wean wasn’t breathing. I was in bed and Kaleb was in his arms at the bedroom door.”

Prosecutor Erin Campbell asked how Kaleb was and she replied: “I put my hand on his heart and it was still beating but I couldn’t understand why he wasn’t breathing.

“His eyes were rolling to the back of his head.”

Miss Cope said she could not watch as mercy crews tended to Kaleb and rushed him to hospital.

It was put to Miss Cope that she knew about Kaleb choking on prune juice as she said it during the 999 call.

Miss Cope was asked how she knew and she replied: “Brian came in and I asked what happened and he said Kaleb choked on prune juice but I didn’t know more about it.”

She later added: “He said he patted his back and said he stiffened up, his body went flimsy then realised he wasn’t breathing.”

Miss Cope said she was beside Penn when he told medical staff that he dropped Kaleb on a changing mat weeks before.

It was also put to the mum that she told police in a statement that Kaleb had a bump on the back of his head.

Miss Cope said she had not known him to hit his head.

Miss Campbell asked: “Did you forget or deliberately not tell them?”

Miss Cope said: “I did forget as my head was discombobulated as my thoughts were to see my son.”

Miss Cope denied causing Kaleb’s injuries stating: “I wouldn’t harm anyone, I couldn’t kill a spider.”

Nurse Carol McNeill earlier told jurors that she spoke toPenn after Kaleb arrived at the hospital.

Mrs McNeill stated: “He said that he had been feeding the baby and there had been a choking episode.

“He (Kaleb) had vomited, but that it was not vomit.”

Consultant neuropathologist professor Colin Smith, 53, who examined Kaleb’s brain after his death, gave evidence at the trial.

He said: “[Kaleb’s injuries] are only seen in a setting of severe trauma, this is either a fall from a height or road traffic incident.”

Prof Smith also claimed there was evidence of previous bleeding to the brain dated seven to 10 days before Kaleb’s death.

He was then asked: “We may hear evidence that three weeks before his death, he may have been dropped from about 12 inches to the ground.

“Was a fall like that likely to have caused the injuries to the brain?”

Prof Smith replied: “It is possible.”

Miss Campbell asked: “Would it be clear the level of brain injury you identified in this case would have led Kaleb to be unresponsive?”

Prof Smith replied: “That’s my opinion.”

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Rosdeep Adekoya – Edinburgh

25 Sunday Apr 2021

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April 2021: Now fully released

December 2018: Now on day release from prison

August 2014

Mikaeel-Kular-

A mother who killed her three-year-old son and hid his body in a suitcase has been jailed for 11 years.

Mikaeel Kular died two days after being beaten repeatedly by Rosdeep Adekoya following a family day out in January.

After discovering his lifeless body on the floor of their Edinburgh home, she wrapped it in a duvet cover, put it in the suitcase and drove about 25 miles to Kirkcaldy, Fife, to hide it in woodland.

But she reported him missing to police, sparking a two-day search operation involving hundreds of local people.

Adekoya, 34, a prisoner at Cornton Vale jail near Stirling, was initially charged with murder but last month pleaded guilty to the reduced charge of culpable homicide.

She also admitted a charge of attempting to defeat the ends of justice by pretending to police her son had gone missing.

She was jailed for 11 years on Monday when she returned to the high court in Edinburgh for sentencing.

The court heard that Mikaeel died on the night of Tuesday 14 January from injuries inflicted the previous Sunday.

His mother lost her temper when he was repeatedly sick following a trip to a Nando’s restaurant at the city’s Fountain Park.

She smacked him and struck him on the body and head with a clenched fist, the court heard previously.

When Mikaeel was sick for a third time, she dragged him to the shower by his arms and beat him heavily on his back as he lay over the bath edge, the court was told.

Over the next few days Mikaeel’s condition worsened and he was kept away from nursery.

He was assaulted again on the Monday after being sick and became listless, but his mother did not take him to a doctor because of the bruising.

By Tuesday night, Mikaeel was said to be quiet and was giving a limited response to his mother’s questions.

Advocate depute Alex Prentice, prosecuting, told the court: “He would have been in significant pain but was put to bed. The pain would have increased significantly while Mikaeel became dangerously ill and finally dying as a result of the injuries inflicted upon him by the accused.”

The Hight Court at Edinburgh heard how Adekoya’s internet history showed searches including “I find it hard to love my son”, “Why am I so aggressive with my son” and “Get rid of bruises”.

Adekoya, who was wearing glasses, a black cardigan and burgundy jeans, cried and wiped away tears throughout her court appearance.

After discovering her son’s body, Adekoya admitted wrapping Mikaeel’s body in a duvet cover, putting it in a suitcase before taking his twin sister to nursery. She then drove to Dunvegan Avenue in Kirkcaldy, Fife, where she hid the case under a bush in woods behind a house

But mobile telephone masts recorded the 34-year-old’s journey across the Forth Road Bridge, undermining her statements to police about her whereabouts.

Adekoya, who had a history of depression and attempted suicide in 2001, had called 999 to report her son missing to police.

She told officers he got out of bed and climbed on a stool to unlock the front door of his home.

Mikaeel died on the night of Tuesday 14 January from injuries inflicted the previous Sunday.

The final cause of death was found to be “blunt force abdominal trauma”.

Mikaeel had more than 40 separate injuries to his body, including bruises to his back, chin and cheek, trauma to the brain, haemorrhage in the spinal cord and injuries to his arms.

Adekoya pleaded guilty to repeatedly punching her son and causing his body to hit against a hard object or inflicting blunt injuries on his head and body between 12 and 15 January at their home in Ferry Gait Crescent in the Drylaw area of the city.

She eventually broke down and took officers to his body.

Adekoya’s internet history showed searches including, “I find it hard to love my son”, “Why am I so aggressive with my son” and “Get rid of bruises”.

Police Scotland Asst Ch Con Malcolm Graham said Mikaeel’s disappearance and death deeply impacted on his family and “resonated across the community in which he lived”.

Passing sentence, judge Lord Glennie said a custodial sentence was inevitable in such a case and referred to the crown acceptance that Adekoya had no intention to kill Mikaeel.

He continued: “Nevertheless, what you did was cruel and inexcusable. Striking a child even once is bad enough. Striking him heavily and repeatedly with hand and fist when he was being sick again and again simply beggars belief.

The toddler’s body was found in woodland behind a property in Kirkcaldy

house

“Mikaeel was by all accounts a healthy, happy little boy. By your actions, however unintended, you have not only robbed Mikaeel of his young life but left a gaping hole in the lives of all who loved him.”

The judge, who heard a plea for a significant discount to the sentence from Adekoya’s defence QC, said it was not clear precisely what triggered the events leading to Mikaeel’s death.

Referring to the beatings the youngster received at the hands of his mother, Glennie told Adekoya her son was in severe pain shortly before he died.

But he said she was “not even aware that death was a possibility until it happened”.

The judge said he accepted that Adekoya’s remorse was “genuine and heartfelt”.

“You are clearly an intelligent and articulate young woman,” he told her. “There is no history of violence by you towards any of your children. That makes it all the more difficult to understand your actions. I do not suppose that you really understand why you did what you did.”

Reports prepared for the case found that Adekoya suffered from depression for some time, particularly in the last few months before Mikaeel’s death, as the single mother found herself “overwhelmed” by her circumstances.

“It is clear that the normal bond between mother and child simply failed to develop between you and Mikaeel, though it clearly developed with the other children,” Glennie added.

The judge also pointed to the large search for Mikaeel, involving the police, fire service, coastguard, mountain rescue teams, air support and hundreds of members of the public.

He said: “By your pretence that Mikaeel had gone missing you caused a massive manhunt to be undertaken, involving both the emergency services and the public. I accept that this was not planned and that you simply panicked when you realised that Mikaeel was dead. But this too … is a serious matter.”

Appealing for leniency, defence QC Brian McConnachie told the judge: “There is no sentence your lordship can impose in this case which will be deemed sufficient by what appears to be an ill-informed mob who are no doubt at this moment waiting to express their outrage and indignation.”

Of Adekoya, he said: “She understands that there is an almost insurmountable difficulty in anyone understanding the circumstances that have come to pass which would cause you to kill your own child.”

He pointed to events in her past, including the death of her alcoholic father when she was about 17 and a suicide attempt by her in 2001.

He spoke of Adekoya’s difficulties adjusting from life as a single woman to being the mother of five children.

Her marriage broke up and her subsequent relationship with the father of Mikaeel and his twin sister was disapproved of by her family, the court heard.

McConnachie spoke of her difficulties forming an emotional attachment to Mikaeel, adding: “One of the things that Mrs Adekoya has never been good at doing is seeking help.”

The lawyer attributed her actions immediately following the death of her son to panic and an inability to comprehend what she had done.

He said this was not a death that had been preceded by months of neglect or other violent incidents. On the contrary, it was a situation that was completely out of character, the court heard.

rosdeep-adekoya

 

July 2014

Mother Admits Beating Mikaeel Kular To Death

Mikaeel Kular’s mother has pleaded guilty to killing her three-year-old son, who she subjected to repeated assaults.

Rosdeep Adekoya had been accused of murder but admitted a reduced charge of culpable homicide at the High Court in Edinburgh.

Social workers were last night accused of failing toddler Mikaeel Kular after his mother admitted she beat him to death as a punishment for being sick.

Rosie Adekoya – who was known to social services – ‘lost her temper’ and battered the three-year-old boy in a rage when he was repeatedly sick after a trip to a restaurant. 

She then left him in agony to die of his 40 separate injuries over the course of three days. When she found him slumped dead on the floor, she wrapped his body in a duvet cover, hid it in a suitcase and buried it in the woods – before calling the police to say he was missing

She also admitted repeatedly punching him and causing his body to hit against a hard object or inflicting blunt injuries on his head and body between January 12 and 15

Last night it emerged Adekoya, 34, had twice had her five children taken into care – but on both occasions, they were returned to her by social workers.

This was despite neighbours and even her own mother warning the authorities on many occasions that the children were being seriously neglected, left to sleep on filthy mattresses and abandoned for whole weekends while she went out partying with drug dealers, drinking and taking cocaine.

And when Adekoya – the daughter of a respectable Hertfordshire GP – moved from Fife to Edinburgh, social services failed to pass on the records about her.

This meant that no one was monitoring the welfare of three-year-old Mikaeel and his siblings in the weeks before his death.

Yesterday social workers and police were facing questions over why the party-mad single mother and her five children slipped so easily off the radar. Last night Fife Council said it was conducting a significant case review following Mikaeel’s death.

At the High Court in Edinburgh yesterday, Adekoya wept as she pleaded guilty to killing her son at their home in Edinburgh in January and hiding his body in woodland.

She was originally charged with murdering the toddler but the court accepted her plea of guilty to the lesser charge of culpable homicide. Adekoya dabbed her eyes repeatedly with tissues as the details of her crime were read to the court. Mikaeel’s father, Zahid Saeed, watched from the public gallery.

The court heard that Mikaeel died on the night of Tuesday, January 14, from injuries inflicted three days earlier when Adekoya battered him for being unwell. His mother smacked him and struck him on the body and head with her fist, the court heard.

When Mikaeel was sick for a third time, she dragged him to the shower by his arms and ‘beat him heavily’ on his back as he lay over the bath edge.

Over the next few days Mikaeel’s condition worsened and he was kept off nursery. He was assaulted again on the Monday after being sick and he became ‘responseless’.

She also pleaded guilty to attempting to defeat the ends of justice by pretending to police he had gone missing.

Mikaeel’s supposed disappearance from his Edinburgh home in January sparked a huge search involving police officers, firefighters, mountain rescue teams and the coastguard, as well as members of the public.

His body was eventually found 25 miles away in woodland in Kirkcaldy, Fife.

Adekoya had called 999 to report her son missing to police, telling officers he got out of bed and climbed on a stool to unlock the front door of his home.

Advocate depute Alex Prentice told the court: “The basis for the plea tendered being accepted is that the Crown accepts that the accused had no intention to kill Mikaeel and that the assault perpetrated upon him, although severe, fell short of the wicked recklessness required for murder.”

Explaining the charge of culpable homicide, Sky’s James Matthews, at the High Court in Edinburgh, said: “Basically she beat up her son causing his death but she didn’t mean to kill him, and that’s been accepted by the prosecution authorities.”

He said after killing Mikaeel, Adekoya had done the school-run taking her four other children to school before continuing on to dump his body behind a property where her sister was staying.

“Her concocted story unravelled under questioning by police, and it was when they spotted inconsistencies in her story that she broke down and told them where Mikaeel’s body was,” Matthews added.

Adekoya’s internet history showed searches including “I find it hard to love my son”, “I love all of my children except one”, “Why am I so aggressive with my son” and “Get rid of bruises”.

The court heard Mikaeel died on the night of Tuesday, January 14, from injuries inflicted the previous Sunday.

His mother “lost her temper” when he was repeatedly sick following a trip to a Nando’s restaurant at the city’s Fountain Park.

Mikaeel had more than 40 separate injuries to his body, including bruises to his back, chin and cheek, trauma to the brain, haemorrhage in the spinal cord and injuries to his arms.

Mr Prentice said: “If medical assistance had been called for, death might not have resulted.”

Sentence was deferred until August 25 at the High Court in Edinburgh.

UPDATE – 08/07/14: Mikaeel Kular’s mother Rosdeep did not enter a plea in a preliminary hearing at Edinburgh’s High Court today and she is next due to appear on 25 July. She was dressed in black, wore glasses and sat beside two security officers. She showed no emotion.

July 2014

Mikaeel Kular’s mum due in court

The mother of three-year-old Mikaeel Kular will appear in court TODAY accused of beating the little boy to death over a four-day period.

Mother-of-five Rosdeep Kular is alleged to have repeatedly struck Mikaeel on the head and body and then failed to get medical help for him. 

The charge states she then wrapped his body in a duvet cover, put the boy in the boot of her car and transported him in a suitcase from the family home in Edinburgh via a school, Flora Stevenson Primary, and then to a relative’s home in Dunvegan Avenue, Kirkcaldy. She is then said to have hidden the suitcase under a bush in woodland behind the Fife home.

The case against Rosdeep Kular, 33, will call for a preliminary hearing at Edinburgh High Court

Kular, who is on remand at Cornton Vale prison, will appear for a preliminary hearing at the High Court in Edinburgh.

The first charge against Kular states she assaulted her son between January 12 and 15 at their flat.

It states that she inflicted blunt force injuries by repeatedly seizing hold of him, punching him on the head and body and by causing his body to strike against a hard object.

A second charge alleges she took steps to conceal her crime in a bid to defeat the ends of justice.

The indictment further claims that she made a 999 call to the emergency services and told police Mikaeel had got out by climbing on a stool to open a door.

It concludes that she did all the above, sparking a police investigation and major search for Mikaeel also involving the fire service, Coastguard, mountain rescue, air support and the public when “the truth being, as you well knew, that he was dead”.

Kular, who will appear under her married name of Adekoya, is also accused of attempting to defeat the ends of justice.

Mikaeel’s body was discovered in Kirkcaldy on January 17, the day after he was reported missing from his home in the north of Edinburgh.

Rosdeep Kular made an initial appearance in private at Edinburgh Sheriff Court the following Monday charged with murder. She made a second appearance on January 27 and was remanded in custody.

After Mikaeel’s disappearance, police issued his picture and appealed to the public for help in finding him. Hundreds of volunteers from the local community joined police and specialist teams as they searched the surrounding area.

In the early hours of January 18, police revealed the body of a young boy had been discovered in Fife and a woman had been detained. Investigations were focused in an area of woodland behind a house in Kirkcaldy.

The boy’s mother was formally arrested and charged in connection with her son’s death later that Saturday. A death certificate later revealed Mikaeel died from peritonitis and an intra-abdominal haemorrhage.

March 2014

mum

Police found the three-year-old’s body in woodland in Fife six weeks ago. His mother Rosdeep, 33, has been charged with his murder

Little Mikaeel Kular died from internal bleeding and peritonitis, according to a death certificate released 

A registrar in Kirkcaldy released the certificate. It listed the cause of death as “peritonitis and intra-abdominal haemorrhage” and said an investigation of the facts of the case was pending.

The NHS website defines peritonitis as inflammation of the peritoneum – the thin lining of the abdomen, or tummy.

The inflammation is most often caused by an infection from elsewhere in the body, but can also develop directly.

An intra-abdominal haemorrhage is a bleed inside the patient’s abdomen.

Mikaeel’s death was registered by his step-grandfather, who signed the document Mr B Krishnaswamy.

Mikaeels body was found and listed on “04.02 on 18 January” in “Woodland behind Dunvegan Avenue, Kirkcaldy”.

Less than a month ago, the patch of woodland was the scene of one of the biggest police forensic operations in Scotland in recent years.

Mikaeel’s body was found in January, the day after single mum-of-five Rosdeep, 33, reported him missing from their home in Ferry Gait Crescent, Edinburgh.

Police released his picture and asked the public for help to find him, and hundreds of local people turned out to help in the search.

But after less than 36 hours, the focus of the investigation switched to a property in Kirkcaldy and woodland behind it, where Mikaeel’s body was quickly discovered.

A neighbour of the house that was searched said Ms Kular and her five children lived at the address until 18 months ago, and that Mikaeel and his twin were born while they lived at the house.

Mourners left flowers and soft toys for him outside the house, in an upmarket area of the town.

Mikaeel’s mother was later charged with murdering her son and attempting to defeat the ends of justice. She is being held on remand at Cornton Vale jail near Stirling.

She has appeared twice in court in Edinburgh, making no plea or declaration. She was remanded in custody after the first appearance.

Prison bosses began an investigation last week after a Facebook page belonging to Kular appeared online.

The prison service said they would look into any suggestion a prisoner was using social media.

peritonitis

Peritonitis is an inflammation of the peritoneum, the thin tissue that lines the inner wall of the abdomen and covers most of the abdominal organs. Peritonitis may be localized or generalized, and may result from infection (often due to rupture of a hollow organ as may occur in abdominal trauma or appendicitis) or from a non-infectious process.

Peritonitis is inflammation of the peritoneum, the thin layer of tissue that lines the inside of the abdomen (tummy).

It is caused by an infection, which can rapidly spread around the body.

Peritonitis is regarded a medical emergency and requires immediate treatment. 

Signs of peritonitis often develop quickly and can include:

  • sudden abdominal pain that becomes more severe

  • nausea (feeling sick)

  • a lack of appetite

  • a high temperature (fever) of 38°C (100.4°F) or above

  • not passing any urine or passing less than normal

Why peritonitis happens

Peritonitis is caused by a bacterial or fungal infection that either develops directly in the peritoneum or spreads from another part of the body.

Most cases of peritonitis are the result of infection or injury to another part of the body, such as:

  • a split stomach ulcer

  • a burst appendix

  • digestive disorders, such as Crohn’s disease ordiverticulitis

Less commonly, an infection develops directly within the peritoneum due to:

  • cirrhosis – scarring of the liver caused by long-term liver damage

  • peritoneal dialysis – a widely used treatment for people with kidney failure

How peritonitis is treated

Peritonitis is a serious condition that needs to be diagnosed and treated quickly to prevent possibly fatal complications developing, so you will usually be admitted to hospital for tests and treatment.

The underlying infection will be treated with injections of antibiotics or antifungal medication, depending on the cause of the infection.

In some cases, surgery may be required to repair damage to the peritoneum or to treat the underlying cause of the infection.

Complications

Peritonitis can be fatal, despite the best efforts of medical staff. This is often due to the infection spreading through the bloodstream to the major organs (septic shock).

It’s estimated that about 1 in every 10 people with peritonitis due to bowel perforation (a hole that develops in the bowel wall) will die, although this can vary considerably depending on what caused the condition, your age, and your general health.

Deaths are less common for peritonitis related to cirrhosis or kidney dialysis, but it is still a serious condition.

Famous Cases

Famous magician and escape artist Harry Houdini (pictured below) died of peritonitis after a fan asked to punch him in the stomach. At the time Houdini had been suffering from appendicitis, rupturing his already weakened appendix and eventual infection of his peritoneum. Refusing to get medical help he died two days later.

Harry HoudiniMarch 2014

The mother of Mikaeel Kular has been allowed out of jail to see the body of the three-year-old son she is accused of murdering.

Rosdeep Kular, 33, was taken under guard from Cornton Vale women’s prison, near Stirling, to a funeral parlour in Kirkcaldy, Fife.

The visit is understood to have taken place on Tuesday, the day before Mikaeel was laid to rest.

Ms Kular was not present at the funeral service at Kirkcaldy Crematorium.

A spokesman for the Scottish Prison Service said: “We do not comment on individual prisoners.”

Ms Kular has twice appeared in private at Edinburgh Sheriff Court charged with her son’s murder and attempting to defeat the ends of justice. She made no plea or declaration and was remanded in custody.

Mikaeel’s body was discovered in woodland in Fife on 17 January, the day after he was reported missing from his home in the Drylaw area of Edinburgh.

Following his disappearance, Police Scotland issued his picture and appealed to the public for help in finding him.

Hundreds of volunteers from the local community joined police and specialist teams as they searched the surrounding area.

In the early hours of 18 January, police revealed the body of a young boy had been found and that a woman had been detained.

Investigations were focused in an area of woodland behind a house in Kirkcaldy.

Ms Kular was formally arrested and charged in connection with her son’s death later that day.

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Zak Holland/David Worrall/Courtney Brierley – Manchester

31 Wednesday Mar 2021

Posted by Author in Child Killer

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April 2021

Killers jailed for 89 years over house fire that left mum and four children dead

Two men and a woman behind a sickening arson attack which claimed the lives of a mum and her four children have been sentenced to a combined 89 years behind bars.

Zak Bolland, 26, and David Worrall, 28, were today sentenced for the murder of Michelle Pearson, 37, who died 20 months after they set fire to her home in December 2017.

Bolland was given a life sentence with a minimum term of 40 years, while Worrall was handed at least 37 years.

Bolland’s former girlfriend Courtney Brierley, 23, who ‘encouraged and assisted’ the pair, was jailed for 12 years for Michelle’s death after admitting manslaughter

Michelle’s children, Demi Pearson, 14, Brandon, eight, Lacie, Seven, and three-year-old Lia all died as a result of the blaze in Walkden, Greater Manchester.

Michelle suffered catastrophic injuries and remained in hospital until her death in August 2019.

She spent her days “crying in pain”, and when she was able to speak she asked “where are my kids?”, Manchester Crown Court heard today.

She was “heartbroken” and after hearing Bolland was responsible said “he killed my kids, he killed my babies”, a statement from her family said.

Both Bolland and Worrall are already serving four life sentences after being convicted of the children’s murders in 2018.

Bolland had a minimum term of 40 years, while Worrall was sentenced to at least 37 years behind bars.

Brierley was previously sentenced to 21 years after being convicted for four counts of manslaughter.

New legislation means she must serve two thirds of her sentence.

The judge rejected arguments from Bolland and Worrall’s barristers that their minimum terms should not be increased.

Today she sentenced them again to 40 years and 37 years in prison respectively.

Both these sentences will begin from today.

Michelle spent five months in a coma with 68 per cent burns to her body following the fire, which was started as she and her family slept.

When she awoke, she had to come to grips with the devastating news that her four youngest children had died in the blaze.

She had hoped to be well enough to attend her children’s funeral in 2018, but was forced to stay in hospital and came close to death on several occasions.

Michelle’s son Kyle, 18, survived the arson attack.

The Pearson family were sleeping in their beds when a molotov cocktail was tossed through the rear kitchen window of their home on Jackson Street at 5am.

Jurors at Manchester Crown Court were shown footage of the defendants buying beer bottles which were used to create the petrol bombs, hours before the attack.

Two lit petrol bombs were thrown inside the Pearsons’ home after the kitchen window was smashed.

Bolland hurled his bottle which “exploded” near the stairs, blocking the only exit to the ground floor and trapping the victims upstairs.

Michelle and her daughter Lia, who were sleeping in the same bedroom, were rescued from the burning home and when Michelle woke to discover her home was engulfed in flames she screamed “Not the kids! Not my kids!” and dialled 999.

The devoted mum was overcome with heat and smoke before completing the call.

Lia died in hospital two days after the fire.

All four children “died a terrible death” from smoke inhalation and burns, the killers’ first trial heard.

In a heartbreaking video recorded in hospital for the first anniversary of the attack, Michelle said: “First of all, I’d like to thank all the firefighters for what they have done.

“Second, I would like to thank the community for all their generous donations. And last I would like to thank everybody for coming tonight.”

Before she died, courageous Michelle had managed to make one final trip outside her hospital ward.

She also called into the hospital gift shop to buy a thank you present for the nurses who had been caring for her for almost two years.

March 2021

Convicted child killers guilty of murdering mother in same arson attack

Two convicted child killers have been found guilty of the murder of a woman who died 20 months after the same arson attack killed four of her children.

Zak Bolland, 26, and David Worrall, 28, were both convicted by a jury on Tuesday of the murder of Michelle Pearson, 37, following a three-week trial at Manchester Crown Court.

The pair were already serving four life sentences – with a minimum of 40 years for Bolland and 37 for Worrall – for the murders of her four children following a trial in 2018.

They denied the murder of Mrs Pearson, claiming they had been wrongly convicted of murdering her children. Both will be sentenced next month.

High on drink and drugs, the pair launched the fatal attack, the culmination of series of tit-for-tat attacks while feuding with the 16-year-old son of Mrs Pearson.

They petrol-bombed her home on Jackson Street, Walkden, Greater Manchester, in the early hours of the morning, trapping the family upstairs as a ferocious blaze engulfed the house on December 11, 2017.

Demi Pearson, 15, her brother Brandon, aged eight, and sister Lacie, aged seven, all perished in the blaze.

Mrs Pearson was rescued along with her youngest daughter, Lia, aged three, who died in hospital two days later.

Her eldest son, Kyle Pearson, 16, managed to escape the blaze through a window.

Mrs Pearson suffered 68% burns to her body and “clung on to life” the court heard, until she died, aged 37, on August 25 2019 – 20 months after the attack.

Bolland’s girlfriend at the time of the attack, Courtney Brierley, 23, who “encouraged or assisted them”, was convicted of four counts of manslaughter at the first trial and jailed for 21 years.

She admitted the manslaughter of Mrs Pearson. All three will be sentenced on April 21.

June 2019

Woman, 21, who killed four children in Walkden house fire to appeal conviction

A woman jailed for helping arsonists torch a family home – killing four children – is set to appeal against her conviction next week.

Courtney Brierley, 21, was jailed for manslaughter last year for helping two men – her then-boyfriend Zak Bolland and his accomplice, David Worrall – carry out the 5am petrol bomb attack on a family home in Walkden.

Demi Pearson, 15, and her siblings Brandon, eight, Lacie, seven, and three-year-old Lia were all killed. Their mother Michelle, 36, was rescued but was seriously hurt.

The attack was the devastating climax to a feud involving Bolland and Kyle Pearson, Michelle Pearson’s eldest son, who escaped the blaze.

Bolland and his partner-in-crime David Worrall are both serving life for murder and must serve a minimum 40 and 37 years behind bars respectively.

Following a trial at Manchester Crown Court , the jury found Courtney Brierley not guilty of murder but convicted her of four counts of manslaughter.

She was sentenced to 21 years in a young offenders’ institution and can apply for parole halfway through her sentence.

Brierley – said to be a ‘broken’ woman behind bars – has lodged appeals against both her sentence and conviction.

She helped Zak Bolland and David Worrall carry out the attack on December 11, 2017, urging them to put their hoods up as they purchased the petrol used in the firebombing and then going with them in the car that took them and the petrol bombs to Jackson Street in Walkden.

Brierley had claimed she acted because she was in fear of her violent and abusive boyfriend Bolland and had not realised exactly what he was about to do.

Her legal team tried and failed to get the case against her thrown out mid-trial, arguing she had done little more than the prosecution’s main witness Abigail Toone, who had unwittingly acted as the trio’s getaway driver.

The Court of Appeal at the Royal Courts of Justice in London has confirmed that her appeal is listed for June 27.

It is understood Brierley is serving her sentence at HMP Bronzefield in Surrey which houses some of the nation’s most dangerous female prisoners, including Joanna Dennehy, who stabbed three men to death in 2013.

Last year one prisoner, after their release, said: “Courtney was very, very quiet, very broken. I didn’t know what she’d done until after I’d left and I was horrified, you just would not have thought it of her.”

She described how Brierley was housed in a block with lifers.

“Courtney came straight in on remand and was put in a single cell which she rarely left. She was employed as a cleaner but was always being chased by senior prison officers to come and do her work,” said the woman.

She added: “She always looked like she’d been crying, was very, very quiet, didn’t make friends with anyone, rarely ate.

“She was completely broken and received a lot of one to one time in her cell from the prison officers.”

When she was returned to the prison to begin her sentence following a period on remand there, Brierley was in a ‘very bad way’.

Bolland, 24, of Blackleach Drive, Worsley, was jailed for a minimum of 40 years after he was convicted of murder at the conclusion of that trial, which heard he threw a large petrol bomb into the house through a rear window as the family slept.

His friend Worrall, 27, of Worsley Avenue, Worsley, had thrown a smaller petrol bomb into the house but it had not caused significant damage. He was caged for a minimum 37 years after being convicted of murdering the children.

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Sean Sadler – Rubery

24 Wednesday Mar 2021

Posted by Author in Child Killer, West Midlands

≈ Comments Off on Sean Sadler – Rubery

March 2021

Face of thug guilty of murdering tot Lilly Hanrahan after catalogue of abuse

This is the face of thug babysitter Sean Sadler – guilty of murdering toddler Lilly Hanrahan after ‘weeks’ of abuse.

Sadler, who had been left in charge of the tot, was today – March 24 – found guilty of her murder and wounding at Birmingham Crown Court, ending a three-year wait for justice for her family.

Lilly was just 21-months-old when she was rushed to hospital with a catastrophic head injury and six broken ribs in November 2017.

Although surgeons battled to save her, her injuries were unsurvivable and her life support was withdrawn three days later.

Lesley Hanrahan looked after her granddaughter for four months after she was born in February 2016, until more suitable care could be found for her.

Lesley’s daughter, Lilly’s mum, had been unable to care for the newborn herself.

Lilly was placed with a legal guardian and continued to thrive and Lesley was able to see her granddaughter often.

“She loved to dance. She would hear music and her arm would shoot up in the air,” said Lesley.

“I’ve got another grandchild and when you look at her, you’d think it was Lilly, and it kills me.”

In Spring of 2017, the guardian began a relationship with Sadler and he became a regular visitor to their home, often staying overnight.

It wasn’t long before the guardian began to notice bruises on Lilly and photographed them from September 2017, even alerting Lilly’s nursery so they could monitor her.

On the afternoon of Sunday, November 19, 2017 Lilly was left in Sadler’s care while the guardian went out.

Sadler alleged that Lilly went to sleep on the settee, but sometime later she would not wake when he tried to rouse her, so he called an ambulance.

At hospital the extent of Lilly’s injuries became apparent when bruising was found on her scalp under her hair, and following her death extensive post-mortem examinations revealed the head injury which killed her and six broken ribs.

Experts believed these were non-accidental and the likely cause was that Lilly had been violently shaken and thrown against a soft surface, such as the armrest of a settee.

It was not the only abuse Lilly had suffered.

It emerged she had three fractured vertebrae in her spine and bleeding in her lungs which had happened some two to three weeks previously.

Sadler, of Coriander Close in Rubery, was arrested and later charged with Lilly’s murder and wounding.

During his trial at Birmingham Crown Court, the jury heard from expert witnesses who testified they found multiple sites of recent and healing injuries on Lilly’s small body.

They found a total of 40 injuries, including 20 to her head and neck and the rest to her body and limbs. They were considered to be consistent with gripping with excessive force or being slapped or punched

Sadler will be sentenced on Friday, March 26.

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