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Gob
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Put him down like a dangerous dog.

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Derby fire deaths: Three guilty of Philpott children's deaths

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The parents who started a blaze which killed six children as they slept have been convicted of their manslaughter.

Mick and Mairead Philpott, and friend Paul Mosley, were found guilty of starting the fire in Derby to frame a former mistress in a custody battle.

The jury at Nottingham Crown Court returned unanimous decisions on Mosley and Mick Philpott while Mairead Philpott was convicted by a majority.

A senior police officer said it was the most tragic case he had worked on.

Five of the Philpott's children died in their home in Victory Road and the sixth, from a previous relationship, died in hospital.

Derbyshire Assistant Chief Constable Steve Cotterill said: "There are six little kids there that have not got the chance to grow up.

"Personally I have found it very upsetting. I have become extremely angry at the needless loss of life."

Five of the children died on the morning of the fire in Victory Road, and the sixth died three days later.

Jade Philpott, 10, John, nine, Jack, eight, Jesse, six, and Jayden, five, died on the morning of the fire on 11 May 2012.

Mrs Philpott's son from a previous relationship, 13-year-old Duwayne, died later in hospital.

Jurors heard that Philpott had been violent and controlling towards his former live-in mistress, Lisa Willis.

When she left, taking her children, he became "obsessed with getting Lisa and the kids back".

He started the fire in a bid to frame her for the crime and win custody of the children - and perhaps obtain a bigger house - the prosecution argued.


Prosecutor Richard Latham QC said the plan had "gone completely wrong" within two minutes because the fire was far bigger than the defendants expected.

The court heard the trio planned to get all six children into one bedroom at the back of the house where they could be rescued through a window using a pre-placed ladder.

Jurors were told that Philpott was to "act the hero and victim", rescuing the youngsters and framing Ms Willis in the process.


But they were not told that he had a violent past - he was jailed in 1978 for attempting to murder a 17-year-old ex-girlfriend.

He stabbed her 13 times as she lay sleeping after she ended their relationship, and also attacked her mother when she intervened.

The three defendants were found guilty after less than eight hours of deliberation.

The judge, Mrs Justice Thirlwall, said the defendants would be sentenced on Wednesday.

As the court heard the guilty verdicts, Mairead Philpott looked down at the floor and appeared upset while holding a tissue in her hands.

Before leaving the dock, Mick Philpott was heard to say: "It's not over yet."

In a statement read outside the court, Mick Philpott's sister Dawn Bestwick said: "Our presence in court was to find out the truth and following today's verdict we believe justice has been done.

"This past year has been a very difficult time for our family as we have had to come to terms with what Mick and Mairead and Paul Mosley have done. We can now move on and our six angels can rest in peace."

A statement read on behalf of the Duffy family, the family of Mairead Philpott, said: "Duwayne, Jade, John, Jack, Jesse and Jayden were taken away in the cruellest way imaginable by the very people that were supposed to love and protect them.

"We, Mairead's family, cannot describe the pain we feel. Today justice has been done and we are happy with the verdict."

Samantha Shallow, of the Crown Prosecution Service, said it had been a "challenging and harrowing case to prosecute".

A serious case review is being carried out by the Derby Safeguarding Children Board into the deaths but there have been no urgent recommendations to emerge so far from the process.

The children were not subject to child protection plans or legal orders. The review is not due to be completed before the summer.

When asked if the tragedy could have been foreseen, ACC Cotterill said: "My answer is a very emphatic no. What we are dealing with is the unpredictability of Mick Philpott."
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”

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Gob
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Joined: Tue Apr 06, 2010 8:40 am

Re: Put him down like a dangerous dog.

Post by Gob »

The bizarre behaviour of Mick and Mairead Philpott following the deaths of their six children included engaging in hospital food fights, going on shopping sprees while the community was raising funds for the funerals and singing Suspicious Minds in a pub karaoke session.

Relatives who spoke out about their actions in the days following the tragedy included Mairead Philpott's sister, Jennifer Lobban. "She is a victim of Mick but at the end of the day when it comes to your kids she should have put them first," Lobban told the BBC's Panorama.

She said that the couple never entered the hospital room where one of the children, Duwayne, lay dying in a specialist burns unit following the house fire in Derby last May, which the Philpotts were found guilty of starting. Asked what they were doing instead, Lobban said: "Discussing where to order Chinese and complaining that the hospital was crap because it had not provided them with food, just a room to sleep."

As the community sprang into action to raise funds for the family in the wake of the fire, Lobban also told of her disgust at the couple's behaviour. "I was getting phone calls every day saying they were out, they were shopping and from that moment on I did not want to see them anymore … the lack of respect for the kids, it was disgusting," she said.

Marie Smith, mortuary manager at Derby Royal Hospital, also spoke about how Mick Philpott appeared to pretend to faint when he saw their bodies for the first time and later engaged in horseplay with a police officer who he put into a headlock.

Smith told Sky News that Philpott also once referred to the young victims as "little shits" and requested gin when she offered him water. The parents' visits were like a "circus", said Smith, who added: "To me it didn't quite match that he was coming to see his children who had died and he was engaging, it was almost like it was a social event."

Mairead Philpott's father, Jimmy Duffy, also told Panorama that he refused to turn his back on his daughter despite claims by her, strongly rejected by her siblings, that he had abused her.

He said: "She is my daughter. I couldn't give up on her. You can't give up on your own flesh and blood. I can't. I am not that type."
“If you trust in yourself, and believe in your dreams, and follow your star. . . you'll still get beaten by people who spent their time working hard and learning things and weren't so lazy.”

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