Couple who killed Arthur Labinjo-Hughes jailedon December 3, 2021 at 2:44 pm

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Thomas Hughes will serve 21 years and Emma Tustin a minimum of 29 for the killing and torture of his son.

Emma Tustin and Thomas Hughes

Image source, West Midlands Police

A man has been jailed for 21 years and his partner for a minimum of 29 years over the torture and killing of his six-year-old son, Arthur Labinjo-Hughes.

Emma Tustin, 32, murdered the boy with a fatal head injury at her home in Solihull last year.

She photographed him lying on the floor, sending the image to his father Thomas Hughes, 29.

Hughes was convicted of the boy’s manslaughter.

Undated handout of Arthur Labinjo-Hughes

Image source, Family handout

Sentencing, Justice Mark Wall QC said the case was “one of the most distressing and disturbing” he had ever dealt with.

He said neither defendant had shown any remorse and their behaviour had been “spiteful and sadistic”.

One of the most troubling aspects of the case, he added, was that Tustin’s own two children “lived a perfectly happy life in that house” just yards from where Arthur was subjected to unthinkable abuse.

The trial at Coventry Crown Court heard Arthur had been poisoned with salt, subjected to regular beatings, denied food and drink and made to stand for hours alone in the hallway.

“This cruel and inhuman treatment of Arthur was a deliberate decision by you to brush off his cries for help as naughtiness,” the judge said.

Tustin, handed a life sentence for murder, was also sentenced to 10 years for four counts of child cruelty.

Hughes, who was found guilty of two cruelty counts, but acquitted of one pertaining to Arthur’s salt poisoning, was sentenced to nine years over them. Both killers will serve these sentences concurrently.

Still from video recorded on an internal CCTV camera in the property's lounge which was shown to the jury at Coventry Crown Court

Image source, West Midlands Police

Tustin refused to enter the court room to hear the judge’s sentencing remarks or victim impact statements from Arthur’s family.

In a victim impact statement read to the court, Arthur’s mother said his death had destroyed her life.

“Life as I know it will never exist again,” Olivia Labinjo-Halcrow’s statement said. “I feel hollow every day, I feel as though I’m walking around with all the lights turned off.

“He was the light of my life, the best parts of me. He was a precious, precious gift.”

Ms Labinjo-Halcrow is in prison for killing her former partner in 2019. The statement was read by her mother, Arthur’s maternal grandmother, Madeleine Halcrow, who broke down in tears as she spoke.

Arthur Labinjo-Hughes

Image source, Family handout

Arthur’s paternal grandmother, Joanne Hughes, also read a statement in which she said the six-year-old was the “sunlight of all our lives”.

“His death has turned the colour of our lives into a perpetual grey,” she continued.

Ms Hughes said Tustin was remorseless and “the only pity she has shown is for herself”.

She also said it was “clear that Arthur was failed by the very authorities that we, as a society, are led to believe are there to ensure the safety of everyone”.

A serious case review is under way into circumstances around Arthur’s death after it emerged social workers had visited the house in the months before he died and found no cause for concern.

Arthur Labinjo-Hughes

Image source, Family handout

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Friday the details of the case were “deeply disturbing” and his thoughts were with those who loved Arthur.

A spokesperson for Number 10 said the government would not hesitate to take any action following the review into Arthur’s death.

Football fans have organised tributes for Arthur, including a banner at his beloved Birmingham City. There will also be applause to remember him at the Blues’ away match with Millwall this weekend.

If you have been affected by the issues raised in this article, help and support is available via BBC Action Line.

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Follow BBC West Midlands on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Send your story ideas to: newsonline.westmidlands@bbc.co.uk

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