An 8-year-old girl has been stabbed to death by her own father, as revenge against her mother, who is his ex-partner for finding solace in another woman.
The 55 year old factory worker has been found guilty of murder after he used a kitchen knife to kill Mylee Billingham. It was gathered that he dragged her by the coat into his bungalow moments after holding the blade to the neck of her mother, Tracey Taundry.
According to Metro UK, a trial at Birmingham Crown Court heard how Miss Taundry dialled 999 from outside Billingham’s house in Brownhills, near Walsall, telling operators to hurry as Mylee was screaming ‘stop it daddy’.
Jurors deliberated for around 80 minutes before unanimously convicting Billingham of murder and a separate charge of making a threat to kill 34-year-old Miss Taundry.
He will be sentenced tomorrow. The unemployed factory worker opted not to give evidence, claiming he had no memory of stabbing Mylee through the chest, and was guilty of the lesser offence of manslaughter due to depression.
But prosecutors argued that Billingham ‘turned his anger’ on Mylee to spite Miss Taundry after she began a same-sex relationship.
Opening the case at the start of the trial, prosecutor Karim Khalil QC said of the killing:
‘It was swift, deliberate, clinical, brutal. It was not some manic unfocused assault.
‘This was no accident and it was not a slight injury – it was a deep, violent thrust of a lethal weapon into the most vulnerable part of his young daughter’s body.’
Billingham, who faces a mandatory life sentence, showed no emotion as the verdict was read out and stared directly at the floor.
He had been wearing bandages during the trial after injuring his wrists while on remand on September 21 after apparently attempting to end his own life.
Billingham underwent an operation and missed three days of his trial but jurors were told to ignore his injuries.
Detective Inspector Jim Colclough said:
‘Sadly Billingham has provided little by way of an explanation for what he did throughout. I cannot imagine how painful and difficult this has been for Tracey and her family to comprehend. After having to try and come to terms with their loss, Billingham has put them through the ordeal of a very public trial.
I hope today’s verdict offers some sense of justice which may in time provide some comfort. However I know they will never come to terms with what has happened. A young girl, who had her whole life ahead of her, has been cruelly taken by someone who she loved and trusted. This is a despicable act on a defenceless child.’