A 26-year-old father in the United Kingdom shook his 15-week-old son so hard that his ribs broke, his shoulder was fractured, his head sustained multiple injuries and his eyes bled.
The father, a Rugby player, was held guilty of manslaughter, not murder, after the Newport Crown Court deliberated on the case for about two hours.
“The medical evidence is such that an accidental fall can be excluded. Cody’s injuries were as a result of deliberate violence probably in the form of both shaking and impact,” said prosecutor Paul Lewis QC, according to the BBC.
Tragic Death of Baby Cody
On the day of the incident, at about 5 p.m., Cody’s mother, Paula Williams went to her sister’s house nearby and left baby Cody with Jones.About an hour later, Jones called Williams saying Cody wouldn’t stop crying. The mother asked Jones to use some teething gel. A few minutes later Jones called Williams again.
Jones told Williams that Cody had fallen from his arms. “He fell onto the top of his neck, fell back onto the mattress with his legs in the air. His legs then came over with his body weight on top of him,” he said according to Wales Online.
“When I picked him up, he sank in my arms and made a choking noise. He wasn’t breathing properly. I was panicking. Cody had never been like that before,” said Williams, according to South Wales Argus.
Proceedings in the Court
Jones sobbed when a bathtime video of Cody was played before a jury at Newport Crown Court.The father told the court he loved his son and had taken 400 pictures of the baby in the short span of his life. “I was very proud. I was also proud of Paula (the child’s mother) for bringing such a beautiful son into the world. I was a happy man. I was excited to have a son in my life,” he said according to South Wales Argus.
The defending prosecutor, Richard Smith, told the jury that Jones has never been in trouble with the police before. “Mr Jones was working very hard indeed supporting his newborn child and his partner Paula,” he told the jury, according to the Daily Mail.
According to the BBC, a pathologist told jurors that Cody had uncountable hemorrhages in his eyes.
“The medical evidence is such that an accidental fall can be excluded. Cody’s injuries were as a result of deliberate violence probably in the form of both shaking and impact,” prosecutor Paul Lewis QC told during the trial.