
Jealous woman who stabbed ex in heart on Christmas Day guilty of his murder
Kirsty Carless, 33, plunged a knife into 31-year-old Louis Price's heart in the early hours of December 25 2024, in an attack 'motivated by anger and jealousy and fuelled by cocaine and alcohol' after a friend sent her a picture of his Tinder profile, Stafford Crown Court heard.
On Wednesday, after around a day of deliberation, a jury of seven men and five women found her guilty of murder and possession of an offensive weapon by unanimous verdicts in relation to the fatal stabbing.
She was also found guilty of assault occasioning actual bodily harm by a majority of 11 to one in connection with an incident in November 2024.
She was cleared of intentional strangulation in relation to the same incident.
The trial was told Carless, of Haling Way in Cannock, Staffordshire, had been at the pub drinking double vodka and cokes with a male friend on December 24.
She later had sex with the male three times at his home before a female friend sent her a screenshot of Mr Price's Tinder profile at around 1.30am on Christmas Day, which left her angry.
Carless then left the male friend's home, took a taxi back to her house, where she picked up a kitchen knife and got another taxi to Mr Price's parents' address in Elm Road, Norton Canes, where she expected to find him with a woman.
CCTV showed her running up the front path into the house and then 'stalking' him around the garden before he was later found with a single stab wound to the chest on the conservatory floor.
Carless had called Mr Price 45 times between 2.15am and 2.44am while she waited for the taxi to take her to the address where he had been staying since their relationship ended – only breaking up what prosecution counsel Jonas Hankin KC called the 'barrage' of calls to impatiently phone the company to check where her taxi was.
After arriving at the address, Carless asked the taxi driver to wait outside while she went into the property to stab Mr Price at around 3am.
The taxi driver reported that around 30 seconds after Carless let herself into the property with a key, he heard a 'very loud and prolonged' scream from a man and that he 'sounded scared'.
Less than two minutes after arriving at the scene, Carless was 'anxious and sweating' as she got back into the taxi and demanded the driver take her to her parents' home, where she admitted what she had done and 999 was called.
Father-of-six Mr Price had been considered by police to be 'at very high risk of domestic abuse' and Carless was on police bail at the time of the fatal stabbing after strangling Mr Price on November 11 2024.
On that occasion, Mr Price phoned 999 to say Carless had poured bleach over tracksuits worth £400 after she put them in the bin, had thrown a glass candle holder at him, pulled him down the stairs and choked him.
He was seen crying on police body-worn video footage, telling the officer: 'It's f****** embarrassing… it can't keep happening, man.'
In a witness statement after the incident, he said the relationship, which started in 2021, had been 'on the whole, abusive', that she had stopped him doing things he liked, such as playing football and had physically abused him.
The trial was told of several previous incidents in which the police had been called, including an incident on March 5 2023, in which Carless had said Mr Price had punched her and been violent and he was arrested, before later retracting her statement.
A neighbour had recalled seeing Carless hitting Mr Price with a metal pole in the ribs outside her house on a different occasion.
Mr Price's friend, Demi-Louise Deakin, also told the trial he had confided in her about his on-off relationship with Carless when they attended a funeral at the end of November 2024, telling her he was 'scared of Kirsty' and feared 'something bad would happen' if he did not leave her.
In her evidence to the trial, Carless said she had no recollection of stabbing him, was 'not a violent person' and had only gone to Mr Price's address as she believed he had taken money from inside a card she had in her home.
She said she picked up a knife with the intent to destroy the caravan he was staying in in his parents' back garden and had 'panicked' after Mr Price was stabbed and fled.
Judge Mr Justice Choudhury thanked the jury for their service and said Carless would be sentenced on Thursday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
25 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
How to work out if YOU can claim £950 from the car finance scandal - and what to do if you can't find the paperwork
It's the scandal dubbed 'PPI on Wheels', but last week five judges at the Supreme Court dealt a blow to millions of drivers hoping for a payout on their car finance deals. There will be no compensation for customers who were simply unaware commission was being paid when they took out car finance, with the judges declaring this was not enough to count as mis-selling.


Times
25 minutes ago
- Times
Six months on from my accident, I've not got on a Lime Bike again
Six months ago I was hit by a car while riding a Lime bike. I was cycling home after a late netball match in a quiet residential area of south London. It was dark but dry and it was a journey I'd made hundreds of times before. I wasn't wearing a helmet — I never did when I got Lime bikes. I had nearly crossed a mini roundabout when a driver coming from my left failed to stop, hitting the back of my bike and sending me catapulting me over the handlebars. I broke my wrist, my jaw and chipped my front teeth. I'm going to require dental work for the rest of my life. I was signed off work for six weeks. It was at least two months before I felt slightly more like myself again. I still get a little pang of nervousness crossing a road when I see a Lime bike coming. And I still haven't got back on a bike. That's why the decision by Hounslow Council to stop Lime ebikes operating in the borough appeals to me. Although less about rider behaviour on the roads and more about parking issues (alternative contracts have been offered to the rental firms Forest and Voi, with 'stricter enforcement for designated bay use' cited as a reason), it feels like sanity is starting to prevail. • The man behind Lime e-bikes on why they're 'no nuisance' The driver who hit me claims she didn't see me, that I 'came out of nowhere''. I guess if I'd been on my normal bike (which had a puncture, hence the Lime), I would have been travelling at a slower pace and therefore more visible to others, or I'd have been able to swerve before she crossed. I don't hate Lime bikes but I fear them now. While in many ways they've positively transformed our mobility across the city, they're big and heavy and fast. Anyone can get on one, and it feels like they leave them anywhere. As an able-bodied person I can walk around the scattered ebikes left on my road but I often think of how this affects wheelchair users, parents with prams, the elderly and people with disabilities. Since my accident, multiple friends have also had incidents, as riders and pedestrians. With summer weather making buses and trains far less desirable, more people are going to choose a Lime bike — thus more potential for accidents. • I know why Lime bike riders are so reckless Am I convinced things will be that different with Forest and Voi bikes? I don't know. It's good to see moves toward stricter parking systems but will that really stop people from riding recklessly? Banning one brand doesn't fix the problem, it just passes it on. For me, it's not so much the product that's inherently dangerous but how people use it. I often see riders on their phones, listening to music, even rolling a cigarette, completely absorbed in their bubble. Red lights and zebra crossings seem optional. And for pedestrians, these heavier, faster bikes leave a fraction of the reaction time compared to non-electric bikes. Riders need to understand that while we feel free and protected, the power is illusory. We're not in a car, it's still a bike, and our bodies are vulnerable. While the ban might ease frustration in the short term, it doesn't solve the bigger issue of integrating technological advances into city travel. Cities need to adapt, not just restrict. If councils don't tackle the root behaviours and infrastructure gaps, we'll be here again in six months with a different logo. As long as we treat these bikes as a quick fix — for cities, for commuters, for climate goals — without properly integrating them into how we move and live, we're asking for more accidents, more frustration and more bans. We need to fix the system before the fear outweighs the convenience and people like me never get back on.


Telegraph
25 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Man ‘who killed family of abandoned baby' caught after week-long manhunt
A man suspected of murdering the family of a baby he then left to die has been captured in Tennessee after a week-long manhunt. Austin Robert Drummond, 28, was apprehended by US Marshals on Tuesday morning after he was seen in the city of Jackson, where residents had been told by authorities to shelter in their homes. Footage released by police on Monday showed Drummond wearing a camouflage jacket and holding a rifle, apparently trying to enter a building. Drummond has been charged with four counts of first-degree murder, aggravated kidnapping, and gun charges in connection with the deaths of Braydon Williams, 15, Matthew Wilson, 21, Adrianna Williams, 20, and Cortney Rose, 38. The victims were the relatives of a baby whom Drummond allegedly abandoned some 40 miles from their bodies, authorities said. Police released a photo of the suspect moments after his apprehension, which showed him wearing a black hoodie. Drummond had served around a decade in prison after robbing a petrol station as a teenager. He was released last year, but later charged with attempted murder in a case that was unrelated to last week's deaths, according to US media. At the time of the four murders last week, he was reportedly out on bond. Authorities have so far not clarified how the victims died or provided a possible motive for their deaths. Their bodies were found in a wooded area in Tiptonville, north of Memphis. Danny Goodman, the local district attorney, said Matthew Wilson and Adrianna Williams were the parents of the baby, while Rose was the grandmother. Girlfriend is sister of one victim Drummond's girlfriend is a sister of one of the victims, according to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation. Drummond is said to have left the baby in a car seat outside a home in Tiptonville, before flagging down people to help in what David Rausch, the TBI director, called a 'sign of compassion'. The infant is safe and being cared for, officials said on Friday. Mr Rausch added that a 'couple of firearms' had been recovered during the course of the investigation, but did not provide further details. Three people, allegedly associates of Drummond's, have been arrested and are accused of assisting him. Tanaka Brown, 29, Giovontie Thomas, 29, and Dearrah Sanders, 23, have all been charged with accessory after the fact to first-degree murder. Brown also faces one count of tampering with evidence.