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Baby murdered by his father in hospital was ‘failed in life'

Baby murdered by his father in hospital was ‘failed in life'

Yahoo24-07-2025
A two-week-old baby who was 'brutally murdered' by his father was 'failed in life', the officer who led the investigation has said.
Brendon Staddon suffered catastrophic injuries at the hands of his father, Daniel Gunter, 27, just weeks after he was born, with multiple broken limbs and his skull crushed.
Speaking with the PA news agency, Chief Inspector Nadine Partridge, of the major crime investigation team at Avon and Somerset Police, said Brendon had been failed in life and 'the only way not to fail him in death is to get justice for what's happened to him'.
She described Brendon's mother, Sophie Staddon, 21, who was cleared of causing or allowing the death of a child, as a 'vulnerable young girl' who was controlled by Gunter.
Brendon, who was born prematurely at 33 weeks, was found in his hospital cot at the Yeovil District Hospital in Somerset on March 5 last year.
While doctors attempted to resuscitate him, Brendon's parents went outside for a cigarette.
'Brendon Staddon was born at just 33 weeks' gestation at Yeovil District Hospital,' Ms Partridge said.
'He lived only two short weeks when he was brutally murdered by his dad, Daniel Gunter, in the hospital. The injuries he sustained were catastrophic.
'He had a shattered skull, he had a broken neck, multiple broken limbs and extensive bruising to his limbs and torso.'
She added: 'The extensive injuries caused are something I've never seen before in my 22 years as a detective.
'The brutality of the murder – and to such a young, vulnerable, tiny baby – is not something, thankfully, that happens all too often.'
She described Gunter as 'very quick to anger', and controlling and coercive towards his partner.
Multiple people have spoken of how he would become violent when frustrated, throwing things.
After the birth of his son, Gunter would 'blatantly ignore' the advice of medical staff, causing Brendon distress by jiggling and poking him.
'Despite multiple times being told this, he ignored it, thinking that he knew best,' Ms Partridge said.
'He would dictate what (Staddon) ate, when she smoked, who she spoke to, where she stayed.
'After Brendon was born, social services offered Sophie a placement in a mother and baby unit and, as such, Daniel would not be welcome there and would lose control over Sophie and Brendon. She refused to take up that support.'
The officer said the parents had shown little emotion during the trial, but Staddon was visibly distressed when she alerted nursing staff at the hospital that Brendon was cold.
'She was quite visibly upset at that point, bent over hysterically crying in the cot space next to where Brendon lay,' she said.
'He was swiftly taken into the resuscitation room, and after a few minutes, both of them left the unit to go outside.
'We can see that on arrest, on the bodyworn footage, that Sophie is quite visibly upset, and she's crying about her baby being dead.'
Ms Partridge thanked the medical staff at the hospital for their work.
'They did everything they could to save Brendon.
'Unfortunately, his injuries were too severe, and the small comfort I can take is that he wouldn't have suffered for long.
'My thoughts are that Brendon was failed in life, and the only way not to fail him in death is to get justice for what's happened to him.'
A child safeguarding and practice review will be held to examine whether there were any missed opportunities to save Brendon and to identify lessons that can be learned.
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Officer who shot D.C. teen in 2020 found liable in wrongful death suit
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A D.C. police officer who killed a young Black man five years ago during an attempted arrest was not legally justified in shooting him, according to a jury that awarded the man's mother $655,000. Deon Kay, 18, was killed in Southeast Washington on Sept. 2, 2020, by D.C. police officer Alexander Alvarez, who saw a pistol in Kay's right hand and fired from eight feet away as Kay was throwing down his weapon. His death sparked protests from those demanding justice and decrying police violence, particularly against Black men. These demonstrations came amid nationwide protests in the summer of 2020 over the Minneapolis police killing of George Floyd. The wrongful death lawsuit was filed in 2021 in D.C. Superior Court by Natasha Kay, the mother of Deon Kay. A jury on Thursday found Alvarez was 'negligent' in the lead-up to the shooting in a way that caused it and that he committed battery against Deon Kay. 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