Murderer's supporters 'removed from court' for 'screaming and shouting'
Thomas Dures, 21, fled the country hours after he stabbed his teenage victim Matthew Daulby to death during a brawl in Ormskirk, the Liverpool Echo reportes.
Dures was convicted of murder and wounding with intent this week following a trial at Preston Crown Court.
READ MORE: 5 retro RPGs you can play right now guaranteed to make you feel like a kid again - you won't have heard of one of them
READ MORE: 5 games released in 2025 guaranteed to take you back to the good old days of gaming
A witness told the Echo two women who attended court in support of Dures had to be removed from the building in the aftermath of the verdict while screaming and shouting.
They were reported to have made comments including "they're all corrupt, the whole place is corrupt, everybody is corrupt". One was heard to say "may God have mercy on them".
Jurors previously heard Mr Daulby travelled to the Ormskirk area with friends on the evening of July 29, 2023 after receiving a message in a group chat, named "M.R.S", which stated that one of their number, who was alone and on crutches, had been punched three times by Dures.
This led to a confrontation near to Alpine Bar on Railway Road, with the defendant having been present at the premises with his associate Henry Houghton earlier in the evening.
The latter would strike Mr Daulby over the head with a makeshift weapon, consisting of a rock stuffed into a sports sock, during the ensuing melee. The 19-year-old suffered damage to his skull and frontal lobe during the incident, although this injury was not fatal of itself.
But Dures, of Whalley Drive in Aughton, West Lancashire, then delivered the deadly blow to the chest with a knife which he had been carrying all night, having alleged that he was minding the weapon on behalf of Houghton.
Mr Daulby managed to leave the scene of the fight but collapsed on nearby Moorgate, later being pronounced dead at Aintree Hospital in the early hours of July 30.
Dures also stabbed two other men during the altercation before fleeing. He discarded his jacket in a nearby park in the aftermath and handed his man bag to a friend.
Having washed his face in the Railway pub and disposed of the knife in an alleyway, he then took a taxi home before travelling to a friend's home at around 3am.
It was there that he apparently first learned that the brawl had resulted in serious injuries, having told jurors from the witness box: "I didn't believe it. I didn't think anyone was seriously injured, because I clearly seen everyone was able to run away."
Following posts on Facebook which reported Mr Daulby's death, he was collected from the Plough Inn pub by an unknown driver and taken to Kent. He thereafter travelled via the Channel Tunnel to Austria, took a coach to southern Italy and boarded a ferry to Greece.
Asked why he had absconded to Europe, Dures said in his evidence: "I was scared of going to prison. There was a £10,000 bounty on my head. I was scared to come back."
Join our Court and Crime WhatsApp group HERE
Dures remained in Athens until December last year, when he handed himself in at a police station before being extradited back to the UK.
In the intervening period, Houghton, of Barrison Green in Scarisbrick, was handed a life sentence imprisonment with a minimum term of 20 years behind bars for Mr Daulby's murder.
Following his conviction, Dures will now be sentenced on Monday next week. Detective Chief Inspector Andy Fallows, from Lancashire Police's major investigation team, saying following Thursday's verdict: "After two long years, the man responsible for fatally stabbing Matthew Daulby has finally been brought to justice.
"This has been two years of pain and frustration, in which the Daulbys have had so many unanswered questions. They have had to figure out a way to try and grieve, knowing the man responsible to taking their son's life before it had really started was actively evading justice and celebrating his 21st birthday in the sun, something Matthew will never be able to do.
"I'd like to thank my investigation team for everything they have done in securing this conviction, the Crown Prosecution Service and our KC, Peter Glenser, and junior counsel Katy Appleton.
"I would also like to thank the public and the media for all the witness appeals they shared and their help in keeping this case in the spotlight."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
20 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Watch: the moment a drug dealer police nicknamed 'Gangster Granny' is arrested
THIS footage shows the moment a drug dealer nicknamed 'Gangster Granny' was arrested following an investigation into her gang picking up shipments of cocaine at an Essex port. Deborah Mason, 65, the leader of the family-run group, was sentenced to 20 years in prison after being convicted of conspiracy to supply Class A drugs at Woolwich Crown Court on July 18. Mason and seven other people - six women and one man - were sentenced to a total of 106 years and six months in prison for their involvement in supplying nearly a tonne of cocaine over seven months. The group transported packages of imported cocaine and drove them around London, Bradford, Leicester, Birmingham, Bristol and Cardiff between April 2023 and November 2023. Footage shows Mason in disbelief that she was being arrested. Arrested - Deborah Mason last year (Image: Metropolitan Police/PA) Mug shot - Deborah Mason (Image: PA/Metropolitan Police) The Met Police's investigation saw officers receive information on April 20, 2023, that a hired car driven by Mason left her house in Crayford Road, Tufnell Park, London, at 4.30am and arrived at Harwich Port at 6.20am. Police said regular trips were made by Mason to the port alongside the couriers to collect the cocaine. The group used encrypted messaging site Signal to communicate. Officers trawled through thousands of messages following their arrests which helped prove their criminal movements. Officers discovered through the messages that Mason - known as Queen Bee - was living an extravagant lifestyle with her profits, purchasing a Gucci collar and lead worth £400 for her cat. During the crime group's operation, the drugs had an estimated wholesale value of between £23million to £35million and a street value of £80million. The Metropolitan Police arrested all members of the gang in May 2024 except a woman called Anita Slaughter who was arrested in November 2024 after being identified from the messages.
Yahoo
30 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Full list of Coventry road closures including one for four months
Part of a major road in Keresley is set to be closed for four months. Fivefield Road will be affected by the closure as part of work at the Bellway development. The road is set to be out-of-bounds from its first junction of Fivefield Road from Tamworth Road until outside the Bellway development. It comes into force at just after midnight on Monday, August 4 and is set to last until Thursday, December 31. There will be diversions in place as well as signage. The closure is one of several set to take place across the city over the coming weeks. READ MORE: Face of Exhall dealer caught in Bedworth just two days after starting out READ MORE: Coventry man charged with pub arson Other road and path closures listed on the city council's online temporary traffic orders include: Public right of way - Bennetts Road The public right of way M315 from a point approximately 210m from Bennetts Road to its meeting point with the public right of way M316 is set to close. A temporary traffic order comes into operation Friday (August 1). This is for safe construction of a new housing development and re alignment of the current Public Right of Way. The order says that the closure will be in place until Sunday, February 1 2026. Closure times would be as signed on site. Avon Street Avon Street between its junctions with Honiton Road and Clovelly Road, is set to be closed from 9.30am on Friday (August 1). This is for manhole cover and frame replacement works. The works are set to be finished by 3.30pm on the same day - August 1. Dugdale Road Dugdale Road between its junctions with Engleton Road and Beech Road is set to be closed from Monday, August 4. It is for 'critical' gas main maintenance works on the highway. The closure is set to in place until just before midnight on Friday, August 8. Harefield Road Harefield Road between its junctions with Walsgrave Road and Dronfield Road is set to be closed from 9.30am on Friday (August 1) This is for manhole cover and frame replacement works. It is said that the works will be complete on the same day - by 3.30pm Newington Close Newington Close will close from its junction with Rowington Road to outside No. 23 Newington Close. The closure comes into force at 7am on Friday (August 1) and is for verge protection and associated works. The closure is set to be in place until August 15. Old Church Road Old Church Road will be closed from its junction with Bellview Way to its junction with Bell Green Road from 7am on Monday, August 4. This is for the installation of new telecom cabinets and associated works. The works are set to last until August 8.
Yahoo
35 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Tensions rise as protests held outside Epping hotel
Protesters and counter-demonstrators gathered in Epping near The Bell Hotel, which is being used to house migrants. A group carrying Union flags was seen outside the site. Police have imposed restrictions to prevent violence or disorder ahead of further protests expected later in the day.