Daily Mail

Murdered Ellie’s grandfathe­r blasts coroner over ‘whitewash’

- By Josh White

‘They have blood on their hands’

THE grandfathe­r of murdered Ellie Butler yesterday accused a coroner of whitewashi­ng failings that allowed her father to take her life.

Ben Butler beat the six-yearold to death at home after a court returned her to his care.

But at the conclusion of an inquest yesterday, the coroner said she could not say that ‘any acts or omissions’ contribute­d to Ellie’s death.

Butler and Ellie’s mother, Jennie Gray, had lost custody of their daughter but regained it in 2012 after duping a judge into thinking they posed no threat.

Her grandfathe­r, Neal Gray, had told Family Court officials of the danger posed by Butler and Gray, who he had disowned.

At a press conference yesterday Mr Gray and his legal team indicated they were considerin­g a judicial review. ‘I believe the agencies involved with Ellie’s care have blood on their hands,’ said the 72-year-old.

‘They were not called to account in the coroner’s conclusion­s despite the fact that they accepted they had let Ellie down.’

He said the inquest was an ‘opportunit­y missed’ and the coroner – retired High Court judge Dame Linda Dobbs – had ‘looked at the case blindly’.

Mr Gray added: ‘She disregarde­d all the evidence that was given to her by all the parties.’

He and his wife Linda had fostered Ellie since she was a baby after Butler was found guilty of shaking her in 2009.

However, Butler’s stubborn legal challenges led to him being acquitted on a technicali­ty by the Court of Appeal in 2010.

He and Gray took their mendacious campaign to the Family Court, where they successful­ly persuaded Mrs Justice Hogg to return Ellie to them.

Within a year Ellie had died from catastroph­ic injuries.

Mrs Justice Hogg retired a week before the pair’s Old Bailey trial began in June 2016.

The two-week inquest into Ellie’s death in Sutton, south London, in October 2013, ended yesterday with Dame Linda concluding she was unlawfully killed by her father.

After hearing hours of detailed evidence from all the agencies concerned, the packed court was braced for a damning review of the failures that led to the tragedy.

The inquest at Croydon Coroner’s Court had received detailed submission­s from eight separate legal teams, including a clutch of QCs. A serious case review had highlighte­d a number of failings in the case.

But Dame Linda left the court stunned as she merely read out a timeline of the case, followed by her conclusion – a single 46word sentence.

She said she had been ‘unable to conclude that any acts or omissions by the relevant agencies pos-

sibly or probably contribute­d to the death of Ellie’.

The coroner had said the hearing would examine whether there were failures on the part of the local authority, social workers and schools, including over communicat­ion and informatio­n sharing.

In her conclusion, however, she did not explain or even refer to where she thought these processes might have broken down. In a solitary reference to the Family Court, Dame Linda appeared to blame social workers for not challengin­g Mrs Justice Hogg’s decision to exonerate Butler, 37.

He is serving life with a minimum term of 23 years after he was convicted of murder.

During the inquest he gave evidence via a prison video link, denying he had killed his daughter and vowing to overturn his conviction. Gray, a 37- year- old graphic designer, was convicted of child cruelty and perverting the course of justice. She served 42 months.

Christine Davies, independen­t chairman of Sutton’s local safeguardi­ng children board, said after the inquest: ‘This was an exceptiona­lly unusual case and an overwhelmi­ng one for those involved.

‘Despite various failings which have been highlighte­d in the serious case review the coroner is unable to conclude that any acts or omissions by the relevant agencies possibly or probably contribute­d to the death of Ellie.

‘Over the past two years, the main agencies responsibl­e for children’s welfare have worked hard to learn the lessons from Ellie’s death and put in place measures to ensure, as far as possible, such a tragedy never occurs again.’

 ??  ?? Dismay: Grandfathe­r Neal Gray
Dismay: Grandfathe­r Neal Gray
 ??  ?? Left in danger: Ben Butler, Linda Gray and their daughter Ellie
Left in danger: Ben Butler, Linda Gray and their daughter Ellie

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