Macclesfield Express

Pathologis­t tells court ‘single stamp’ could have killed Liam

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IT is possible a single stamp from a child could have led to the heart injury that resulted in toddler Liam Fee’s death, a court has heard.

Pathologis­t Dr Paul French was giving evidence for a second day at the trial of Rachel Trelfa (Fee), 31, and her civil partner Nyomi Fee, 28, who deny murdering Trelfa’s son Liam.

Jurors have heard how Dr French carried out a post-mortem examinatio­n on the two-year-old’s body two days after his death at a house in Fife in March 2014.

He told the High Court in Livingston how the toddler had a ruptured heart and he recorded the cause of death as blunt force injury to the torso.

Dr French, 38, said ‘severe force’ would have been needed to cause the injury.

During crossexami­nation from Mark Stewart QC, defending Fee, he was asked that if the child had been stamped on in a ‘sudden, sharp manner’ to the abdomen, would it have generated the sort of ‘compressiv­e force’ that led to the heart injury.

Dr French replied: “That is one possibilit­y, yes.”

Mr Stewart asked: “That event, if it occurred, was capable of being executed by a single person.

“Yes, that’s possible,” Dr French said.

“That single person might have been a four stone child?” asked Mr Stewart.

“That’s possible,” the witness said.

During re-examinatio­n of his evidence, advocate depute Alex Prentice QC, prosecutin­g, put it to Dr French that it was also “equally possible an adult could have done it”. The witness agreed. “It’s not just a push or a punch in the stomach, is it?” asked Mr Prentice.

“No, it’s severe force,” said Dr French.

The murder charge alleges that the couple assaulted Liam at a house in Fife on various occasions between March 15 and March 22, 2014.

They also face a catalogue of allegation­s of wilfully ill-treating and neglecting two other young boys, who cannot be named for legal reasons, over a period of more than two years.

The pair are accused of falsely telling others, including police, that one of the other young boys was responsibl­e for Liam’s death.

The jury later heard evidence from Liam’s father Joseph Johnson, 33. He said he had been ‘devastated’ when Trelfa unexpected­ly left him and their home in the north of England in December 2011, taking their son to Scotland with Fee. ●» PROCEEDING

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 ??  ?? ●» Liam Fee died at his family’s flat
●» Liam Fee died at his family’s flat

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