The Scotsman

Mother pleads for justice for baby Poppi

● Third court judgment finds toddler was sexually assaulted before death

- By PAT HURST

The mother of Poppi Worthingto­n has called for prosecutor­s to look again at her daughter’s case after a third court judgment decided that she was sexually assaulted before her death.

The senior coroner for Cumbria yesterday found the 13-month-old toddler was anally penetrated in her father’s double bed at the family home in Barrow-infurness in the early hours of 12 December, 2012.

The ruling on the balance of probabilit­ies effectivel­y mirrored two earlier factfindin­g judgments by a High Court family judge in 2014 and 2016 that Poppi’s father Paul Worthingto­n abused his daughter shortly before her death.

Coroner David Roberts yesterday ruled out penetratio­n as the cause of death.

He said Poppi suffocated as she slept next to her 50-yearold father for a significan­t period of time in an “unsafe sleeping environmen­t”.

Poppi was in such a position that her breathing was compromise­d, either due to the position of the bed clothes, her position in the bed, overlaying or a combinatio­n of all three.

Mr Roberts said: “The deceased was at her home address when, at some time after 2:30am, she was taken from her cot to a double bed where she was anally penetrated.

“She subsequent­ly went to sleep in the double bed with an adult sleeping close to her.

“She was suffering from an upper respirator­y tract infection and her ability to breathe was compromise­d by her unsafe sleeping environmen­t.” Mr Roberts said she was discovered to have stopped breathing shortly before 5:56am and had gone into cardiac arrest before she was pronounced dead more than a hour later at Furness General Hospital. Mr Worthingto­n only answered a handful of questions when he gave evidence at the inquest, exercising his right against potential selfincrim­ination.

He told previous hearings that he moved Poppi from her cot into the main bedroom after she woke during the night while Poppi’s mother was asleep downstairs.

Mr Worthingto­n had previously told the family court he had gone to bed earlier with his laptop, which was not recovered by police, where his usual routine was to check football scores and Facebook updates. He has denied any wrongdoing and has not been charged with any offence following a bungled investigat­ion by Cumbria Police in which vital evidence was not gathered.

The Crown Prosecutio­n Service (CPS) said there were no plans to review its charging decisions, although Cumbria Police Chief Constable Jerry Graham said the force would have “early discussion­s” with the CPS to “determine possible courses of action”.

Fiona Mcghie, solicitor for Poppi’s mother, said: “This is now the third time a court has found, on the balance of probabilit­ies, that Poppi was anally penetrated prior to death and my client hopes that the CPS will take another look at this case.”

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