Yorkshire Post

Stepfather is sent to jail for killing toddler 50 years ago

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT

A STEPFATHER who was convicted of murdering a toddler almost 50 years after a Facebook photograph sparked a new inquiry has been jailed for life with a minimum term of 13 years.

David Dearlove, 71, swung 19-month-old Paul Booth by the ankles and bashed his head against a fireplace in 1968, then lied about what he had done for decades, claiming the little boy fell out of bed.

His murderous attack had been witnessed by Paul’s brother, Peter, who was three years old at the time, after he crept downstairs at the family home in Haverton Hill, Stockton, Teesside, to get a drink.

Mr Booth had told police what happened after piecing together childhood memories, but no action was taken.

That changed in 2015 when, incensed by seeing a black-andwhite photo of Dearlove with Paul on his knee on Facebook, Mr Booth went to the police again with the allegation that his brother was murdered, and an investigat­ion was launched.

Dearlove, now a retired grandfathe­r and married with two daughters, was arrested at his home in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk.

A jury deliberate­d for three days before finding him guilty of murder and child cruelty offences against Paul, Peter and their sister Stephanie.

Teesside Crown Court heard that Dearlove was 21 when he moved in with Carol Booth, a single mother, and her three young children.

A month before Paul was killed, nursery staff were concerned about bruises on his body and the authoritie­s investigat­ed, with photos taken of the little boy.

Those black-and-white images of the intensely sad-looking toddler were used in court to convict Dearlove 49 years on.

At the time, the ICI worker claimed a motorbike had fallen on the youngster.

On October 1, 1968, Dearlove lashed out again, causing a fatal brain injury by bashing his head.

Initially, in 2015, he told police Paul had collapsed in a chair downstairs, but, at the time and during the trial, he claimed the toddler fell out of bed.

Experts told the jury a fatal fall out of bed was extremely unlikely and the extent of his injuries indicated Paul had been physically abused.

In a dramatic piece of evidence, jurors wept as Home Office pathologis­t Dr Mark Egan used a doll marked with the sites of Paul’s bruises and bashed its head against the witness box to demonstrat­e how he could have been killed.

Outside court, the family said Paul would have been 50 this year, but instead he lay in an unmarked grave which they cannot find.

They said: “Thinking about this makes us sad, as Paul would have been a man, no doubt married and more than likely with children of his own.

“However, sadly, Paul was not given the opportunit­y to live his life due to the cruel and wicked actions of David Dearlove.”

Outside court, Detective Inspector Mark Dimelow said the passage of time had not stopped the family getting justice.

Tim Roberts QC, defending, earlier told the judge there was no intention to kill.

Paul died in hospital on the same night Peter witnessed him being attacked.

An inquest held in 1968 returned an open verdict and Dearlove was not prosecuted.

Ms Booth, who gave birth to Dearlove’s son three months after Paul was killed, died in 1991.

They had split up in 1970 and Dearlove never saw Peter again until Mr Booth faced him in court and told the jury what he saw.

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