The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Child killer mum has to wait for appeal verdict

COURT: Rachel Fee claims jury in Liam Fee murder case was misdirecte­d by judge

- Claire Warrender cwarrender@thecourier.co.uk

The mother of tragic toddler Liam Fee will have to wait to find out if she will be cleared of his murder.

Rachel Fee, 32, launched an appeal against her conviction yesterday, claiming trial judge Lord Burns misdirecte­d the jury as they prepared to deliver their verdict.

Her lawyers insisted the possibilit­y of convicting her of culpable homicide, even if her civil partner Nyomi Fee was guilty of murder, had not been presented.

The pair were jailed for life at the High Court in Livingston last year after being convicted of the brutal murder of twoyear-old Liam at their home in Thornton in March 2014.

Liam had suffered a ruptured heart as a result of blunt force trauma and prosecutor Alex Prentice QC said at the time the women were guilty of “unyielding, heartless cruelty”.

Rachel Fee’s representa­tives say Lord Burns did not direct the jury correctly on whether she and Nyomi had been acting in consort.

The appeal before Scotland’s second top judge Lady Dorrian, sitting alongside Lord Turnbull and Lord Bracadale, was told the jury should have been given the option of convicting Fee of culpable homicide, even if Nyomi was not.

Brian MacConnach­ie QC, who defended Rachel Fee during the trial, said that was not one of a series of possibilit­ies given by Lord Burns.

Mr MacConnach­ie made it clear Rachel Fee had not blamed Nyomi Fee for the murder during the trial and that was still her position.

But he said that even if the jury had accepted the pair had acted together in the abuse of Liam it did not mean Rachel had “signed up” to the criminal act which killed him.

Advocate depute Alex Prentice QC, acting for the Crown, said he believed the crown had establishe­d the case for a murder conviction.

“The indictment was drafted to set out allegation­s of a long-term course of serious cruel treatment of children,” he said.

Mr Prentice said Rachel had taken “considerab­le steps” to conceal injuries by keeping Liam covered up in public and preventing health visitors from seeing him. In the immediate aftermath of his death, she had delayed calling the emergency services and had helped to hide items such as a cage and cable ties used to abuse the boys.

“There was no room for culpable homicide due to the nature of the injuries inflicted and the vulnerable state of Liam at the time,” he said.

A decision will be issued in due course.

 ??  ?? Rachel Fee, above, was convicted of killing son Liam with her civil partner Nyomi Fee, top right.
Rachel Fee, above, was convicted of killing son Liam with her civil partner Nyomi Fee, top right.
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