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Mother and partner convicted over death of Lola James, two, in Wales Mother and partner convicted over death of Lola James, two, in Wales
(about 2 hours later)
Kyle Bevan guilty of murder with Sinead James found to have caused or allowed death of her daughter Kyle Bevan guilty of murder and Sinead James found to have caused or allowed death of her daughter
A woman and her partner have been found guilty over the death of a two-year-old girl who was fatally attacked at her home in Wales. A mother and her partner face jail after being convicted over the death of a two-year-old girl who suffered horrific injuries in an attack at the family home.
Lola James died in hospital four days after suffering “catastrophic” brain injuries in the early hours of 17 July 2020. Kyle Bevan, 31, was found guilty of murdering Lola James, who died of the sort of injuries usually suffered by car crash victims or people who have fallen from a significant height.
Lola’s stepfather, Kyle Bevan, denied murdering the girl a few months after moving in with the family in Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, claiming Lola had fallen down the stairs after being jumped on by the pet dog. But a jury at Swansea crown court convicted the 31-year-old of murder on Tuesday. Lola’s mother, Sinead James, 30, was convicted of causing or allowing the child’s death.
Sinead James, Lola’s mother, had denied causing or allowing her death but was found guilty. A child practice review will take place to establish whether agencies could have done more to protect Lola, who was attacked at the family home in Haverfordwest, south-west Wales.
During the four-week trial the prosecutor, Caroline Rees KC, said Bevan, a self-confessed “spice head”, had launched a “murderous” attack on Lola and used the hours after it to cover his tracks instead of calling for an ambulance. NSPCC Cymru said: “The child practice review into Lola’s death must establish whether more could have been done by agencies to save her, and drive the action required to help prevent such tragic cases in the future.
The court heard Lola had previously sustained injuries including a damaged nose, black eyes and a cut lip while in Bevan’s care. “Now is the time to make child protection a national priority. The Welsh government has rightly committed to transforming children’s social care and it’s crucial this leads to systemic changes that ensure children like Lola are better protected.”
It was accepted James, a mother of three, was asleep at the time and did not take part in the assault that led to her daughter’s death. Lola’s case follows that of Logan Mwangi, a five-year-old boy murdered by his mother, her partner and his stepson at the family home in Bridgend, south Wales. A review concluded last year that health professionals and local authority staff missed a string of opportunities to protect Logan.
But it was the prosecution’s case that James, a previous victim of domestic violence, failed to protect Lola from Bevan, “instead choosing to prioritise her relationship with him over her own daughter’s physical safety”. In Lola’s case, Swansea crown court heard that the family had been known to agencies, with James receiving education on domestic abuse and the related dangers.
They will be sentenced on 25 April. Described as a “happy, beautiful and busy little girl”, Lola was found to have 101 external injuries, “catastrophic” head trauma and extensive damage to both her eyes.
The prosecution said the girl had been the victim of a “frenzied and extremely violent attack” and the jury dismissed Bevan’s claim that the family dog had knocked her down the stairs.
Opening the prosecution case, Caroline Rees KC said Bevan, from Aberystwyth, west Wales, who was a drug user, subjected the girl to the assault while he was alone with her between the evening of 16 July and the morning of 17 July 2020.
Rees said phone records showed that at about 6.30am on 17 July, Bevan Googled “my 2 year old child has just taken a bang to the head and gone all limp and snoring. What’s wrong”.
Bevan contacted his mother, Alison Bevan, a healthcare worker, at 6.40am. He then made a video that showed him trying to make Lola stand before he allowed her to fall to the floor. He was seen walking towards the camera saying: “She’s gone. She’s gone.” He sent this to his mother at 6.58am. Alison Bevan urged her son to contact the emergency services but the first call was not made until 7.30am.
When paramedics arrived, Lola was lying unconscious with a swollen and bruised face and she appeared to be wet. It was believed that Lola had been scrubbed clean, even of transfer tattoos that she appeared to have had on her arm the day before.
James says she was asleep when her daughter’s injuries were caused. But the prosecution say James should have been aware of the threat Bevan posed to Lola.
During the trial, James said she met Bevan on Facebook in February 2020, and he moved into her home with her three children the next month.
James said that a few minutes after midnight on 17 July 2021, she heard “a bang and a scream coming from Lola” in her bedroom. She said she ran to the room and found Lola sitting on Bevan’s lap, with no visible injuries.
James told the court that Bevan reassured her, saying: ‘I’ve got this’, and she went to bed.
She said: “I never thought he would kill my children, never in a million years, and he’s a monster … He needs to rot in hell.”
James told the court Bevan “smashed up” her home with a hammer after taking the tranquilliser Xanax in May 2021, forcing her to take her children to a friend’s house.
She said he regularly took strong tranquillisers and cannabis, and they both took amphetamines, but only when the children were out.
James said Bevan had pushed her youngest daughter’s buggy into a road on July 2021. She attempted to carry out domestic violence checks on Bevan using Clare’s Law the day before the attack but he refused to give her his date of birth. The court heard that Bevan had said: “I don’t have to give it to you. They won’t find anything on me.”
Bevan and James will be sentenced on 25 April.