According to the indictment, the two lost interest in the wheelchair-bound teenager until she left her for six months in a dirty room on a mattress from which the 16-year-old never got up.
They have left their 16-year-old disabled daughter to die abandoning it during the Covid lockdown and keeping it in conditions the judges found “unfit even for animals”. Two British parents were convicted of manslaughter by a court in Swansea, Wales. Alun Titford, 45, and Sarah Lloyd-Jones, 40, of Newtown, Powys, had been jailed for gross negligence after their teenage daughter Kaylea was found dead in appalling conditions in October 2020.
The man was found guilty of manslaughter and gross negligence in February and sentenced to seven years and six months after a trial on Wednesday. The same charges were also accepted against his wife, who had already pleaded guilty and had already been sentenced to six years in prison. According to the indictment, the two are they would have lost interest in the teenager, who was born with spina bifida and is confined to a wheelchair, up to Leave her in a dirty room on a mattress on which the immobilized 16-year-old had become obese to a weight of 146 kg.
Emergency services reported the horrifying scene in court when they arrived at the scene with the girl’s body covered in worms and wearing dirty clothes a room full of flies, dirty and untidy. As noted by prosecutors, she has been bedridden for more than six months since the start of the UK’s Covid lockdown.
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Not long before that, however, Kaylea was one “calm but naughty” girl who showed “impressive potential” on the wheelchair basketball court in his hometown of Newtown, Powys, several witnesses said. The girl was also stalked by social services as lockdown complicated everything. The parents who should have taken care of her did not let her die slowly lying on the bed from which she never got up.