Father, 31, who shook and squeezed his newborn son to death leaving him with 71 rib fractures and a bleed on the brain is jailed for life

 A father who shook and squeezed his newborn son to death leaving him with 71 rib fractures and a bleed on the brain has been jailed for life for his murder.

James Clark, 31, from Gloucestershire, was ordered on Friday to serve a minimum of 15 years in prison for killing 39-day-old baby Sean Clark.

After inflicting the fatal injuries Clark put his son in his cot and went to bed, leaving the boy's mother Helen Jeremy to find him dead the next morning in January 2018.

A post-mortem examination was carried out and revealed Sean had been assaulted on at least three occasions – suffering 71 rib fractures and head injuries consistent with being shaken.

James Clark, 31, from Warmley, Gloucestershire, (pictured) was jailed for life on Friday for the murder of his newborn son in January 2018

James Clark, 31, from Warmley, Gloucestershire, (pictured) was jailed for life on Friday for the murder of his newborn son in January 2018

He was found guilty of murder after he shook and squeezed 39-day-old baby Sean Clark (pictured) to death leaving him with 71 rib fractures and a bleed on the brain

He was found guilty of murder after he shook and squeezed 39-day-old baby Sean Clark (pictured) to death leaving him with 71 rib fractures and a bleed on the brain

Jane Osborne QC, prosecuting, told the court: 'He squeezed his son Sean tightly around the chest, causing fractures, and shook him forcefully to cause that bleed to the brain, which was the fatal incident.

'That shaking incident would have led to rapid unconsciousness and death.

'The evidence following that shaking incident – when it must have been clear Sean Clark was lifeless – the defendant put Sean Clark back in his cot and went to bed, knowing that he would wait until the morning until Sean was discovered.'

The trial heard Clark and Ms Jeremy lived separately at their respective parents' homes but at weekends would stay together.

Ms Jeremy and Sean had gone to Clark's home on January 11 to stay for the weekend and on the morning of January 14 discovered her son's body.

Clark, of Neads Drive, Warmley, South Gloucestershire, denied murder but was convicted following a trial at Bristol Crown Court.

After inflicting the fatal injuries Clark put his son in his cot and went to bed, leaving the boy's mother Helen Jeremy to find him dead the next morning on January 14, 2018

After inflicting the fatal injuries Clark put his son in his cot and went to bed, leaving the boy's mother Helen Jeremy to find him dead the next morning on January 14, 2018

Ms Jeremy, 27, of Russell Avenue, Kingswood, also stood trial but was acquitted of murder and causing or allowing his death.

Andrew Langdon QC, defending, said Clark suffered from autism and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and that had impaired his ability to understand the consequences of the fatal attack.

'It may be a mistake to assume that he was wicked, devious, cunning, ruthless and cold hearted as one could be more confident with a man who suffered none of those impairments in his thinking,' he said.'It enumerates to some extent the extent to which one should aggravate the sentence for his failure to obtain assistance.'

Imposing a life sentence, Mr Justice Butcher said: 'He had died from a brain injury caused by being very roughly handled or shaken, exacerbated by injuries to his rib cage caused by squeezing.

'It was you who had inflicted the injuries upon him which caused his death. What exactly happened or why we do not know because you have not said.'

A post-mortem examination was carried out and revealed Sean had been assaulted on at least three occasions before being fatally assaulted

A post-mortem examination was carried out and revealed Sean had been assaulted on at least three occasions before being fatally assaulted

The judge said Sean had been injured on two previous occasions before being fatally assaulted.

'I am sure that it was the same person who was responsible for those prior incidents as was responsible for the fatal injuries, and those by its verdict the jury has found that you inflicted,' he said.

'Every crime of murder not only ends one life but grievously affects others.

'In the present case there is no doubt that this crime has had a profound effect on other members of Sean's family and in particular his mother, Helen Jeremy, who has had to bear not only the loss of her son but was also faced with charges that she herself had killed him.'

Ann Hampshire, from the Crown Prosecution Service, said: 'Sean Clark was the victim of a number of serious assaults in the weeks before he died. These attacks resulted in a series of horrific injuries and eventually in Sean's tragic death.

'Cases involving the death of a child are distressing for everyone involved. This includes the jury, who were presented with harrowing evidence from some of the top medical experts in the country, and who found James Clark guilty of murder.'

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