Dad and mom who murdered their child son on Christmas Day jailed for all times

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mother and father who murdered their "perfect" child son on Christmas Day have been jailed for all times and can serve respective minimal phrases of 27 and 29 years.

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Shannon Marsden and Stephen Boden inflicted 130 separate accidents on 10-month-old Finley Boden earlier than his deadly collapse in 2020, together with 71 bruises, 57 bone breaks and fractures, and burns.

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Finley had fractures to his collarbones and thighs, whereas his pelvis had been damaged in two locations, probably from sustained "kicking or stamping", with accidents likened to a multi-storey fall.

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He additionally had two burns on his left hand - one "from a hot, flat surface", the opposite most likely "from a cigarette lighter flame".

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Handing the pair life sentences at Derby Crown Court on Friday, Mrs Justice Amanda Tipples stated the pair had been "persuasive and accomplished liars" who inflicted "unimaginable cruelty" on their son.

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She stated: "You both knew that Finley was very seriously ill and dying... yet you deliberately failed to seek any medical help for him and you made sure that he was not seen by anyone that could have rescued him and taken him away from your care.

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"He was topic to repeated abuse on a number of events. Once the accidents had been inflicted, Finley's each day expertise was certainly one of appreciable ache, misery and struggling.

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"It was obvious to both of you by December 16 that Finley was very seriously injured, and he was utterly miserable.

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"He was now not capable of sit up and play along with his toys. He was unable to feed himself."

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She added: "By the night of December 23 he was plainly dying. There was nothing refined about this in any respect. It was plainly apparent to each of you."

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Immediately before she passed the sentence, the judge said: "Neither of you've got proven any regret in any respect for what you've got accomplished."

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The pair showed no emotion and remained silent during sentencing, while family members wept in the public gallery as Mrs Justice Tipples detailed the horrific abuse they inflicted on Finley.

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He had been in the care of Boden, of Romford Way, Barrow Hill, Chesterfield, and Marsden, of no fixed address, for just over a month after a Family Court deemed they did not pose an unmanageable risk to their son in the weeks before his murder.

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In documents submitted to the Family Court, Boden, 30, described his son as "excellent" and Marsden, 22, said he was a "cuddly, chunky munchkin".

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But in the time he spent at his family home in Holland Road, Old Whittington, Derbyshire, Finley was the victim of what prosecutors called a "savage and brutal" campaign of abuse, surrounded by squalor in the home of his cannabis-using parents.

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Images shown to the jury depicted a house full of clutter with cannabis paraphernalia next to gone-off baby formula and items of Finley's clothing covered in his blood, saliva and faeces.

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Documents, since released to the PA news agency by the courts, show that at the Family Court hearing in October 2020, magistrates were shown images of a tidy home and heard from the parents that they "had labored actually onerous to make adjustments".

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The court ordered he should be returned to them within eight weeks and did not order further drug testing despite Derbyshire County Council raising "some issues" over their parenting skills and asking for a four-month transition.

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A council assertion following the sentemcing stated: “The sentencing of Finley’s parents after their conviction for his murder is another stage in the legal process following his tragic death and our thoughts are with everyone who knew and loved him.

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“We remain fully engaged with the independent Local Child Safeguarding Practice Review – a statutory legal process commissioned by the Derby and Derbyshire Safeguarding Children Partnership to look in depth at the role of all agencies following Finley’s death.

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“When that review is concluded later this year, we will be in a position to communicate more fully about this case.”

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Hitesh Keshvala, district crown prosecutor for the Crown Prosecution Service East Midlands, stated: “Today’s sentence marks the conclusion of lengthy and, at times, harrowing criminal proceedings against the two people responsible for Finley Boden’s death – his parents Stephen Boden and Shannon Marsden.

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“The sentence handed down takes into account all the evidence we have shown the court: the sheer number of injuries inflicted on Finley, the violence used and the neglect shown by the defendants as they thought to cover up their actions rather than seek help for their baby.

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“However, first and foremost, our thoughts are with Finley’s loved ones who have had to come to terms with his tragic death and the circumstances in which he died – at the hands of those who should have been there to care for him and nurture him.”

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An NSPCC spokesperson stated: “The cruelty and abuse inflicted on Finley leading up to his tragic death was appalling and heart-breaking.

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“The death of a child in such brutal circumstances leaves many of us asking questions and we await the Child Safeguarding Practice Review to establish exactly what happened and any ways in which Finley could have been better protected, in order to help prevent future tragedies.

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“We know that babies and our youngest children are particularly vulnerable to abuse and completely reliant on the adults around them for care and protection.

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“Nationally, the Government must take forward the changes recommended by previous reviews and experts to transform the child protection system and ensure the different agencies involved are able to work together effectively to focus on children and babies like Finley.

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“It’s also crucial that everyone does all they can to prevent child abuse.

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“Anyone who has concerns for a child’s safety should contact the local authorities, the police or the NSPCC helpline.”

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