The 15 most shocking clips shown in Wales’ courts in 2024

Juries in courts across Wales come across some horrific and bizarre tales during criminal trials and are faced with pieces of footage which be imprinted on their minds. Examples shown to courts in Wales this year include a woman attacking a couple with a shovel and fire poker, a murderer running from the scene of a killing, and a drug dealer leaping from a first-floor window. Whether it's CCTV, police body-worn footage, or dashcam clips all are essential ingredients in bringing a perpetrators to justice and form some of the most memorable pieces of evidence those in the courtroom will see.

Here are some of the most eye-catching videos played in Welsh courts in 2024.

Paula Attwood-Rees

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Paula Attwood-Rees, 59, attacked a couple with a shovel and a fire poker in a horrific attack which was caught on camera. She could be seen brutally hitting a woman with the shovel before being restrained by a passing motorist. The defendant also used the shovel to hit parked cars outside the home of her victims in Monkswood, near Usk[1], in May.

She was seen attacking the woman by approaching her menacingly with the raised garden tool and bringing it down upon her.

Custody image of Paula Attwood-ReesPaula Attwood-Rees

As she was arrested Attwood-Rees was placed onto her front and handcuffed. She was told by an officer not to make any sudden movements or she would be tasered. Attwood-Rees, of Usk, later pleaded guilty to wounding with intent, assault occasioning actual bodily harm, aggravated burglary with intent, common assault of an emergency worker, and two counts of causing criminal damage to property.

The defendant also pleaded guilty to possession of a prohibited weapon after she was found in possession of an electric shock cattle prod, possession of an offensive weapon in a public place, and possession of a knife blade in a public place. She was sentenced to a total of six years and two months imprisonment.[2]

Kieran Carter

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Eerie footage shows killer Kieran Carter, 23, moments after he brutally murdered father-of-four Daniel Rae, 30, with a knife over a drug debt. He was caught on CCTV fleeing the victim's home after stabbing him in the leg four times and causing him fatal injuries.

Carter was sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum of 17 years[3] for murdering Mr Rae at his home in Treforest, Pontypridd[4], on December 17, 2023. The victim was attacked in his bedroom after his killer arrived to enforce a debt he owed after purchasing drugs from him.

Kieran Carter, 23, murdered Daniel Rae, 30, after stabbing him in the leg at his home in Treforest, PontypriddKieran Carter, 23, murdered Daniel Rae, 30, after stabbing him in the leg at his home in Treforest, Pontypridd

The murderer went "beyond" self-defence when he disarmed Mr Rae of a knife and stabbed him to the leg four times. Despite Mr Rae's pleas the defendant did not call an ambulance and his victim bled to death.

In CCTV footage recorded after the killing Carter could be seen running through the streets of Treforest in possession of the murder weapon, which was never discovered.

Cameron Jones

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Disqualified driver Cameron Jones killed his partner when he crashed while racing on a wet residential road at "motorway speeds". As Demi Mabbitt lay unconscious and gravely injured at the roadside Jones callously used her phone to call the police and falsely claim she had been the one driving. He then collected his bag from the smashed car and ran away.

Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court[5] heard Jones had only been out of prison for 30 days at the time of the crash and was at the wheel of a powerful car with two virtually-bald tyres and windows so heavily tinted they were dangerous. Sending the 30-year-old to prison a judge told Jones his decision to flee the scene and leave his obviously seriously injured partner alone in the rain was "inhuman" and an act of "total cowardice". The collision happened at around 11.45pm on April 5, 2024, in Swansea[6] Road, Merthyr Tydfil.

A fellow motorist saw Jones at the wheel of a powerful Audi S3 car accelerate away from the Trago Mills roundabout at speeds estimated to be around 70mph. The witness reported the conditions were "soaking wet" with so much spray being thrown up from the road he had to use his windscreen wipers. The witness commented to his passenger about the driver of the speeding Audi, saying: "He is going to kill himself".

Cameron Jones

The witness continued westward along Swansea Road in the wake of the Audi which he by now estimated to be travelling at between 110mph and 120mph as it disappeared out of sight.

The court heard that when the witness next saw the Audi it was positioned at 90 degrees across the carriageway and "it looked like a bomb had gone off" with car parts and debris spread far and wide. Jones climbed out of the rear driver's side door of the Audi then approached the witness and asked for a lift. Concerned at what was going on the witness refused the request and returned to his vehicle, unaware that Jones' passenger lay gravely ill nearby.

The court heard Jones then approached Miss Mabbitt as she lay unconscious on the roadside 27m from the crash scene and used her phone to call 999, telling police: "My missus has just crashed her car". A number of drivers as well as people living on the street responded to the sight and sounds of the crash and Jones was seen "rummaging around" in the crashed Audi with a torch and talking about "finding the guy who was driving". The defendant then ran away.

First aid was performed on 25-year-old Miss Mabbitt at the scene until paramedics arrived and took over. She was then rushed to the University Hospital of Wales[7] in Cardiff[8] where subsequent CT scans showed she had suffered traumatic brain injuries. Miss Mabbitt underwent emergency surgery to try to reduce the pressure on her brain but despite "extensive medical intervention" her condition continued to deteriorate and she died at 11.20am on April 12.

Jones was sentenced to 10 years in prison. He will serve up to half that sentence in custody before being released on licence to serve the remainder in the community. He was banned from driving for a total of 10 years and must pass an extended test before he can get a licence again.

Sambou Kassama

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Class A drug dealer Sambou Kassama was caught on camera emerging from a first-floor window during a police raid.

His risky manoeuvre was in vain and he's now behind bars after being found hiding in a neighbour's garden. A police investigation revealed the 27-year-old from Ely, Cardiff[9], had been running two drug lines in the area dealing crack cocaine and heroin. On July 4 officers conducted a warrant at his home address and drone footage captured the moment Kassama discarded drugs out of a back bedroom window before jumping and running away over neighbours' fences.

A custody image of Sambou KassamaSambou Kassama

He was arrested and later pleaded guilty to two counts of possession with intent to supply Class A drugs, two counts of being concerned in the supply of Class A drugs, and possession of Class B drugs.

A sentencing hearing at Cardiff Crown Court[10] heard the defendant was apprehended by police and was found with a package containing 0.236g of heroin valued at GBP30. Underneath the bedroom door was another package of 0.212g of heroin worth GBP20. An empty packet with residue of cocaine was discovered and 2.57g of crack cocaine was also found in a neighbour's garden and was valued at GBP230.

Three phones were seized from the property in Heol Muston, Ely, as well as digital scales with residue on it, 9.2g of cannabis, a flick knife, a machete, pepper spray, and GBP750 in cash. Kassama was jailed for four years and four months.[11][12]

Raymond Catterall

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Lorry driver Raymond Catterall, 44, crashed into a broken-down car after repeatedly looking for a podcast on his phone. He narrowly avoided a family in the collision.

He came up unexpectedly to a stationary vehicle on the inside lane and partly on the verge of the A55. The defendant pleaded guilty to dangerous driving and using a mobile phone at the wheel. Catterall had been travelling on the eastbound carriageway at Tal-y-Bont near Bangor[13] at about 2pm on Mary 15, 2023.

After the collision the defendant, of Rufford Avenue, Maghull, Merseyside, got out of his cab and sought help from a nearby house and was found by an officer. The defendant had been driving a 7.5-tonne Mercedes-Benz Atego lorry and had worked for his firm for 28 years. He initially suggested a car had "pulled out" in front of him but later pleaded guilty.

He was sentenced to an eight-month jail sentence, suspended for 18 months[14], ordered to do 150 hours of unpaid work, and was made subject to a curfew. He was also disqualified from driving for a year.

Christian Jugessur

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Five-a-side football player Christian Jugessur physically attacked an opponent by pushing him into a metal pole and causing a wound to his head. The victim was left with a permanent scar and concussion as a result of the assault.

The defendant was playing football at the Gol Centre in Cardiff[15] on September 3, 2023, against a team including James Harrison. The game was described as "feisty" and "competitive" with several players sent off. A sentencing hearing at Cardiff Crown Court[16] heard the defendant was "aggressive" and "argumentative" and made a threat to Mr Harrison and his brother, saying: "I've got something heavy in the van for you." The assault happened at the Canton pitch when the victim had taken the ball to the corner and was "running down the clock".

A member of Jugessur's team challenged Mr Harrison from behind, someone pushed the victim, and he responded by pushing them back. As a result of this the defendant ran up to Mr Harrison and pushed him heavily from behind causing him to hit his head on a metal pole which served as a doorframe to the pitch. Mr Harrison began bleeding profusely from a wound to his head.

He was facing away from the defendant and described the push causing his head to "flex backwards and forwards" as it collided with the post. The victim said he had no chance to brace himself before the assault and he saw Jugessur laughing at him as he drove away in his van Jugessur was sentenced to nine months imprisonment suspended for 18 months[17].

He was ordered to carry out 60 hours of unpaid work, complete a five-day rehabilitation activity requirement and 26 sessions of a programme requirement, and to pay GBP300 in compensation.

Thomas and Jack Davies

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An organised crime group in the Rhondda[18] Valley led by brothers Thomas Davies, 38, and Jack Davies, 37, employed their parents to launder money made through the sale of cocaine. Members of the crime group were sentenced to a combined total of more than 70 years' imprisonment. The brothers headed up a conspiracy which saw multiple kilograms of cocaine being driven to south Wales by couriers.

The drugs were then cut down into lower-purity cocaine and sold on in varying amounts from kilograms to grams. Their parents Jacqueline Davies, 59, and Byron Davies, 66, helped to launder money for their sons with a safe in Byron Davies' home found to contain GBP57,000. A shell company called Valley Self-Storage was also set up to launder the funds.

Custody images of Thomas Davies (left) and Jack Davies (right)Brothers Thomas Davies (left) and Jack Davies (right)

Thomas Davies' partner Nicole Locke, 31, acted as a street dealer, dealing with the day-to-day "gram" customers, and "washed" the cocaine into crack cocaine.

Christopher Adams, 39, Scott Alway, 35, and Steven Evans, 38, acted as couriers for the group, travelling across the UK to pick up multi kilogram amounts of cocaine back to south Wales for onward sale. When Steven Evans was arrested he was discovered with GBP23,000 of cash in a safe and had more than GBP50,000 in unexplained cash in his bank accounts. Gavin Etchell, 42, also acted as a courier and a high-level street dealer supplying ounce amounts of cocaine to street dealers.

He was stopped by police on July 23, 2020, on the A40 in Monmouth in a BMW. On February 9, 2021, police executed warrants targeting the Davies brothers. More than two kilograms of cocaine were recovered along with 50kg of cutting agent, two hydraulic presses, and blenders.

These were found in a manmade drugs factory set up in a garage at the rear of Patridge Road, Trealaw, which was rented by the Davies brothers for GBP50 per month. Thomas Davies, of Buckley Road, Trealaw, Tonypandy, was sentenced to 16 years imprisonment for conspiracy to supply crack cocaine and cocaine and being concerned in arrangement to facilitate acquisition or control of criminal property. Jack Davies, of Buckley Road, was sentenced to 13 years and seven months imprisonment for conspiracy to supply crack cocaine and cocaine and being concerned in arrangement to facilitate acquisition or control of criminal property.

Jacqueline Davies, of Buckley Road, was sentenced to two years imprisonment for being concerned in an offer to supply cocaine and being concerned in arrangement to facilitate acquisition or control of criminal property. Byron Davies, of Heol Trecastell, Caerphilly[19], was sentenced to one year and seven months imprisonment suspended for two years for being concerned in arrangement to facilitate acquisition or control of criminal property.

James Bristow

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Footage shows arsonist James Bristow.

30, breaking into his friend's back garden and causing GBP4,700 worth of damage. He was heard shouting to the victim: "You f****** c***" before pouring oil on the shed and setting it alight.

The defendant woke up Daniel Dennehy by kicking down the door of his garden fence at his home in Cwmbran[20] shortly after midnight on August 30, 2023. He proceeded to throw a number of tools around the garden before setting fire to the shed. A sentencing hearing at Cardiff Crown Court[21] heard Mr Dennehy could see CCTV footage on his phone of the defendant entering the garden.

He recognised Bristow's voice but did not leave his house out of fear. A minute or two later smoke and flames came from the victim's shed and he contacted the fire brigade. As the flames grew higher and higher Bristow left but briefly returned to throw a garden strimmer on the blaze.

Custody image of James BristowJames Bristow

Police attended the address and while they were inside watching the CCTV footage the defendant let himself into the house and made his way upstairs.

He was agitated and threatened to kick officers down the stairs. Attempts were made to calm him down but after repeated threats of violence the decision was made to arrest him. During his arrest he kicked out and struck an officer in the chest twice with force.

The defendant also attempted to reach for an officer's Taser and pava spray was used to subdue him. The officer kicked by Bristow suffered injuries to his forearm and finger. When the fire brigade arrived the blaze was well alight with oil or petrol having been poured on the flames.

The total value of the damage caused to Mr Dennehy's property came to GBP4,700 while GBP2,000 worth of damage was caused to a neighbouring property belonging to a 90-year-old woman. Bristow was sentenced to a total of 36 months imprisonment[22]. He was also made subject to a restraining order for 10 years.

Cory and Steven Jones

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Two Cardiff City fans attacked a Swansea City fan in the stands after he celebrated a last-minute winning goal in the Cardiff[23] end.

The hooligans were identified on mobile phone footage and CCTV footage taken within the ground. Brothers Cory Jones, 28, and Steven Jones, 34, made a beeline for Swansea City[24] fan Samuel Evans who attended the south Wales derby at the Cardiff City Stadium[25] in Cardiff on April 1, 2023. Mr Evans had bought a ticket for the match in the Cardiff end having been unable to purchase one in the away end.

Mr Evans "instinctively" celebrated a winning Swansea[26] goal in the 99th minute and revealed his Swansea City shirt in the process. As a result the Jones brothers climbed over a number of seats and began raining punches down upon their victim The defendants delivered a number of blows to Mr Evans who had gone to the floor.

Steven Jones began the initial attack before Cory Jones weighed in and stamped, kicked, and punched the victim.

Cardiff City fans Cory Jones (left) and Steven Jones (right)Cardiff City fans Cory Jones (left) and Steven Jones (right)

Stewards attempted to separate the two sets of fans but as they attempted to move Mr Evans the defendants pursued him and continued to throw punches. The footage showed Mr Evans falling down stairs in the stand but this was not down to the defendants. Steven Jones was sentenced to 12 months imprisonment[27] suspended for two years and Cory Jones was sentenced to 15 months imprisonment suspended for two years.

Both were made subject to football banning orders for five years. Cory Jones was made subject to a 23-day rehabilitation activity requirement and a 120-day alcohol abstinence monitoring requirement and must complete 180 hours of unpaid work and pay compensation of GBP500. Steven Jones was made subject to a 20-day rehabilitation activity requirement and 120-day alcohol abstinence monitoring requirement and must complete 12 hours of unpaid work and ordered to pay GBP500 in compensation and GBP500 in costs.

Thomas Love

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Thomas Love brutally attacked his friend by repeatedly punching him to the face.

The victim was left drifting in and out of consciousness and suffered a collapsed lung as well as numerous fractures. The 53-year-old 53, carried out a vicious assault on Adam Higgins in Cardiff[28] on October 8, 2022, after the pair had gone to a cash machine. They had both been smoking cannabis and the defendant had also taken pregabalin and diazepam.

The incident took place outside a Tesco store in St Mellons[29] which began after Mr Higgins hit Love with a speaker he was carrying. The defendant was able to get the better of his victim and took him to the floor. In CCTV footage Love proceeded to repeatedly punch Mr Higgins to the head and slap him across the face.

The defendant went on to lay on top of him and continue to punch him to the head. He then picked up the speaker and used it to hit the victim over the head two times.

Thomas Love, 53, savagely assaulted Adam Higgins outside a Tesco in St Mellon, in a vicious assault caught on CCTVThomas Love, 53, savagely assaulted Adam Higgins outside a Tesco in St Mellon, in a vicious assault caught on CCTV

Mr Higgins was visibly bleeding from his head as Love continued to kick him. He then punched the victim, who appeared to be drifting in and out of consciousness, in the groin and Mr Higgins raised up his leg to protect himself.

After hitting him with the speaker once more the assault came to an end. Having made his way to a nearby roundabout Mr Higgins collapsed and next remembered waking up in the University Hospital of Wales[30]. The victim suffered a collapsed lung and could have died if not treated quickly.

He also suffered fractures to the left side of his face, his right cheekbone, and his eye sockets as well as a broken nose, a spine fracture, rib fractures, and injuries to his pancreas. Love was sentenced to seven years and three months imprisonment[31] with an extended four years on licence. He will serve two-thirds of the custodial element of the sentence before he will be considered for parole.

Leo Payne

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Sexual predator Leo Payne, 20, lingered around the streets of Swansea looking for women to rape.

In the space of an hour he attacked and tried to rape two women as they walked through the city centre as well as sexually assaulting one of his victims. During the course of his offending Payne pursued a number of other woman, walked around with his trousers down exposing himself, and performed a sex act in front of witnesses on a busy road. The defendant went on to assault a man with a bottle after the member of the public challenged him on his behaviour towards a female.

Handing the defendant an extended 16-year sentence[32] as a dangerous offender a judge at Swansea Crown Court[33] said the offending was concerning especially because there appeared to be no explanation for Payne's behaviour and described it as "quite unprecedented" for Swansea and perhaps other cities too.

Custody image of Leo PayneLeo Payne

In a statement detective constable Kelly Hurley, of South Wales Police[34], said Payne showed "no signs of any remorse for his actions" and described him as an "incredible danger to others". In impact statements read to the court both of Payne's victims described the anxiety and fear caused by the rape attempts and said they no longer feel safe. One victim said she previously regularly walked in the city centre without any worries but no longer feels safe going out on her own and fears the effects of what happened would last for the rest of her life.

In her statement the second victim said as a result of the assault she had "lost my trust in the city". She said she no longer wanted to socialise and was scared of people and especially men.

Sergiu Stanciu

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Sergiu Stanciu was locked up for racing along a pedestrianised town centre shopping street and colliding with a man. He fell off his motorbike following the crash then went up to the pedestrian and began abusing him and threatening to stab him.

A judge said it was clear the 18-year-old - who has a history of offending including threatening with a bladed article, affray, burglary, sexual assault, possession of cannabis, public order matters, criminal damage, and possession of knives - believed he was a "big man" in a gang. Sending the teenager down the judge said the reality was Stanciu was a "very small person" and told him if he continued to "play Jack the lad" he would be facing ever-longer sentences.

Police custody picture of Sergiu StanciuSergiu Stanciu from Port Talbot was sentenced to 14 months detention for dangerous driving

The incident happened on the afternoon of October 20, 2023, as the complainant in the case was walking along the pedestrianised section of Station Road in Port Talbot[35] town centre en route to meet his wife. Stanciu was travelling "at speed" in the opposite direction on a motorbike and when the pedestrian saw him coming towards him he held out his hands in a "'slow down' type gesture".

The court heard that as Stanciu raced past the man he struck his victim's hand before losing control of his bike, falling off, and sliding along the wet road. The biker then picked himself up and approached the injured man, swearing and abusing him and threatening to knife him. Staff from a nearby cafe along with passers-by went to check on the pedestrian and Stanciu - who had by now been joined by a number of other youngsters - tried to push over tables outside the cafe as he walked away.

Stanciu was sentenced to 14 months in a young offenders institution[36]. He will serve up to half that period in custody before being released on licence to serve the remainder in the community. He was disqualified from driving for 19 months and must pass an extended test before he can get a licence.

Mark Richardson

Mark Richardson used his dumper truck as a weapon after enforcement officers came onto his land over an unpaid council tax bill.

The 54-year-old repeatedly rammed the officers' van causing GBP24,000 worth of damage and writing off the vehicle. The defendant "saw red" on the day in question and had engaged in "disgraceful behaviour". The court heard the outstanding council tax debt which lay at the heart of the incident was subsequently slashed by 90% on appeal.

On the afternoon of January 11, 2024, civil enforcement officers visited Richardson's farm near Coelbren over an outstanding tax liability and after initially finding the main gate padlocked shut were able to gain access via a different route. Officers found a Vauxhall Vivaro van parked on the land and were in the process of clamping and seizing it in order to satisfy the debt when the defendant appeared. Richardson shouted at the officers and told them to get off his land and the officers presented their ID cards and told the defendant his van had been seized.

The defendant left the scene but returned a short time later on a dumper truck which he used to repeatedly ram the front and rear of the officers' van. The enforcement officers called the police and Richardson was arrested at the farm. He told police: "I am sorry for it but I don't regret doing it" and later went on to claim the enforcement officers had not shown him any identification.

The court heard the cost of the damage to the enforcement officers' van was put at around GBP24,000 and the vehicle was written off. Richardson was sentenced to eight months in prison suspended for two years and was ordered to complete a rehabilitation course and to do 200 hours of unpaid work in the community. As Richardson left the dock he said: "I am really ashamed of it judge."

Ali Farah

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Ali Farah, 31, was more than three times the drink-drive limit during a police chase during which he crashed into a sari shop in Cardiff[37].

When police tried to detain him he resisted to the point that officers decided to pava spray him. He was seen driving on the wrong side of the road in Clare Road, Grangetown, in the early hours of November 13 having attended a house party where he had been drinking. He was driving a Vauxhall Crossland which police attempted to pull over in Neville Street.

The defendant had to swerve to avoid hitting parked vehicles. An officer tried to drive alongside Farah in order to identify him and told him to pull over. He initially stop his car and the officer got out of his vehicle to approach the Crossland.

But Farah accelerated away which caused the officer to return to his vehicle and a pursuit began. Farah turned left into Wellington Street before taking a turn into Albert Street and then Ninian Park Road. He reached speeds of 62mph and was swerving onto the wrong side of the road.

The defendant took a right-hand turn at speed and collided into the shutters of Jannat Sarees. The officers approached the car and attempted to detain Farah and his front-seat passenger. The defendant struggled and flapped his arms to prevent himself from being handcuffed.

Pava spray was used to disable Farah and he was arrested at 2.04am. He was unable to provide a roadside breath test but upon being taken to custody he gave a reading of 122mcg of alcohol per 100ml of breath with the legal limit being 35mcg per 100ml of breath. The damage caused to Jannat Sarees was estimated to be worth around GBP4,700.

Farah was sentenced to 10 months imprisonment[38] suspended for 18 months. He was also ordered to carry out 150 hours unpaid work and must complete a five-day rehabilitation activity requirement and pay GBP240 in compensation.

Michael Thomas

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Michael Thomas, 46, torched his flat then suggested the inferno could have been cased by a faulty smoke alarm. He started two fires in his flat in the converted chapel causing tens of thousands of pounds damage and leaving himself homeless.

The defendant denied arson saying visitors to his flat earlier that day may have lit the fire and even suggesting that it could have been caused by a spark from a smoke alarm but was convicted at trial of arson. The court heard the defendant is unable to explain how the incident happened. The blaze happened on November 19, 2022, at the former Smyrna Welsh Baptist Chapel in Port Talbot[39], which had been converted into flats.

The emergency services were called to a fire at a ground-floor flat and on arrival found the property well alight. The ferocity of the fire was illustrated by a neighbour who filmed some of the incident on a mobile phone. In the footage the flames can be seen licking the outside of the building as they reach up towards towards the flats on the upper floors.

The jury was reminded of the horrors of the Grenfell Tower when a fire in a lower-level flat spread quickly upwards to others.

Custody image of Michael ThomasMichael Thomas

The subsequent investigation found there had been two separate seats of fire in the flat - one in Thomas' bedroom and one in the bathroom - and that the bedroom door had been shut when firefighters entered the property. At trial the 46-year-old defendant denied causing the fire and suggested it may have been started by friends who were at the flat shortly before the blaze broke out or by a faulty fire alarm which he said he had seen sparking. A fire investigator with Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue Service who gave evidence to the jury said in his two decades of experience he had never seen a smoke alarm causing a fire.

Thomas was sentenced to three years in prison. The defendant will serve up to half that sentence in custody before being released on licence to serve the remainder in the community. Join our WhatsApp news community here[40] for the latest breaking news.

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References

  1. ^ Usk (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  2. ^ six years and two months imprisonment. (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  3. ^ life imprisonment with a minimum of 17 years (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  4. ^ Pontypridd (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  5. ^ Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  6. ^ Swansea (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  7. ^ University Hospital of Wales (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  8. ^ Cardiff (www.walesonline.co.uk)
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  10. ^ Cardiff Crown Court (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  11. ^ Ely (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  12. ^ jailed for four years and four months. (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  13. ^ Bangor (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  14. ^ eight-month jail sentence, suspended for 18 months (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  15. ^ Cardiff (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  16. ^ Cardiff Crown Court (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  17. ^ nine months imprisonment suspended for 18 months (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  18. ^ Rhondda (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  19. ^ Caerphilly (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  20. ^ Cwmbran (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  21. ^ Cardiff Crown Court (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  22. ^ 36 months imprisonment (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  23. ^ Cardiff (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  24. ^ Swansea City (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  25. ^ Cardiff City Stadium (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  26. ^ Swansea (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  27. ^ 12 months imprisonment (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  28. ^ Cardiff (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  29. ^ St Mellons (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  30. ^ University Hospital of Wales (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  31. ^ seven years and three months imprisonment (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  32. ^ extended 16-year sentence (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  33. ^ Swansea Crown Court (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  34. ^ South Wales Police (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  35. ^ Port Talbot (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  36. ^ sentenced to 14 months in a young offenders institution (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  37. ^ Cardiff (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  38. ^ 10 months imprisonment (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  39. ^ Port Talbot (www.walesonline.co.uk)
  40. ^ Join our WhatsApp news community here (chat.whatsapp.com)