Matthew Wright 7am - 10am
Psychologist 'killed mother with hammer before taking £25,000'
28 August 2020, 16:56
A psychologist violently killed his mother with a hammer before transferring £25,000 from her bank account to buy a Jaguar car, a court heard.
Robert Child, 37, admitted murdering his mother Janice, 64, who was found in a bloodstained utility room under the stairs of her home in Woolton, Liverpool, on March 6.
Liverpool Crown Court was told her body was found under the stairs with 31 wounds, including to the skull and face as well as defensive injuries to her hands, thought to have been caused by a hammer and another weapon.
Although Child admits the killing, he denies carrying it out for financial gain.
Opening a trial of issue on Friday, John Benson QC said Child had been planning a wedding to his fiancee Kelly Williams in May, despite still being married to a former partner.
He worked at the University of Liverpool in the area of sports psychology but had not completed a PhD, although he described himself as a doctor, Mr Benson said.
He also falsely claimed to work as an analyst, or football scout, for Manchester United, but the court heard at the time of his mother's death he had £1.01 in his bank account.
Mr Benson said: "The prosecution advance the case that the defendant was in financial straits."
Police were called to Mrs Child's home in Kings Drive in the early hours of the morning the day of the killing after neighbours were alerted by the sound of her dog Alfie barking and were unable to contact her.
The court heard she lived alone with the dachshund, which she was described as "very attached" to, as her husband Stanley was in a care home with dementia. He has since died.
When officers went to Child's house in Thingwall, Wirral, on March 6 to tell him his mother's body had been found, his partner told them he was out buying a new car.
Child returned in a blue Jaguar, Mr Benson said, and appeared shocked and upset at the news.
He said: "The prosecution say that reaction was entirely feigned. It was a simulated response because he knew full well his mother was dead. He killed her less than 24 hours before."
The court heard Child had looked at buying the £14,000 car in February but was unable to provide the deposit.
Mr Benson said a transaction to transfer £25,000 to Child's account from his mother was made on her mobile phone just after 4.30pm on March 5.
He said: "That, the prosecution say, was some five or six minutes after the defendant had left his mother's house."
The court heard Child claimed he had enough money to buy the car, without needing to take it from his mother.
Mr Benson said: "He may not have needed it but he wanted it. That much, we would suggest, is beyond sensible dispute."
Child was arrested by officers after giving inconsistent accounts of his movements on the day of his mother's death.
He was due to stand trial for murder on Monday but changed his plea to guilty on the first day, having previously pleaded guilty to manslaughter.
The trial of issue is expected to continue until next week.