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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Alice Peacock & Hannah Mackenzie Wood

Stepmum who killed Arthur Labinjo-Hughes, 6, attempted suicide in jail

The woman who killed her six-year-old stepson Arthur Labinjo-Hughes attempted suicide in prison after she was locked up for the horrifying crime.

Emma Tustin is currently serving a life sentence at HMP Peterborough in Cambridgeshire after being sentenced on manslaughter charges, the Mirror reports.

Since being put behind bars, Tustin has been threatened, bullied and kicked out of her cell after killing the youngster at her home in Solihull, West Midlands.

The news of Tustin’s attempt on her life, reported by the Evening Standard comes as senior judges are considering appeals or challenges to she and Arthur's father Thomas Hughes prison sentences, as well as three other notorious convicts.

Tustin and Hughes, who was sentenced to 21 years for manslaughter, are having their sentences reviewed.

Arthur suffered an unsurvivable brain injury while in the sole care of Tustin, who was jailed for life with a minimum term of 29 years after assaulting him.

Tustin and Hughes are appealing against the length of their sentences, which are also being challenged as being unduly lenient.

During the trial, the court heard that Tustin tried to take her own life during the trial by taking an overdose and attempting to hang herself to avoid facing punishment for murdering Arthur, Coventry Live reports.

Arthur Labinjo-Hughes. (Olivia Labinjo-Halcrow/PA Wire)

A doctor assessed Tustin as fit to continue the trial but she will remain a suicide risk, the court heard at the time of her trial.

Mary Prior QC, representing Tustin, told judges the killer had twice attempted to kill herself, by hanging and drug overdose, during her criminal trial, and she made a fresh bid a few weeks after her sentencing hearing in December last year.

She said: "Her prison report indicates there been a further episode of attempted suicide.

“On January 1, 2022, she put a ligature around her neck and the records from prison show she is on the hospital wing and has remained on the hospital wing because of significant fears of suicide.”

On Wednesday, Tom Little QC, representing the Attorney General's Office (AGO), said Tustin's case "merited at the very least consideration of a whole-life order".

He said: "This was, we accept, not a straightforward sentencing exercise. The trial was plainly a harrowing one for all concerned."

Mr Little said Arthur was "subjected to the most unimaginable suffering", adding: "This was an extremely serious example of child murder against the background of that cruelty."

In written submissions, Mr Little said the trial judge failed to properly consider whether Tustin's offences were so serious they required a whole-life order.

He wrote: "In the context of sadistic conduct that preceded the murder, it is submitted that murder itself was sadistically motivated.

"Even if it was not, then (Tustin)'s offending as a whole was so exceptionally serious that it was open to the judge to impose a whole-life order.

"This was not a case involving episodic criminality before the murder but systematic brutality amounting to torture."

The barrister also said the 30-year starting point for Tustin's sentence should have been significantly increased.

However Mary Prior QC, for Tustin, said the sentencing judge took a "fair and proper approach in this very difficult case".

Ms Prior said the "toxicity of the relationship" between Tustin and Hughes created a scenario where they both abused Arthur.

"At the very least, Thomas Hughes was encouraging Emma Tustin to be cruel, to assault and to ill-treat his son," she added.

Wednesday's hearing also heard arguments over the sentence of Jordan Monaghan, who was handed a minimum term of 40 years at Preston Crown Court after he murdered two of his children and his new partner.

Monaghan was jailed in December after smothering his 24-day-old daughter Ruby as she slept in a Moses basket on New Year's Day 2013.

Eight months later he smothered his 21-month-old son Logan and six years after that he murdered his new partner Evie Adams with a drugs overdose.

Mr Little said Monaghan's murders or attempted murders were of "exceptionally high" seriousness, with "no mitigation here at all".

He told the court: "The clear rationale or intention behind these offences was to try to distract his then partner from his gambling habit and maintain control over her despite her repeated attempts to free herself from him."

Mr Little added of Ms Adams: "If that was not enough, the third murder was one involving significant planning and preparation involving a painful death having, in short, been tricked to take strong forms of medication which ultimately killed her, and that was committed whilst on police bail."

Arthur Labinjo-Hughes with his killers - father Thomas Hughes and Thomas' partner Emma Tustin (PA)

Benjamin Myers QC, for Monaghan, stressed the high bar needed for a whole-life term, which means the criminal would die in prison.

He told the court: "A whole-life order is an extreme sentence for an extreme level of offending.

"There has to be some caution not to apply whole-life orders with a readiness that would lead to an escalation in their use."

At the start of the hearing, Mr Little told the court that "whilst the offending in these various cases differs markedly, one common feature of the applications is that either a whole-life order was imposed, is challenged, or it was not" and the AGO was seeking one.

He said whole-life orders could be lawfully handed to an offender "if just punishment and retribution requires it".

Ex-Met Police constable Couzens was handed a whole-life term last year for the rape and murder of 33-year-old Sarah Everard after he abducted her in south London on March 3 2021.

It was the first time the sentence had been imposed for a single murder of an adult not committed in the course of a terror attack.

Wayne Couzens was handed a life-sentence for the murder of Sarah Everard (PA)

A bearded Couzens, wearing a grey jumper, appeared by video-link from HMP Frankland at the start of Wednesday's hearing ahead of his appeal against his whole-life term.

Double killer Ian Stewart, who was convicted of murdering his first wife six years before he went on to murder his fiancée, is also due to appeal against his whole-life order.

Stewart, who did not attend Wednesday's hearing, killed 51-year-old children's author Helen Bailey in 2016, and was found guilty of murder in 2017.

Couzens murdered Sarah Everard after he staged a fake covid arrest whilst she was walking home (PA)

After this conviction, police investigated the 2010 death of Stewart's first wife, Diane Stewart, 47, and in February, he was found guilty of her murder.

Couzens, 49, formerly of Deal, Kent, and Stewart, 61, previously of Royston, Hertfordshire, are appealing against their whole-life orders.

Monaghan, aged 30 at sentence and previously of Belgrave Close, Blackburn, is having his sentence challenged as unduly lenient.

Tustin, 32, previously of Cranmore Road, Solihull, and Hughes, 29, are appealing against their sentences which are also being challenged by the AGO.

The hearing before the Lord Chief Justice Lord Burnett and four other judges is due to finish on Thursday, with a decision expected at a later date.

The Samaritans is available 24/7 if you need to talk. You can contact them for free by calling 116 123, email jo@samaritans.org or head to the website to find your nearest branch. You matter.

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