A woman bravely confronted her sister's evil murderer as he was jailed for life today, and told him: "I hope she haunts you."
Lab technician Ross McCullam was sentenced at Leicester Crown Court in front of more than 20 family members for cutting the throat of his 23-year-old colleague Megan Newborough, who was described as having a "stellar" personality.
Turning to McCullam, who was sitting crying to himself in the dock a few short yards across the courtroom, Claire Newborough described him as the very “definition” of a “monster”.
Speaking of her sister, she told him: "She always thought she could fix people, but fixing evil people is not possible. You tricked her, murdered her, brutalised her and left her in such an undignified way.
"I hope she haunts you."
McCullam, who had admitted manslaughter before his trial but denied murder, was convicted in little more than 90 minutes by a jury on Monday.
He was handed a life sentence with a minimum term of 23 years on Friday.
The lab worker had claimed he acted only in a "blind rage" after a loss of control which Miss Newborough had inadvertently triggered during oral sex, after an incident at his parents' home on August 6, 2021.
McCullam, who met Miss Newborough at brickmaker Ibstock where they both worked, sought to blame his attack on undiagnosed PTSD caused by unreported childhood sexual abuse.
But he was undone by his own web of lies, including mounting an elaborate cover-up in which he dumped her body in undergrowth and changed his blood-stained clothes, and also texted her to say "you were amazing" and asking if she had got home safe.
In her victim impact statement, Miss Newborough’s older sibling added that having been subjected to a “terrifying” and unprovoked attack, McCullam heaped fresh “suffering” on his victim.
“She was cruelly dumped, topless, in a cold, dark field, where the defendant thought she would never be found,” she said.
“The thing Megan hated most was feeling cold, and as her big sister, the very thought of her so cold and alone for all those hours, has destroyed me.”
She continued: “The definition of a monster is cruel, frightening and evil – and it is to my relief the defendant has been recognised as a monster
“You are an unpredictable menace, a danger to women, obsessed with serial killers,” adding he also seemed obsessed with his own notoriety.
The older sister said McCullam had made a choice, by running murder to trial, that had put the family through “seven weeks of hell”, despite him having launched an “horrific and barbaric” attack on her sibling.
Although the judge did not sentence McCullam on the grounds he had tried to cut off Miss Newborough’s head, her family were sure it is what her co-worker had intended, with seven separate injuries to her neck.
Miss Newborough’s sibling added: “We fully believe the defendant tried to decapitate Megan, this brutalisation of my sister’s body is something we will never be able to come to terms with.”
Earlier Judge Philip Head described Miss Newborough as a "stellar" personality, who was "supportive, patient and caring" of friends, colleagues and family.
Jailing McCullam, he said: "I regard you cutting her throat as a very substantial aggravating factor."
"It was the truly dreadful and sustained way you ensured that intention to kill was achieved."
The victim's father, Anthony, wept in a court victim impact statement as he said the family had lost their “beautiful treasured daughter Megan, in such horrific circumstances”.
He added: “We are a large and close family who have been ripped apart by one evil human being. It is like a horror film, but it is a true story, Megan’s story, our story.
“These events have caused us so much pain and anguish we struggle that Megan, in her last moments, would have been so frightened.
"She was loved by so many and touched so many lives for those she met and left a great gaping hole that can never be filled.
"She was our princess and the defendant with his evil hands, his strength, together with his evil mind has taken her away from us forever."