Saturday, October 4, 2025 - Dad Daniel Gunter, who "crushed" the skull of his own newborn son before heading outside for a cigarette, has been sentenced to life in jail.
Premature baby Brendon Statton was just two weeks
old when his father attacked him in his cot at Yeovil District
Hospital's special care baby unit in Somerset, inflicting
"catastrophic injuries" to his head, neck, legs and jaw.
Nurses were said to be working just five metres away when he
carried out the despicable act, breaking the baby's neck.
Gunter, 27, denied harming the vulnerable infant on March 5
last year, but was ultimately convicted of murd£r following a three-week
trial.
Today, October 3, Gunter was sentenced to life in prison
with a minimum term of 20 years.
Bristol Crown Court previously heard how nurses at the
unit tried desperately to resuscitate tiny Brendon, after finding him
with horrific injuries.
The court heard how the child's grave condition was
discovered after his mother, Sophie Staddon, told nurses that he was cold and
asked them to check on him.
Recalling the devastating scene, Charles Row KC,
prosecuting, told the trial: "Staff found him lying in his cot with his
baby grow open. They immediately saw that he wasn't just cold but that he had
suffered catastrophic injuries.
"In plain language, his head had been crushed so as to
shatter his skull. He was badly bruised from head to toe, with deep scratches
in his neck. He was later found to have, amongst other injuries, a broken neck,
a broken jaw, broken legs, broken ankles and broken wrists."
By the time staff realized something was terribly wrong,
evil Gunter had already walked out of the unit for a cigarette, leaving his son
with fatal injuries.
The prosecution said that staff carried Brendon's
"limp, lifeless body" to the resuscitation area, but the baby
tragically did not respond to treatment. Gunter and Staddon, 23, were arrested
by the police while smoking outside the hospital.
Gunter told police officers: "At no stage did I do
anything to Brendon that could have caused him any injury. I was with Sophie
the whole time, and she didn't do anything either."
In a separate statement, he said: "I would never hurt
my baby boy."
The baby's mother, who was cleared of causing or allowing
the de@th of a child, told officers: "I had done nothing to harm Brendon
at all. I love him. He was my everything. I would not have harmed
him."
A post-mortem examination determined that Brendon di£d of
"blunt force impact(s) head injury" with multiple non-accidental head
injuries.
During the trial, DCI Nadine Partridge, of Avon and
Somerset police, described Gunter as selfish and criticised the defendant for
laughing and joking while in the dock, The Guardian reports.
Brendon, who'd been born prematurely at 33 weeks' gestation,
weighing just 1.83kg at birth, had already faced many hurdles in his short
life, which ended in the most brutal way imaginable.
Ms Partridge told the court that Gunter must have twisted
and pulled at the newborn's limbs, and may have even gripped him by the legs,
striking him against hard objects.
She said: "You don't want to imagine what happened to
him in those last moments".
Although Gunter has not given any explanation for the
murd£r, officers believe he could have been motivated by the fear that his then
partner, Staddon, might move to a mother and baby unit, where there would be no
available accommodation for him.
Gunter and Staddon, who had an on-off relationship, had been
homeless and living in temporary accommodation in a former Yeovil pub when she
became pregnant with Brendon.
The court heard how Gunter had been "violent"
towards Staddon, controlling her finances as well as who she could talk to. A
social worker who visited the couple in January 2024 advised them that
authorities were planning to remove the child from their care after the
birth.
Telling jurors how the couple displayed no emotion at this
news, Mr Row said: "The authorities were concerned about many things,
including their precarious housing situation, the way Mr Gunter appeared to
control Ms Staddon and her finances, Ms Staddon's physical and mental health
and their lack of engagement."
Before Brendon's de@th, both social services and Gunter's
family had reportedly also expressed concern about the "lack of emotional
warmth" the couple showed their baby, who was born on February 20,
2024.
Although attempts were made to persuade Staddon to remain in
the hospital, she chose to return to the accommodation she and Gunter
shared.
Gunter repeatedly ignored the nurses' advice at the unit,
taking Brendon out of his incubator without asking, overstimulating the newborn
to the point of causing him distress and removing his nasal gastric tube.
Family members had witnessed Gunter shouting and getting
angry with Brendon during hospital visits, and recalled seeing him handling the
child roughly.
Louise Besica, Gunter's aunt, recalled: "I felt like he
had no patience. He was really rough with him with how he was putting him in
his babygrow."

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