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Scissors killer who stabbed pregnant associate has sentence decreased

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A roofer who murdered his heavily-pregnant girlfriend with a pair of scissors in a ‘frenzied’ attack has had his sentence reduced by two years.

Liam Taylor stabbed Ailish Walsh 46 times and hit her in the head with a dumbbell at their flat in Hackney, east London, on December 15, 2022.

The 38-year-old was jailed for life with a minimum term of imprisonment of 27 years after he pleaded guilty to Ms Walsh’s murder at the Old Bailey in August 2023.

His trial heard that the pair had a ‘volatile relationship’ and that Taylor was upset about Ms Walsh’s latest pregnancy because he had two girls and wanted a boy. 

Ms Walsh, 28, was almost 23 weeks pregnant at the time of the attack and was found dead in her bedroom by her father Larry Goulding. 

On Wednesday, appeal judges in London said Taylor’s sentence should be reduced to a life sentence with a minimum term of imprisonment of 25 years.  

Andrew Morris, representing Taylor, said the sentencing judge incorrectly used words like sadistic and sexual to categorise Taylor’s sentence but there was ‘no factual basis that his conduct was sexual in nature’.

Ailish Walsh, 28, was almost 23 weeks pregnant when she was killed by her partner Liam Taylor in their flat in Hackney, east London

Ailish Walsh, 28, was almost 23 weeks pregnant when she was killed by her partner Liam Taylor in their flat in Hackney, east London

Liam Taylor, 38, was jailed for life with a minimum term of imprisonment of 27 years after he pleaded guilty to Ms Walsh's murder at the Old Bailey in August 2023

Liam Taylor, 38, was jailed for life with a minimum term of imprisonment of 27 years after he pleaded guilty to Ms Walsh’s murder at the Old Bailey in August 2023

But Mr Morris said that though Ms Walsh was stabbed in the genitals and abdomen, there was no sexual element to her murder.

The barrister added: ‘The attack was ferocious, with a large number of stab wounds using two weapons.

‘The judge used words like sadistic and sexual, which were chosen in order to meet the sentencing tariff.

‘Only as the case developed and changed, it was simply not enough to make for such a high starting point to his sentence.’

Mr Morris also said Taylor, who has previous convictions for attacking female members of his family, had not intended to kill the female foetus and that the ‘frenzied attack was a loss of temper, on the spur of the moment’.

Jane Osborne KC, representing the Crown Prosecution Service, said the wounds on Ms Walsh’s abdomen ‘went directly upwards’ which ‘was a clear attempt to inflict direct injury on the foetus he knew the deceased was carrying, and who he knew was his’.

The court heard the pair had a 'volatile relationship' and that Taylor was upset about Ms Walsh's latest pregnancy because he had two girls and wanted a boy

The court heard the pair had a ‘volatile relationship’ and that Taylor was upset about Ms Walsh’s latest pregnancy because he had two girls and wanted a boy

She added: ‘This was not just an attack on a pregnant woman, but an attack on a pregnant woman to kill both her and the foetus she was carrying.’

Mrs Justice Thornton, sitting with Lord Justice Holroyde and Mr Justice Nicklin, said Taylor had ‘left Ms Walsh to die and made no attempt to contact the emergency services’ afterwards.

The judge said the victim was found by her father ‘with the 15kg dumbbell on her leg, scissors on the floor and blood all over the carpet’.

She added that Taylor, who had cocaine, cannabis and alcohol in his system, was arrested the morning after the attack.

Ms Walsh was found dead in her bedroom by her father, Larry Goulding

Ms Walsh was found dead in her bedroom by her father, Larry Goulding

Though she said the sentencing judge was ‘entitled to find many, very serious aggravating features’ in the case, there was no sexual element to the offending, allowing a reduction in the sentence.

She said: ‘This was a brutal, savage assault.

‘The attack had elements that were sadistic in nature, and possibly Ms Walsh knew what was happening to her.’

For free and confidential support, connect to a Women’s Aid support worker via their instant messaging service at chat.womensaid.org.uk