Couple who murdered three-year-old boy in their care jailed for life

A couple who murdered a toddler they were paid to look after were today jailed for life.

Kayley Boleyn, 19, and Christopher Taylor, 25, inflicted more than 70 injuries on three-year-old Ryan Lovell-Hancox. The boy lived with the couple at their flat in Bilston, West Midlands, for a month before he was taken to hospital in a coma after a brain haemorrhage.

They had been paid £40 a week by the boy’s mother and Boleyn’s cousin, 21-year-old Amy Hancox, who felt she could not look after the child because of mental health problems. But Boleyn “abused the trust” of Ryan’s parents, who had no idea of their son’s suffering.

Wolverhampton crown court heard Taylor and Boleyn forced the youngster to live in squalor in the weeks before his death on Christmas Eve 2008, providing better care for two dogs. Violence towards Ryan was not borne from a “flash of temper”, but was sustained and horrific.

Two days before Ryan’s death, Hancox tried to batter down the door to Boleyn’s home to see her son. But Boleyn, who like her boyfriend abused cannabis and alcohol, refused to let her in as Ryan’s face and body was covered in bruising.

Mrs Justice Macur ordered Boleyn to serve at least 13 years in prison while Taylor was told his minimum term would be 15 years. “It’s clear to me that you [Boleyn] and your co-defendant were incapable of looking after yourselves, let alone a child,” she said.

“There were bruises to his skull, which had been inflicted by up to 10 individual blows. There were marks on his legs and grazes to his face. He had been grabbed forcibly around the jaw and slapped and punched.

“These were not in isolation. There were further assaults to his lower back and buttocks on which there was extensive bruising.

“It really was a case where the jury saw injuries from top to toe. He would have suffered emotionally and physically and he would have needed comfort but you mocked him.”

The judge added: “You were unable to keep your own lives under control without smoking cannabis and alcohol and you took your petty grievances out on this boy because you regarded him as hyperactive and out of control.”

It was disclosed during today’s 45-minute hearing that Boleyn, who with Taylor was found guilty in March of murder and child cruelty, was known to social services. A social worker had attended her home on the day the toddler was taken to hospital.

Social workers were aware Boleyn had problems after she left school, aged 12, to care for her younger siblings.

Frances Oldham QC, for Boleyn, read out a probation officer’s report to the court which said: “I believe Miss Boleyn is vulnerable and in need of assistance. She has very few supportive relationships in her life and as a result is very isolated.”

Wolverhamton city council said it expected to publish the findings of its serious case review this autumn.

Ryan’s mother and his father, John Lovell, 24, wept throughout the hearing. Hancox ran from the public gallery in tears as her victim impact statement was read out. In it she described her son as a “bubbly, intelligent boy who she loved with all her heart”.