2
Whole life order given to UK teacher who sexually abused and murdered adopted baby
Jamie Varley (left) and John McGowan-Fazakerley at Preston crown court. The adopting parents were said to have treated the baby as a ‘plaything’. Photograph: Elizabeth Cook/PA View image in fullscreen Jamie Varley (left) and John McGowan-Fazakerley at Preston crown court. The adopting parents were said to have treated the baby as a ‘plaything’. Photograph: Elizabeth Cook/PA Whole life order given to UK teacher who sexually abused and murdered adopted baby Jamie Varley jailed for life and partner John McGowan-Fazakerley jailed for 25 years over death of Preston Davey A secondary school teacher has been jailed for life for sexually abusing and murdering the baby boy he was adopting with his partner. Jamie Varley, 37, was sentenced to a whole life order by a judge on Thursday for abusing and killing 13-month-old Preston Davey. It means he will stay in prison for the rest of his life and never be eligible for parole, Mr Justice Turner said. His partner, John McGowan-Fazakerley, 32, was jailed for 25 years for sexual abuse, child cruelty and allowing the death of a child. Preston was taken from his biological mother, a convicted killer, and went to foster parents five days after his birth. He was placed by an adoption agency with Varley and McGowan-Fazakerley at the age of nine months. By the age of 13 months he was dead. The adopting parents treated him, Preston crown court heard, as a “plaything”. Over the course of his time at the Varley-McGowan-Fazakerley home in Staining, near Blackpool, the baby was “routinely ill-treated, sexually abused and physically assaulted”, the prosecutor Peter Wright KC said. Evidence showed the baby suffered 40 traumatic injuries. On 27 July 2023 an unresponsive baby Preston was rushed by the couple to hospital, where medics worked in vain for 50 minutes to try to save his life. Preston Davey. Photograph: Twitter X/Lancashire police Varley, described in court as overly dramatic by nature, gave a “performance” of a grieving parent that one senior doctor described as unlike anything she had seen before. Jurors heard that Varley claimed to have left the baby in the bath for a couple of minutes and returned to find him submerged. But there was no medical evidence to support that story. Preston’s hair was dry, he had a nappy in place and he did not appear to have swallowed any water. Instead a pathologist gave the cause of death as acute upper airways obstruction by either smothering or an object or objects being inserted into the baby’s mouth. A long police investigation revealed a number of disturbing images and videos on Varley’s phone, which were used as evidence that he had been physically, psychologically and sexually abusing his child. The case has raised questions about whether authorities missed opportunities to save Preston. The eight-week trial heard that Preston had been seen by a “battery of professionals” in the final weeks of his life. They included social workers, doctors and nurses. Preston was taken three