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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
National
Eleanor Barlow

Jury considers verdicts in trial of grandparents accused of murder

Two-year-old Ethan Ives-Griffiths (North Wales Police/PA) -

The jury in the trial of a couple accused of murdering their two-year-old grandson have retired to consider their verdicts.

Ethan Ives-Griffiths died on August 16 2021, two days after he collapsed with a fatal head injury at the home of his grandparents, Michael Ives, 47, and Kerry Ives, 46, in Flintshire, North Wales.

A trial at Mold Crown Court, lasting more than five weeks, has heard the boy was severely underweight and dehydrated when he died, with 40 visible marks on his body.

Michael and Kerry Ives, both of Kingsley Road, Garden City but originally from Wolverhampton, West Midlands, deny the murder of Ethan, an alternative count of causing or allowing his death and cruelty to a child under the age of 16.

Ethan’s mother Shannon Ives, of Rhes-y-Cae, near Holywell, who was living with her parents at the time, denies causing or allowing his death and child cruelty.

Sending the jury out to consider the verdicts just before 11.30am on Monday, Mr Justice Griffiths told them: “You are under no pressure of time.”

Opening the case last month, Caroline Rees KC, prosecuting, said Ethan was exposed to “casual brutality” and, according to a medical expert, would have experienced “distress, pain and misery in the days and weeks prior to his death”.

Jurors were shown CCTV from outside the home, of Michael Ives carrying the youngster by the top of his arm.

The court has heard Ethan was with his grandparents in the living room on August 14 2021, while his mother was upstairs on the phone.

Both Michael and Kerry Ives told the jury nothing happened in the moments before Ethan collapsed, but the court heard medical experts believed his head injury was caused by deliberate use of force, which may have included forceful shaking.

The prosecution said the “overwhelming expert evidence” suggested the fatal injury was caused within minutes of his collapse.

The jury was sent home for the day shortly after 4.30pm and court was adjourned until Tuesday.

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