'Rare' for baby's injuries to be accidental

Jacob Panons
BBC News, South East
Sara Smith
BBC News, Canterbury
Kent Police A sleeping baby in a pink onesie and a black bobble hat.Kent Police
Everleigh was admitted to hospital aged five weeks and died when she was 14-months-old

A doctor has told a jury it is "extremely rare" for the type of leg and rib injuries seen on a five-week-old baby who was allegedly murdered by her father to be accidental.

Thomas Holford, 24, is accused of murdering Everleigh Stroud, who was rushed to Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother (QEQM) Hospital in Margate, Kent, on 21 April 2021.

Everleigh was having seizures, had a bleed on the brain and a number of other injuries. She died in hospital, aged 14 months, on 27 May the following year, Canterbury Crown Court was told.

Holford, of Ramsgate, pleaded guilty to manslaughter in November but denies murder and causing actual bodily harm.

Supplied A man with stubble, a septum piercing, face tattoos and dreadlock hair looking at the camera. He is wearing a black shirt and silver chain necklace.Supplied
Holford is accused of murdering his daughter Everleigh

Dr Jeremy Jones, a paediatric radiologist, said it would require "significant or extreme force" to cause the leg fractures seen on Everleigh, and that they could not happen in normal or rough play-handling of a baby.

When asked how physically shaking a baby could cause the leg injuries, Dr Jones said: "If shaken by their chest their limbs can flail uncontrollably.

"The flicking of a foot on the end of a leg while being shaken can result in the force required to cause this type of fracture."

Both prosecution and defence accepted the injuries were caused by shaking.

In evidence read to the court from Professor Safa Al-Sarraj, a consultant neuropathologist, he said an MRI scan showed damage "consistent with non-accidental (abusive) traumatic brain injuries".

He also said the "force appears to be severe enough to cause apnoea - or stoppage of breathing".

The trial continues.

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