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Mother accused of murdering five-year-old son ‘never shed a real tear for him’

Angharad Williamson happily watched reality TV on the day she was charged with murdering Logan Mwangi and only faked her grief, a fellow inmate says.

Tess de La Mare
Tuesday 22 March 2022 13:47 EDT
Angharad Williamson in the dock at Cardiff Crown Court (Elizabeth Cook/PA)
Angharad Williamson in the dock at Cardiff Crown Court (Elizabeth Cook/PA) (PA Wire)

The mother of a five-year-old boy found dumped in a river with catastrophic injuries sat around watching reality TV on the night she was charged with murder, a fellow prison inmate claims.

Logan Mwangi, also known as Logan Williamson, was found in the River Ogmore in Pandy Park, Bridgend, on July 31 2021, a few hundred metres from the flat he shared with his family.

The victim had suffered more than 56 external injuries, as well as internal injuries commonly found in victims of high-speed car accidents, including a large tear to his liver and one to his bowel.

His mother Angharad Williamson, 30, is on trial at Cardiff Crown Court charged with his murder.

Also on trial for murder is Logan’s stepfather John Cole, and a 14-year-old boy, who cannot legally be identified.

On Tuesday, Joanne Brooks, who was incarcerated with Williamson at HMP Eastwood Park between September 14 and December 23 2021 said the defendant had “never shed a real tear” about Logan.

Ms Brooks said Williamson had put on an elaborate show of emotion for prison staff on the day she was charged with murder, but dropped it when they were not looking.

“Prior to us being put in our rooms that night, Angie had collapsed to the floor with some kind of emotion,” she said.

The witness said she had a clear view into Williamson’s cell from her own cell window.

“I could look across to see how she was because she had just been charged with the murder of her child and she was sat on her bed watching Married At First Sight Australia,” Ms Brooks said.

“She was basically eating snacks and laughing at what was on the screen.”

Williamson had been placed on hourly checks, Ms Brooks said.

“From what I could see, if a prison officer was due to come and see her, wailing would begin and it would stop as abruptly as it had started when the prison officer walked away.”

She said Williamson would then get back on the bed and continue with whatever she had been watching.

Asked whether she had ever seen Williamson shed a genuine tear, Ms Brooks said: “I can categorically say I never saw her shed a real tear and that’s something that has stuck in my mind.”

She described Williamson singing and skipping around the prison and laughing and joking with people.

“I’m a mother and a grandmother, (Williamson) didn’t look like someone whose child had been killed weeks before.”

Ms Brooks said on one occasion Williamson had shown her a montage of photos of Logan.

“There was no emotion, if you were showing someone a picture of your child that has just died you show emotion, and there was just none,” she said.

The witness said that Williamson’s manner was a “weird kind of attention-seeking” and that she informed her, without being asked, that she was “the Bridgend baby’s mum”.

“She told a lot of women in the prison – if she hadn’t told me, I wouldn’t have known who she was,” Ms Brooks said.

Ms Brooks said Williamson had given her three accounts of her son’s death – the first being that she had tried to get help for him, but she had been prevented from leaving her property by the teenage defendant.

In another version of events, Ms Brooks said Williamson had told her Logan had fallen and hit his head so she had put him to bed and given him Calpol, and that he had “wandered off of his own accord” because the lock on the front door was broken.

In a third telling, Williamson claimed she did not know what had happened because she was in her room listening to loud music, the witness said.

It is alleged the three defendants were involved in murdering Logan before concocting a cover-up which included dumping his body in the river, phoning the police to falsely report him missing, and washing his bloodstained bed linen.

Williamson and the youth deny murder and perverting the course of justice. Cole denies murder but admits perverting the course of justice.

Cole and Williamson are also charged with causing or allowing the death of a child.

The trial continues.

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