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Christmas Eve pub shooting gunman loses appeal against prison sentence

Connor Chapman, 23, was found guilty following a trial at Liverpool Crown Court of the murder of Elle Edwards.

Tom Pilgrim
Thursday 29 February 2024 09:09 EST
Connor Chapman was jailed for killing Elle Edwards in Wallasey (Merseyside Police/PA)
Connor Chapman was jailed for killing Elle Edwards in Wallasey (Merseyside Police/PA) (PA Media)

The gunman who fatally shot a 26-year-old beautician outside a pub on Christmas Eve 2022 has lost a challenge against his 48-year minimum term life sentence at the Court of Appeal.

Connor Chapman, 23, was convicted of the murder of Elle Edwards, who was hit twice in the back of the head when he fired 12 shots from a Skorpion submachine gun outside the Lighthouse pub in Wallasey Village, Wirral, Merseyside.

A trial at Liverpool Crown Court last year was told five other people were injured in the shooting, with Chapman intending to murder two men ā€“ Jake Duffy and Kieran Salkeld.

The incident was said to be the culmination of a gang feud in Wirral, where there had been nine shootings in 2022.

At a hearing in London on Thursday, senior judges rejected Chapmanā€™s appeal against the length of his prison sentence.

The Lady Chief Justice Baroness Carr, who considered the case alongside Mrs Justice May and Mr Justice Foxton, said they concluded the sentence was ā€œsevere, but not manifestly excessiveā€.

Baroness Carr said that in a bid for revenge, Chapman was ā€œutterly indifferent to who else might be or would be killed or injured in the processā€, adding it was clear on the night ā€œmany bystanders were present celebrating the holiday seasonā€ in the pub.

The judge said Chapman ā€œkilled a person with murderous intentā€ amid ā€œintending to kill two moreā€, adding: ā€œThis was a case in which in his obsessive determination to take those two lives, (he) was willing to kill more and could so easily have done so.ā€

Mark Rhind KC, representing Chapman, told the court his sentence was ā€œmanifestly excessiveā€.

The barrister said the challenge was not seeking to ā€œminimise the culpability of Mr Chapman or the seriousness of what heā€™s doneā€.

He said it was conceded it was an ā€œextremely serious caseā€ with ā€œnumerous aggravating featuresā€, adding that, whatever the outcome of the appeal bid, Chapman would spend ā€œdecades in prison, perhaps his entire life in prisonā€.

Mr Rhind said: ā€œAs bad as this offending is, the court will in the future have to deal with more serious cases and a minimum term in this case of 48 years leaves no room those even more serious cases that do not require a whole life term.ā€

He also argued Chapmanā€™s young age at the time of the offences provided a ā€œsmall degree of mitigationā€ and said his was ā€œnot a case which involved a substantial degree of premeditation or planningā€.

But Nigel Power KC, representing the Crown Prosecution Service, said the Court of Appeal ā€œshould be slow to interfere with the assessment of the trial judge who heard all of the evidence in this caseā€.

Rejecting Mr Rhindā€™s arguments, he said: ā€œWhat we have is a man living a criminal lifestyle involved or associated with revenge attacks who immediately upon hearing of the location of people he was determinedā€¦ to take out of the game, was able to act.ā€

The court heard that since Chapmanā€™s arrest, there had been no firearm discharges in the Wirral, while discharges in Merseyside generally had fallen from 49 in 2022 to 23 in 2023 ā€“ the lowest figure for 20 years.

ā€œMerseyside Police identify the circumstances and the sentencing in this case as having had a significant deterrent effect,ā€ Mr Power said.

At his sentencing last summer, Mr Justice Goose said what Chapman did ā€œwas as wicked as it was shockingā€, adding the offender was a ā€œhighly dangerous manā€.

Prosecutors told Liverpool Crown Court that Chapman had recorded a rap video while in custody in 2022 after an aggravated burglary at his motherā€™s home.

In the video, he made comments including: ā€œIf I make it out of here Iā€™m due to become famous because if you touch one of mine, Iā€™ll leave your soul on the pavement.ā€

He also said: ā€œI know Iā€™ve been a scumbag but Iā€™m proud of that.ā€

Chapmanā€™s brother Lewis had been shot with a Skorpion, although a different weapon to the one which killed Ms Edwards, in August 2022 but refused to co-operate with the police investigation.

Ms Edwardsā€™s mother Gaynor previously said in a court statement she had ā€œnever been the sameā€ since her daughterā€™s murder, adding: ā€œI canā€™t accept that she has gone. I still think sheā€™ll come home.ā€

Her grandmother Susan said: ā€œIf I were to die tomorrow, the coroner would write on my death certificate ā€™cause of death: she died of a broken heartā€™.ā€

Chapman was handed two concurrent life sentences, with a minimum term of 22 years, for the attempted murder of his intended targets Duffy and Salkeld.

He was also sentenced for two counts of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, one count of assault occasioning actual bodily harm, possession of a Skorpion submachine gun with intent to endanger life and ammunition with intent to endanger life as well as handling stolen goods.

His co-defendant Thomas Waring was sentenced to nine years for possession of a prohibited weapon, assisting an offender and failing to comply with a disclosure notice.

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