A couple were today jailed over the death of their baby who died from a mystery brain injury after being found soaking wet in their flat.
Ah’Kiell Walker was discovered naked and freezing cold at the family home and died the following day.
A CT scan showed bleeding within his eyes ‘consistent with shaking a baby’, fractured ribs and a broken shoulder.
Last month his father Alistair Walker, 27, was convicted of manslaughter and mother Hannah Henry, 22, convicted of causing or allowing the death of their four-month-old.

A CT scan taken after baby Ah’Kiell was rushed to hospital showed bleeding within his eyes ‘consistent with shaking a baby’
Henry was cleared of manslaughter after a five-week trial at Bristol Crown Court but both were convicted of cruelty to a child under 16.
The court heard the baby had not ‘pooed for a month’ and that Walker was ‘obsessed’ with Ah’Kiell’s constipation but neither parent sought medical advice.
Alistair Walker was today jailed for 10 years for manslaughter and concurrent three years for child cruelty.
Hannah Henry was jailed for four years for causing or allowing death of child under 16 and concurrent two years for child cruelty.

A wet carpet could be seen where paramedics desperately tried to save the Ah’Kiell Walker’s life after finding him ‘soaking wet and freezing’


Alistair Walker (left) and Hannah Henry (right) are pictured arriving at Bristol Crown Court
Weeks before Ah’Kiell’s death Walker had Googled a number of search terms about baby constipation and how to deal with it.
He had also searched ‘baby broken ribs’ and ‘jailed father locked up as baby’s ribs broken’.
Walker tried to place the blame on paramedics who attended, and told the court: ‘He was made worse by the critical care.’
‘They put him into cardiac arrest. That’s not an attack that’s a fact.’
Henry denied knowing her son was injured and said: ‘I never noticed him in pain. If I knew he was in pain or hurt, then I would have taken him to the doctor.’
The infant died in the Intensive Care Unit at Bristol Children’s Hospital from an unsurvivable brain injury.
Doctors discovered scratches on his bottom and Walker was quizzed about whether he had sexually abused the baby.

Dumbbells and exercise equipment was scattered around the room where the couple slept, beneath a wall plaque reading ‘Family’


Footage from a police interview shows Walker (left) feigning confusion when discussing how the baby (right) fell unconscious
He denied it, claiming he used cotton buds to ‘squeeze’ faeces out of Ah’Kiell.
Henry insisted she knew nothing about this.
Both defendants denied the charges against them and claimed they were unaware of the other harming the child, who was described as a ‘happy’ baby.
The couple had money problems and Walker lost money at a betting shop the day before Ah’Kiell’s death.
Henry had sent WhatsApp messages to her mother, including one which said: ‘He’s so horrible to Ah’Kiell.

Shocking images show the inside of the flat where Ah’Kiell Walker died – surrounded by his father’s flashy trainers, coats and exercise equipment
‘Don’t know how he does it.’
Judge Sir John Royce called Walker a ‘controlling and manipulative bully’.
Sentencing the pair, Judge Royce referred to an incident in which Walker had broken some of his four-month-old son’s ribs around four-eight weeks before Ah’Kiell’s death.
The judge said: ‘It is clear to me that it was you, Alistair Walker who broke Ah’Kiell’s ribs with considerable force.

Henry was also questioned by police on the death of her son, during which she can be heard sobbing


Alistair Walker, 27, and Hannah Henry, 22, were jointly accused of causing or allowing the death of their three-month-old son Ah’Kiell
‘I am satisfied that you knew you would have broken those ribs.
‘A series of revealing images and links recovered from your phone included “shaken baby’, “rib fracture and children: what you need to know”, and ‘baby broken ribs”.’
The judge added: ‘Ah’Kiell would have screamed in pain for some minutes.’
He also referenced Walker and Henry’s ‘strange and strained’ relationship, saying that Henry continues to show an ‘obsession’ with Walker.
The judge said: ‘You, Mr Walker, were a controlling and manipulative bully, who wanted to control who Miss Henry saw and what she did.
‘You used to regard it as your right to go off with other girls as and when you wished, but you would become angry with Hannah when she dared to check up on you.
‘I am also satisfied that you, Hannah Henry, know much more about this than you are willing to let on.


Walker and Henry, who remained emotionless as the unanimous verdicts were returned and were today jailed for a total of 14 years
‘On June 26 you had a text exchange with your mother in which you said you told Alistair Walker to go, but you were worried he would take Ah’Kiell.
‘You said he was horrible to Ah’Kiell and couldn’t handle him for more than two seconds without getting mad.
‘But you decided to stay and ignore your mother’s pleas to move back to Essex. You still show an obsession with Alistair Walker.’
Sentencing Walker, the judge added: ‘You know what it was that you did, but you have decided you will not reveal what you did.
‘You know why he was freezing cold and soaking wet, with catastrophic injuries.
‘You no doubt thought you would get away with it. But the jury were not to be fooled by you.’
And addressing Henry, he said: ‘I accept that you were manipulated and controlled by him, that you had been on the receiving end of his violence.
‘But you ignored your mother’s pleas to leave him, and you put your obsession with him ahead of your duty to protect your son.’
Commenting on the sentencing, an NSPCC South West spokesman said: ‘Ah’Kiell Walker suffered a catalogue of abuse and appalling injuries which tragically led to his death at just three months old.
‘Babies are completely reliant on their parents, but instead of loving and protecting him Ah’Kiell’s parents contributed to his death and have now faced the consequences of their heartless crimes.
‘It is a sad reality that cases of abuse and neglect take place every day in homes across the country. It is all of our responsibility to be alert to the signs that a child may need help and be ready to take action to protect them.”
If an adult is worried about a child they can call the NSPCC 24/7 on 0808 800 5000 in confidence. Children and young people can contact Childline anytime on 0800 1111 or access help online at www.childline.org.uk.