‘Pure evil’ McKenzie has been jailed for life at the Old Bailey for killing his heavily pregnant ex-girlfriend Kelly Fauvrelle and their baby
A jilted boyfriend who was branded a ‘baby killer’ today at the Old Bailey has been jailed for life for stabbing his heavily pregnant ex-girlfriend and their unborn baby to death.
‘Pure evil’ Aaron McKenzie, 26, crept into Kelly Fauvrelle’s bedroom in south London in the early hours of June 29 last year and stabbed her 21 times after he had found an online receipt for a gift she had bought her new partner.
Their son Riley was delivered via emergency C-section at the scene – seven weeks before the due date – but died four days later in hospital.
McKenzie had denied killing the 26-year-old Royal Mail worker, claiming a man named Mike was responsible.
Ms Fauvrelle’s family wept in court as the jury foreman returned guilty verdicts following just two hours of deliberation.
Judge Mark Lucraft gave him a life sentence with a minimum term of 35 years, calling the late-night attack ‘the most vicious and deliberate killing’.
It was the ‘cowardly’ response to learning Ms Fauvrelle wanted nothing to do with him, and his actions afterwards demonstrated no ‘sorrow or remorse’, he said.
The judge added: As is clear from the course if the trial you made no genuine expression or statement of remorse.
‘The killing of Kelly was particularly violent and extreme. In the aftermath you destroyed evidence and concealed evidence from police which may implicate you. Your post death conduct involved you masquerading as an innocent person.’
Crane operator McKenzie, from Peckham, south London, gave the judge a thumbs up as he was sent down while Ms Fauvrelle’s family wept in court.
One of them, thought to be Ms Fauvrelle’s cousin, shouted out at him: ‘Yes. I hope you have a good time in jail. Baby killer.’
Aaron McKenzie crept into Kelly Fauvrelle’s bedroom in south London on June 29 last year and stabbed her 21 times after he had found an online receipt for a gift she had bought her new partner. McKenzie’s son baby Riley was delivered via emergency C-section at the scene – seven weeks before the due date – but died after four days on a ventilator in hospital
The trial had heard Ms Fauvrelle’s relationship with McKenzie, with whom she shared an interest in motorbikes, had ended early last year.
In February McKenzie messaged that he was feeling ‘not needed, not wanted, unimportant and lost’ as he appealed to her.
Ms Fauvrelle told him he needed professional help, saying: ‘Until u get the fact I don’t want to be with you anymore… I will no longer speak or see you unless is about the baby.’
Last March, she told his mother that the relationship was ‘toxic’ but she would not deny him access to their child.
Her mother, sister, and brothers endured hearing details of her terrible final moments and told the court how they tried everything to save her.
After the attack McKenzie took a driving lesson and pretended to the family he was devastated by Ms Fauvrelle’s death.
But jurors were told he used his intimate knowledge of the house to sneak in through her patio door which she kept open in the evening.
CCTV played in court captured him stalking through the darkened streets before he vanished inside the house.
McKenzie left 11 minutes and 20 seconds later and dashed off along the same street in Thornton Heath in south London and off into the distance.
Afterwards, McKenzie pretended to have nothing to do with it, the court heard.
He went to the hospital where medical staff were trying to save the life of his child, ‘posing as a victim’, prosecutor Duncan Penny QC said.
The defendant lied to police and did not tell them that he had spent more than an hour before the killing accessing and reading his ex-partner’s emails.
McKenzie continued to deceive police, hospital staff and Ms Fauvrelle’s family until he was arrested and ‘confessed’.
In the written confession, which he later claimed was false, McKenzie said: ‘I don’t know what came over me. It was definitely not planned. I had been feeling anxious and depressed.’
He added that he had ‘evil thoughts and anger’.
At trial McKenzie invented a killer called ‘Mike’ in an effort to beat the charge after initially confessing to police, even telling the court that he had extracted a confession out of the fictional killer.
A statement by Ms Fauvrelle’s father said: ‘She was robbed of the chance to be a mother to her son Riley.
Ms Fauvrelle’s family wept at the Old Bailey today as the jury foreman returned guilty verdicts following just two hours of deliberation. Her relatives cheered as McKenzie was led away and one family member, believed to be a cousin of the victim shouted: ‘Baby killer’
At trial McKenzie (depicted in a sketch) invented a killer in an effort to beat the charge after initially confessing to police. McKenzie said he had even extracted a confession out of him
‘Visions of what he did to my beautiful daughter haunt my dreams.’
Tearfully the cousin added: ‘She was very small in size but had a big heart.
‘The bond between her and her dad was so special. Kelly especially loved children and the whole family was looking forward to watching her becoming a mother.’
Her sister added: ‘I miss her every day. I tried to save her but I couldn’t.
‘I hear her screams most nights. Our sons were going to grow up together, blood brothers we said.
‘It was a horror scene, unimaginable, evil merciless. It was an act of pure evil.’
Mr Penny told the court: ‘In the early hours of the morning of Saturday 29 June 2019 within a family home in Thornton Heath in South London, Kelly Fauvrelle, a heavily pregnant young woman lay in her bed in the middle of the night.
‘In her womb, she was carrying a little boy, who was later to be named Riley during his very short life. She was 33 weeks pregnant.
‘But when she had gone to bed on the night of Friday 28 June 2019, she had retired to her bedroom whilst all around her, under the same roof, other members of her family slept in the various other bedrooms of the house.
‘Kelly’s bedroom was on the ground floor at the rear of the family house at Raymead Avenue, Thornton Heath.
‘At around 3.15 am that morning, however, an intruder broke into her bedroom through the rear patio doors which formed part of the back wall of her room onto the back garden.
‘That intruder proceeded to launch a vicious and a cowardly attack upon her, inflicting a total of 21 stab wounds with a knife.
‘In the process the intruder murdered not only Kelly Fauvrelle, but through his attack upon Kelly he killed Riley, the unborn child she was carrying. That intruder was this defendant, Aaron McKenzie.
‘As well as being their killer, the intruder was, in fact, both the former partner of Ms Fauvrelle and the father of Riley, the unborn child.
‘The Crown’s case is that this was a vicious and a deliberate killing – perhaps you will conclude in due course the cowardly response of a man desperately jealous about the fact that the mother of his child yet to be born had moved on and now wanted very little to do with him.
‘Whilst the motivation of this defendant may remain unclear at the conclusion of this trial, what he did that night and what he intended in that attack most certainly does not.’
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