Footage shows three prisoners plotting with each other before slaughtering a notorious child killer in his cell.Lee Newell, 57, Mark Fellows, 45, and David Taylor, 63, were captured at UK prison HMP Wakefield plotting with each other before the horror, reported The Sun. The killers then followed Kyle Bevan, 33, into his cell and stabbed him 25 times before tucking him up in bed where he bled to death.At the time, Bevan was serving a life sentence for murdering his partner’s two-year-old stepdaughter Lola James in a brutal attack that left her with 101 injuries.Footage then showed the trio emerge four minutes and 39 seconds later displaying “something of a satisfied, job-done mood”.None of the killers will ever be released from jail after they were sentenced for murder this week.Fellows and Newell, who were already serving whole life orders when they killed Bevan, were handed “new and separate” tariffs.Taylor was given a whole life order for Bevan’s death, on top of the offences he was on remand for at the time.Leeds Crown Court heard there was “a lot of tension in the prison at the time” and there had been two other serious attacks in the weeks leading up to Bevan’s death – including Ian Watkins’ killing.Jurors were told that unlike other jails, vulnerable prisoners were not separated from other inmates at Wakefield.This meant “main prisoners” such as Fellows, Newell and Taylor “had to mix with, in a distorted moral hierarchy, other criminals that were beneath them” – such as child killers.Contract killer Fellows, known as “The Iceman”, had been locked up for murdering gangland kingpins Paul Massey and John Kinsella.Taylor had been transferred to Wakefield in relation to the murder of an associate and the attempted murder of a police officer while he was in custody.During the brutal attack last November, Bevan’s heart and major blood vessels were slashed, with one wound cutting through bone.Jurors were told a folded piece of metal was later found with Bevan’s blood on it, which had been made from a piece of a television.Opening the case previously, prosecutor Jason Pitter KC, said: “Four minutes and 39 seconds – that is how long it took.“That is the length of time between Kyle Bevan entering his cell at Wakefield prison, immediately followed by the defendants, his fellow prisoners, one after the other: Lee Newell, Mark Fellows and David Taylor.“The prosecution say they followed him in there with real purpose.“This case is about what that purpose was.”The court heard Bevan was stabbed “25 times” with a “sharp weapon” in his fourth-floor cell on the prison’s A Wing.Mr Pitter said: “Then they left him for dead, one after the other.“Not before, though, putting him to bed – not our phrase, but a phrase we anticipate you will hear later in the evidence.“Leaving him as if asleep. And there it was that he, on his bed, bled out. Bled to death, and his body then not discovered until the roll call in the prison the following morning.“The purpose was clear – to carry out a joint attack on Kyle Bevan to kill him.”Bevan was locked up for at least 28 years in 2023 for Lola’s sadistic murder in Pembrokeshire, Wales.The stepdad failed to call an ambulance after attacking the toddler and instead recorded a “disturbing” 22 second film of stricken Lola as he attempted to prop her up.Doctors later compared her injuries to those suffered in a high-speed car crash.Tragically, there was not one part of the youngster’s body that wasn’t bruised following a campaign of torture.Senior investigating officer, Chief Inspector James Entwistle said: “This was a premeditated brutal attack carried out inside a prison by three long-term inmates.“Fellows, Taylor and Newell’s actions showed a complete disregard for life and for the rules designed to keep people safe in custody.“By their very nature, prisons are designed to deny offenders of their liberty, but they also need to be environments that are kept safe from unlawful violence.“Today’s verdicts ensure the continued safety of others by holding these dangerous individuals to account and ensuring they face the full weight of the law.“It also underlines that serious offences committed in West Yorkshire’s prisons will be thoroughly investigated and robustly prosecuted.”This article originally appeared on The Sun and was reproduced with permission.
Clip shows prisoners plotting before gruesome murder in British jail
Footage shows three prisoners plotting with each other before slaughtering a notorious child killer in his cell.










