Mick Philpott, accused of killing his six children in a house fire, started the blaze as part of a “plan” to frame his ex-girlfriend after becoming locked in a custody battle, a court hears.
Mick Philpott, along with his wife Mairead, allegedly started the fire at their semi-detached home after making reports to the police that his former partner, Lisa Willis, had been threatening him and his family.
The court was told the family shared an unconventional lifestyle – Philpott, 56, his 31-year-old wife and Ms Willis, 28, all lived in the same house.
A total of 11 children also lived there – six were those of Mick and Mairead Philpott, while four were his children with Ms Willis. Another child was Ms Willis’s with another man.
Mick and Mairead Philpott’s children – Jade, 10, and her brothers John, nine, Jack, eight, Jesse, six, Jayden, five, and Duwayne, 13 – all perished after the fire at their home in Victory Road, Allenton, Derby, in the early hours of 11 May last year.
The couple, along with a third defendant, 46-year-old Paul Mosley, have all denied six separate counts of manslaughter in relation to the deaths.
A harrowing 999 call made on the night of the fire was played in court, as Midlands Correspondent Darshna Soni reports:
The 999 call lasted eight minutes and was distressing to hear. As the tape was played to the jury, Mr Philpott stood up in the dock, crying "I don't want to listen to it."
Screaming could be heard in the background of the recording, as Mr Philpott screamed to the operator: "My kids are trapped inside."
As she listened in court, Mrs Philpott put her hands to her face and wept.
At the start of their trial at Nottingham crown court today, prosecutor Richard Latham QC told the jury the fire was started in the early hours of the morning on the day Ms Willis and Philpott were due in court to discuss the residency of the children.
She had left Philpott and the Victory Road property in February last year, taking her children with her, and had become embroiled in a bitter battle with Philpott.
He planned to frame her and eventually win his children back, and had made numerous reports to the police that she had threatened him, his wife and the children, the jury heard.
Mr Latham told the jury of six men and six women: “By May 1st Mick Philpott was reporting to the police that Lisa Willis had made telephone threats to kill him.
“The police visited him, he was at times highly emotional and made it clear that he wanted Lisa arrested.
“If she had been this would have assisted him in the court proceedings, wouldn’t it?”
About a fortnight before the fire Philpott told friends he had an idea for a way of getting Lisa and the children back, Mr Latham said.
“He told people he had a plan up his sleeve and that she wasn’t going to get away with it – watch this space.”