A MONSTER dad and stepmum have today been convicted of killing a six-year-old boy in a horrifying case that shocked the nation.
Jurors heard how Arthur Labinjo-Hughes was isolated, poisoned with salt and starved in his final months.
7
Jurors heard tragic evidence in Arthur's murder trial Credit: PA
The tragic youngster's short life came to an end when he was beaten to death by wicked Emma Tustin at her home in Shirley, West Mids.
She was today found guilty of murder while Arthur's dad Thomas Hughes was convicted of manslaughter after a grisly seven-week trial.
Here are the five most harrowing pieces of evidence to come out at trial.
Chilling recordings
Tustin recorded more than 22 pictures and videos of Arthur in distress highlighting the horrific abuse he was suffering.
Jurors were forced to watch clips of the mum cruelly tucking into a McDonald's while Arthur was left in a hallway for 14 hours without food.
Most read in The Sun
Exclusive
JESY'S BUST-UP Jesy Nelson branded a 'f***ing ho' in furious clash over scarf on night out
GET ME OUT OF HERE! I'm A Celeb star 'tried to escape FIVE times and was held back by crew'
two peas in a pod Chloe Sims twins with rarely seen daughter Maddie, 16, at Towie filming
'WHAT A WASTE' I’m A Celeb in 'fix' row as some campers are being ‘completely ignored’
ALWAYS HERE EastEnders' Max Bowden supported as he 'isn't doing great' after 3 friends died
ALL GROWN UP EastEnders' little Ben Mitchell actor Charlie Jones looks unrecognisable now
They also had to sit through shocking audio of the youngster sobbing: "Daddy's going to throw me out the window, daddy's going to throw me out the window, daddy's going to throw me out of the window."
In haunting video released by police, Arthur could be seen the morning of his death waking up on the living room floor after being denied a bed.
He appeared to be so frail he could barely pick up his bedding and staggered as he attempted to walk.
His pyjamas - the same onesie he had been in for the fifth day in a row - appear to be hanging off him.
Towards the end of the distressing clip, little Arthur edges out of the room while limping on his bruised legs.
7
Just some of the chilling evidence shown to jurors Credit: SWNS 7
The youngster could be seen struggling to stand Credit: SWNS
Arthur could also be heard wailing in one 23-second recording "no one loves me" and "no one is going to feed me" repeatedly.
The haunting clips were punctuated in evidence by vile text exchanges between Tustin and Hughes.
Hughes told Tustin to dig his son’s grave and “gag him with rope and a sock” when he was apparently misbehaving.
He also threatened to “take his c*****g jaw off his shoulders”.
Meanwhile, Tustin called her stepson vile names - including “Satan” and “Hitler” - over hundreds of disgusting messages.
On the day Arthur collapsed, his dad had messaged: “Put him outside, put him out with the rubbish.”
The youngster's tragic final moments were even captured on camera as Tustin was seen carrying his "limp" body into the living room.
She had already taken a picture of stricken Arthur lying in a hallway after inflicting the fatal blow.
Horrific injuries
After his death, doctors found 130 bruises on his skeletal body where he had suffered 93 different areas of injury.
The youngster was found to have been battered from head to toe and his cause of death was given as a "head trauma inflicted on him by an adult".
Medics said this was consistent with being "vigorously shaken and his head banged repeatedly against a hard surface".
Arthur also had 25 sites of bruising on his scalp, face, and neck that raised “serious concerns about non-accidental injury”.
7
Pictures showed bruising on Arthur's frail body Credit: PA
There were also 20 areas of bruising on his arms and eight on his chest and stomach.
Even if just half of the 130 bruises on Arthur's body were the result of abuse, it would still be a mark for every day he spent being terrorised by Tustin and Hughes during lockdown.
Giving evidence, one doctor told jurors: “I’m not sure that outside of obvious traumatic situations I’ve ever seen a child found dead at home with this number of injuries to the head and face.”
Torture
Little Arthur was subjected to a "campaign of cruelty" that matched the “medical definition of child torture”.
In his closing speech, prosecutor Jonas Hankin QC said Tustin and Hughes carried out a "systematic course of conduct designed to terrorise, degrade, neglect and harm Arthur physically and psychologically".
He added: "Together they denigrated and debased him, they dehumanised him."
Arthur was forced to stand alone in a hallway for up to 14 hours a day and deprived of food and water.
Instead, his evil killers "prioritised their own desires" over Arthur's basic needs.
In the height of a heatwave, Arthur wore sweltering onesie for two days while being confined to the hallway for 26 hours in total.
7
Hughes tortured his son and denied him food and water Credit: BPM 7
Tustin inflicted the fatal blow
Meanwhile, his dad and stepmum cooled down with ice cream in a hot tub outside.
He was made to stand for long periods of time and wasn't allowed to eat meals with the rest of the family.
Tustin and Hughes also dished out unusual punishments as the sickening abuse ramped up - cutting up his football shirts and taking his teddy away.
The vile couple also compiled a list of "time penalties" for how long Arthur had to sit on a pink naughty chair.
The piece of paper - titled "Chair list" - included a one hour stint on a pink naughty chair if Arthur was "rude to mummy bear" [Tustin].
Other penalties included 20 minutes for a "poor attitude", 40 minutes for being "naughty", ten minutes for "weeing on toilet seat" and ten minutes for "talking like a baby".
A note at the bottom of the list read: "Any additional time accrued on chair such as crying, telling more than once, is extra 10 minutes on top of already set time."
Poison
One of the more harrowing parts of evidence in the trial was when it was revealed Arthur had been poisoned with salt.
The "off the charts" levels of salt in his body were so high that medics believed their equipment was broken.
Analysis revealed he had sodium levels between 180 and 187.2 millimoles per litre (mmol/L).
A normal range of sodium is around 140 mmol/L, jurors were told.
The levels were still the same seven hours after he was taken to hospital - suggesting he had consumed so much salt his stomach couldn't absorb it all at once.
In the hours before he was fatally attacked, Arthur was had eaten at least 34g of salt - the equivalent of six spoons worth.
Hughes had force-fed Arthur the massive dose with water before popping to Iceland and a toy store.
In the hours that followed, the youngster was murdered by Tustin.
Chillingly, he was so weak from the poisoning that he couldn't even put up a fight against her when she battered him.
Missed opportunities
Police, social workers and teachers missed a series of chances to save Arthur before his death in June last year.
Hughes and Tustin were able to shield behind Covid restrictions to hide their abuse from the authorities.
In April, concerned gran Joanne Hughes took pictures of bruises she noticed on Arthur's emaciated body.
She called social services and offered to send them the photos but told the court they “didn’t want to see them”.
Solihull Council’s children’s services team went round to the house the following day.
But social workers failed to spot the bruises - despite the images being taken just 25 hours earlier.
No further action was taken and the injury was put down to "boisterous play" with his step-siblings.
In another failing, it was revealed Arthur had made alarming remarks to his teachers at Dickens Heath Primary School that were not properly followed up.
The youngster expressed fears over his dad, telling staff: "Dad is going to kill me.
"Dad is going to throw me out the window...dad is a c***".
7
Arthur was failed by his teachers, social services and the police
Despite his comments, no action was taken and Hughes was believed by staff when he told them the youngster was "doing grand" during a call in lockdown.
Calls then went unanswered to the home in May and Arthur failed to return when schools re-opened on June 8.
Hughes claimed to teachers he wasn't eating and there was a risk he would faint if he came back so he was keeping him home.
Arthur never returned and died eight days later.
The boy's uncle had also sent over photos of bruising to police - but officers threatened him with arrest if he broke Covid rules by going to Tustin’s house.
A serious case review has now been launched into the shortcomings - including that Tustin was already known to children’s services over previous concerns of domestic violence.
West Midlands Police, too, has been probed by the police watchdog over its actions after worried family members raised concerns over Arthur’s safety.
Moment boy, 6, cries 'no one loves me, no one is going to feed me' before he was 'tortured to death by dad and stepmum'