Wed. Mar 12th, 2025
alert-–-bbc-star-john-hunt-gives-emotional-statement-after-killer-kyle-clifford-refused-to-leave-cellAlert – BBC star John Hunt gives emotional statement after killer Kyle Clifford REFUSED to leave cell

Brave BBC star John Hunt moved a court to tears as he revealed how ‘proud’ he was of ‘all my girls’ in the wake of their brutal murders – as cowardly Kyle Clifford refused to leave his cell. 

The racing commentator described how he could hear the ‘screams of hell’ waiting for Clifford after losing his wife and two of three daughters to the killer in July. 

Ex-soldier Clifford, 26, subjected the family to a terrifying five-hour ordeal in which he raped and murdered his ex-girlfriend Louise Hunt, 25, with a crossbow at her family home. 

On the same day, he fatally stabbed her mother Carol, 61, eight times and shot dead her 28-year-old sister Hannah. 

At Clifford’s sentencing today, relatives wept as Mr Hunt paid tribute to each member of his slaughtered family in an emotional victim impact statement. 

‘I so wished to deliver these words eye to eye Kyle and I’ll continue to do so as if I was doing that,’ he said. 

‘The screams of hell, Kyle. I can hear them faintly now.

‘They’re going to roll the red carpet out for you.’

Mr Hunt’s eldest and surviving daughter Amy Hunt broke down in tears part way through her own victim impact statement, condemning Clifford for his ‘monstrous, selfish actions’. 

‘It’s clear that you hate women Kyle and can’t handle being confronted by a strong woman like my sister Louise,’ Amy said. 

Turning to each family member, Mr Hunt commended daughter Louise’s ‘bravery’, Hannah’s ‘amazing physical and mental strength’ and wife Carol’s ‘compassion’.

First, of Louise, he said: ‘I hope women round the world will take Louise’s bravery as a shining beacon for their lives. If you feel enough is enough, then it is.’

Louise had courageously ended her relationship with Kyle after becoming alarmed by his controlling behaviour. 

Addressing the murder of his wife Carol, Mr Hunt said: ‘Carol still displayed compassion right up until the moment she answered the door to you.

‘Do you remember her kindness, Kyle? How she urged you to get some relationship help and guidance for fear that you would never be able to sustain a lasting relationship?

‘You calmly accepted that advice on the doorstep and then literally seconds later, savagely stabbed her eight times and ended her life.’

Then honouring his ‘incredible’ daughter Hannah, Mr Hunt added: ‘I really believe that had she not managed to show such amazing physical and mental strength in raising the alarm after you, Kyle, fatally injured her, that I would have been your fourth victim that day.

‘Hannah handed me a second chance, one that she worked so hard to achieve for me.’

At the start of today’s hearing, Mr Justice Joel Bennathan said: ‘The defendant was asked to attend but refused.’

He said HMP Belmarsh had discussed using ‘restraints’ but the judge added: ‘I’ve declined on the grounds of a man in a wheelchair being put in restraints is simply not appropriate.

‘If the defendant simply lacks the courage to face today, so be it.’  

It means the family – including Louise’s father, BBC horse racing commentator John Hunt – who acted impeccably throughout the process – never got the chance to look the killer in the eye.

In her own victim impact statement, the family’s eldest daughter Amy broken down in tears at Clifford’s ‘selfish and sadistic aims’.

‘You planned to take the lives of three women who have never done anything to hurt you and for what – you got dumped,’ she said. 

‘That day, my mum, Hannah and Louise were all simply living their lives, getting on with their day in the home working or returning to their home after work. 

‘Their home is a place that was and should have continued to be safe for them and you made it the most unsafe place in the world for those few hours – you are a monster.’ 

Mr Hunt bravely told the court he wanted to deliver his victim impact statement ‘eye to eye with Kyle’ – but was denied the chance by the cowardly killer.

He said: ‘When I was first invited to provide a victim impact statement, I initially misunderstood its purpose, do I really need to detail the impact of having three quarters of my family murdered?

‘But then I realised that his was my final opportunity to say what I wanted to say, specifically to you, Kyle, words that will also be directed to your family, who will carry guilt forwards with them for the rest of their lives.

‘They knew about the weapons, they knew.’

Mr Hunt said Kyle had been ‘always welcome’ in the family home, adding: ‘The only Christmas you spent together was at our house. Was it four or five days? The laughter… the films… the normality.

‘What was it about that blissful existence you couldn’t handle?’

Carol had spotted Clifford’s ‘personal inadequacies at the start’ but allowed Louise to find out in her own time.

Mr Hunt, who attended with his surviving daughter Amy, described her killer as ‘callous, cowardly and vindictive’ during sentencing at Cambridge Crown Court.

The BBC racing commentator told the court how Louise’s favourite book was To Kill a Mockingbird and mentioned a scene where one of the characters says how it’s wrong to kill them because all they do is ‘make music’.

‘All their lives, Hannah, Louise and Carol simply brought joy and happiness to other people’s lives. You killed three beautiful mockingbirds Kyle,’ Mr Hunt said.

Mr Hunt described himself as ‘badly damaged’ but said he has received strength from his ‘incredible Hansie’ Hannah, who courageously raised the alarm after being struck by Clifford. 

Phil Bradley KC, mitigating for Clifford, said that the defendant’s offending was ‘quite simply appalling’.

But he invited the judge at Cambridge Crown Court to ‘step back from imposing a sentence of last resort, a whole-life term’.

The judge, Mr Justice Joel Bennathan, said he needed time to consider the sentence he will pass and that he would return to do so at 2pm.

As Clifford’s sentencing got underway, a court source told the Mail: ‘He won’t be appearing in court or on CVP.

‘Everything has been done to try and convince him but it’s not going to happen.’

The non-attendance will renew pressure for new rules forcing criminals to face the music in person. Those who have refused to appear in court include Lucy Letby, who didn’t attend her sentencing.

Hate-filled misogynist Clifford fuelled his fury by watching obnoxious Andrew Tate videos the day before he murdered ex the three women.

Carol was butchered with a ten-inch knife at the family home in Bushey, Hertfordshire, before evil Clifford waited for Louise to come in and subjected her to a two-and-a-half-hour rape ordeal, during which she was bound and gagged with duct tape.

He then shot her through the heart with a crossbow and did the same to her sister when she got home moments later.

Clifford admitted the three murders, false imprisonment and possession of weapons but forced Louise’s family and friends to hear harrowing evidence at the trial after denying the rape. He was convicted last week.

The killer’s brother Bradley is serving life with a minimum 23 years for murder after ramming a moped driver with his car following a dispute over a women.

Traumatised Mr Hunt and his eldest daughter, Amy – who were not at home during Clifford’s rampage – will not be commenting after sentencing, police said.

Friends had noticed how Louise started wearing less makeup and wasn’t allowed to see male friends on her own during the 18=-month relationship with Clifford.

Her growing doubts came to a head on June 22 last year when they went to a friend’s wedding in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, and he ‘belittled’ her by boasting about sleeping with other women and mocking her cooking.

She dumped him shortly afterwards, unaware he had had at least two affairs while they were together.

On July 9 – having bought a murder kit including the crossbow, knife, duct tape, rope and other paraphernalia – Clifford turned up at the £800,000 detached family home to enact what the prosecution called his ‘violent, sexual act of spite’.

He talked his way in, telling kindly Carol he had a farewell card for the family and was also dropping off some of Louise’s belongings.

Her obvious fear at his appearance was caught on audio from two security cameras at the house as she admitted she felt like she’d seen a ‘ghost’.

It would also record screams from the women as they were murdered, one by one, and the ‘whooshing’ sound of the crossbow as bolts were unleashed.

After a jury took just 45 minutes to convict Clifford unanimously of rape last Thursday, Mr Justice Bennathan said: ‘It’s unspeakable what friends and family have witnessed in this court.’

Brave Hannah managed to call 999 as she lay dying. All three women were declared dead at the scene.

Clifford was found hiding in Lavender Hill Cemetery, near his home in Enfield, north London, the following day.

He shot himself with the crossbow as officers approached and was left paralysed from the chest down.

The only time he showed emotion during a police interview was when crocodile tears appeared as officers mentioned a suicide note in which he wrote: ‘I could be a better man. But I choose not to.’

The case has renewed concerns about the tidal wave of toxic masculinity spouted by online influencers such as Tate – who has been accused of rape by several women and was accused of sexual misconduct and human trafficking in Romania, allegations he denies – brainwashing impressionable young boys and men.

The government has also said it will look at laws governing the sale of crossbows.

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