Oliva Pratt-Korbel's family arrive to see her killer's sentencing
Murdered Olivia Pratt-Korbel’s mother clutches special patchwork ‘memory’ teddy made from her daughter’s clothes as she arrives at court for the sentencing of her daughter’s killer
- Thomas Cashman, 34, was found guilty last week of murdering the nine-year-old
- Olivia’s mother Cheryl arrived at Manchester Crown Court surrounded by family
The mother of gunned-down schoolgirl Olivia Pratt-Korbel clutched a special patchwork ‘memory teddy’ made from the murdered nine-year-old’s clothes as she arrived at court to see her daughter’s killer be sentenced.
Grieving Cheryl Korbel was surrounded by family as she walked into Manchester Crown Court this afternoon to see Liverpool gangster Thomas Cashman being delivered to justice.
The 34-year-old thug was last week found guilty of murdering the schoolgirl and the wounding with intent of Mrs Korbel, 46, as he chased convicted drug dealer Joseph Nee into their home in Dovecot on August 22 last year.
The jury also found him guilty of the attempted murder of Nee, 36, and two counts of possession of a firearm with intent to endanger life.
Armed police have formed a ring of steel around the Manchester court house where Cashman will be sentenced today amid claims crime bosses had put a £250,000 bounty on his head over fears he will ‘grass’ fellow gang members to lighten his sentence, it was reported last night.
Olivia’s family arrive outside Manchester Crown Court ahead of the sentencing of the nine-year-old’s killer, Thomas Cashman, 34. Pictured is Olivia’s mother Cheryl Korbel clutching a toy (centre)
Olivia was killed at her home in Liverpool by Thomas Cashman, who had been trying to killer a drug dealer when he shot through Olivia’s front door
Cashman, 34, will be sentenced today at Manchester Crown Court
A gang insider told The Sun that a bounty to ‘silence him’ was issued and has already been circulating in the North and around jails.
The source added that there are several people ‘who will not think twice about carrying it out’.
Murderer demanded half his £100k hitman fee despite failing to kill target Joseph Nee
News of the bounty was publicised on encrypted messaging app Telegram, the source said.
Those who ordered the hit are understood to worry that Cashman will turn over information about gang executions and unsolved murders in an attempt to improve the terms of his imprisonment.
There is concern his testimony would cause a ‘world of pain’ for several big organised crime bosses who ‘do not want their activities being looked at’.
‘He has nothing to lose — he is cornered,’ the source said.
‘There’s lifers who will be mixing with him in months and years to come who will not think twice about carrying it out.’
The insider added that Cashman ‘knows everything there is to know about organised crime, drugs and violence’ in Merseyside.
The convicted killer claimed in court that he was only a cannabis dealer, but was allegedly known as a hitman who ‘thought nothing of putting a bullet in someone’.
Devastated: Olivia’s loved ones are pictured walking into Manchester Crown Court to watch the sentencing of Thomas Cashman
There was extremely tight security around Manchester Crown Court today prior to Thomas Cashman’s sentencing, with firearms officers forming a ring around the building
Olivia (pictured) was shot by Cashman as he aimed at drug dealer Joseph Nee, 36, who had run into her house moments earlier
A prison van arrives at the building prior to the murderer’s sentencing
A firearms officer wearing a mask over his face stands guard outside court
Cashman next to a waxwork of the late Queen with his fingers in a gun gesture pointing at the figure’s head
Gang bosses have reportedly issued a £250,000 bounty to ‘silence’ Cashman (pictured in a court sketch on Thursday after the verdicts were read out) amid fears he will ‘grass’ fellow criminals. News of the bounty has been circulating in the north and around jails
Cashman killed Olivia and injured her mother as he chased convicted drug dealer Nee into their home on August 22.
He had tried to carry out the hit on Nee while he was walking home from a friend’s house, but his gun jammed and the target fled, barging into Olivia’s home in a bid to save himself.
Was the decision of Cashman’s girlfriend Kayleeanne to wear pink the final insult?
Even though Cashman murdered nine-year-old Olivia and failed to kill Nee, he reportedly demanded half of his £100,000 hitman fee.
Cashman was given the order to kill Nee because he owed a crime family a drugs debt, a source previously told The Sun.
They said: ‘Cashman has no heart. Everyone knew that Olivia had been fatally wounded but he didn’t seem to care, despite being a dad himself.’
The youngster’s devastated family cried tears of relief on Thursday when the jury at Manchester Crown Court unanimously convicted him of Olivia’s murder.
The career criminal was also found guilty of the attempted murder of Nee, as well as wounding with intent to do grievous bodily harm to Olivia’s mother.
He was further convicted of two counts of possession of a firearm with intent to endanger life.
Cashman, a father-of-two, insisted that around the time of the shooting he had been at a friend’s house where he counted £10,000 in cash and smoked a spliff.
Terrifying CCTV footage showed a gun-wielding Cashman (in blue) hunting his intended target, Joseph Nee (in red)
Footage of Cashman hunting Nee was released by Merseyside Police following Thursday’s verdict. Thomas Cashman (referred to as TC) can be heard shooting at his intended target
A bullet hole in the front door of Olivia Pratt-Korbel’s family home, where the schoolgirl died
During his evidence, he told the court: ‘I’m not a killer, I’m a dad.’
But a woman who had a fling with Cashman told the jury he came to her house after the shooting, where he changed his clothes and she heard him say he had ‘done Joey’.
Giving evidence from behind a screen, Cashman’s former lover said she ‘ruined her life’ to help put the killer away.
She described how drug dealer Cashman had jumped over back gardens to seek refuge at her home on the night of August 22 last year.
After realising he had killed nine-year-old Olivia, she reported the man she had been ‘infatuated’ with to the police – putting her own life on the line in the process.
As the star witness at Cashman’s 18-day murder trial, she had to provide humiliating and tawdry details about the couple’s affair, including the size of Cashman’s genitalia.
Cashman insisted that around the time of the shooting he had been at a friend’s house where he counted £10,000 in cash and smoked a spliff. Pictured: An artist impression of Thomas Cashman giving evidence at Manchester Crown Court during his trial
Having become pivotal to Cashman’s conviction, she is said to have faced more threats than any witness Merseyside Police has ever dealt with.
Cashman, who is facing decades behind bars, told the court she was a ‘woman scorned’ and accused her of lying because she wanted to ‘ruin’ his life.
The woman has since been granted a lifetime of anonymity under the witness protection scheme and is believed to have been moved out of Liverpool.
Cashman was left sobbing in the dock after he was found guilty of murder.
It came as CCTV revealed the moment he carried out the shooting and police released bodycam footage of his arrest. The killer was pinned to the ground by armed officers but protested his innocence and complained: ‘Some c*** has stitched me up.’
There were gasps and then tears of relief from Olivia’s relatives when the jury returned their unanimous verdicts.
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