Indefinite jail (that might mean three years) for 'sickening' attack on a two-week old baby

A HALIFAX man who shook a two-week-old baby so hard he may never fully recover from his injuries, was jailed indefinitely today.

Matthew Masterman, 23, caused life-threatening multiple injuries when he deliberately shook and gripped the baby after he "lost control".

He was sentenced to imprisonment for public protection with a minimum term of three years at Bradford Crown Court today after earlier pleading guilty to grievous bodily harm with intent.

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The court heard he had previously been suspected of causing injuries to a five-month-old baby but criminal charges were never brought.

A civil court hearing found that he was one of a number of people who could have been responsible for that baby's injuries, which included a broken knee and elbow.

Today's case was described by Judge Peter Benson as "disturbing in the extreme".

In mitigation, Jayne Beckett told the court Masterman, who suffered "serious abuse" as a child and has anger management issues, was "tired, alone and emotional" when he shook the baby boy in February 2008.

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The baby suffered fractures to his collarbone, ribs and leg and haemorrhages to his brain, eyes and lower spine, but help was not summoned for around 12 hours after the baby began fitting.

The initial prognosis for the baby, who is now two years old, was described as "very grave" but the court heard he had since exceeded expectations.

Masterman, of Dodge Holme Court, Mixenden, wore navy tracksuit bottoms and a light blue zip-up hooded sports jacket. He showed no emotion as Judge Benson told him: "The circumstances of the present offence are disturbing in the extreme.

"You present a serious risk to the public of causing serious personal injury as a result of you committing further offences."

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The judge added: "It was thought when (the baby) was admitted to hospital that there would be very severe handicap to him in the future due to brain damage and that would take both physical and psychological form and he would have a very difficult life, with very much reduced quality of life as a result of your actions.

"I accept that those injuries were inflicted when you lost control."

He continued: "You have caused him very severe injury. Happily, he has made remarkable progress and his development has proceeded at a surprising and encouraging pace and one can only hope that will continue."

Speaking after the sentencing today, Detective Chief Inspector Marianne Huison, of West Yorkshire Police, said: "This was a sickening and savage attack against a very young baby boy who was only two weeks old at the time."

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Detective Sergeant Stephen Barnes continued: "I think the judge recognises that Matthew Masterman needed to be detained to prevent the public being at risk."

Speaking about the baby's "dramatic recovery", he added: "This little boy is a right scrapper, a fighter, and he's fought himself back to fitness again."

A second defendant, 21-year-old Kimberley Doherty, was last year sentenced to a two-year community order with a supervision requirement after she admitted child cruelty by neglect.

In November 2008, Doherty had posted a message on her social networking page page attacking Steven Barker and Jason Owen, who were convicted of causing Baby Peter's death after he was found in his blood-splattered cot in August 2007, in a crime that shocked the nation.

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