This is the moment a vile abuser swigs a bottle of Prosecco and sings about his manslaughter charge after his ex-girlfriend took her own life and blame him in her suicide note.
Kiena Dawes, 23, wrote ‘I was murdered’ in her harrowing suicide note before she died on a railway track in Lancashire.
She also said in the letter it was her ex-boyfriend, Ryan Wellings, 30, who had ‘killed’ her after he repeatedly abused her.
Wellings was cleared of manslaughter today but was convicted of assault and controlling and coercive behaviour.
Kiena Dawes, 23, wrote ‘I was murdered’ in her harrowing suicide note before she died on a railway track in Lancashire
She also said in the letter it was her ex-boyfriend, Ryan Wellings, 30, who had ‘killed’ her after he repeatedly abused her
He can be seen in a car with sunglasses on, drinking Prosecco as loud music played in the background
Police have released a video shared by Wellings on Facebook just one hour after he left the police station.
He can be seen in a car with sunglasses on as loud music blared in the background.
In the clip, he said: ‘I’m driving around with a bottle of Prosecco.
‘I have been told off an hour ago on a manslaughter charge. It’s all f****** s**t.
‘Angela Dawes (Kiena’s mother), you need to take the blame for abandoning your daughter and going to. You are a f****** s**g.’
Wellings, who cried when he was arrested, had been detained just 11 days before Kiena took her own life after he brutally attacked her in front of their baby daughter.
Police released harrowing images of Keina with blood pouring from her head on July 11, 2022.
In a recording of the 999 call, she tells the operator: ‘Please, please there’s blood everywhere. Please help me…quick.’
Kiena continues: ‘I really don’t feel very well…I just need to sit down’.
At one point, the mum reassures her daughter as she tells police she ‘woke up in the hallway’ while her baby was screaming.
She adds: ‘I’m actually pouring with blood. I’ve just woken up. I was unconscious.
‘It’s absolutely pouring down my face, but I don’t know what’s happened. Well, I do know what’s happened, but I don’t know what’s happened to the injury.’
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