Jamie Varley, 37, a former head of year at a high school, and his partner, ex-public schoolboy and sales manager John McGowan-Fazakerley, 32, sexually assaulted and physically abused Preston Davey after adopting him aged nine months, before his murder following a sex assault by Varley four months later at their Blackpool home.
Varley’s sentence means he will never be released from prison, while McGowan-Fazakerley was also jailed for 25 years for allowing Preston’s death.
Both men were convicted by a jury on Monday, June 15, following an eight-week trial at Preston Crown Court, following Preston’s death on April 27, 2023.
Jamie Varley will never be released from prison (Image: Lancashire Police)
Passing sentence, Mr Justice Turner said Preston had faced “unremitting abuse” and neglect before being killed by Varley during a sex attack.
Turning to Varley, he said: “It was you who did this. You murdered him.
“A whole life order is a sentence of last resort for cases of the most extreme gravity.
“This is a case of the most extreme gravity. You must stay in prison for the rest of your life. You will never be eligible for parole.”
Varley, wearing a purple V-neck T-shirt, looked gaunt and sat with his hands folded on his lap, looking straight ahead and made no reaction when his sentence was read out.
Preston had been taken from his mother, Sarah Davey, now 42, by an emergency care order by Oldham Council and placed into foster care at five days old.
Preston Davey was murdered by Jamie Varley (Image: Police)
Ms Davey was herself jailed for murdering a frail pensioner when she was a 14-year-old, and has been in and out of prison since then.
In a victim impact statement, Ms Davey described the day Preston was taken from her as one of the worst of her life.
She said: “I had no choice in that decision.
“I tried to take some comfort in believing he would be safe, loved, and protected, and he was with his foster parents, Sandra and Paul (Cooper).
“I trusted them, they and the system trusted you, that trust was completely and unforgivably broken.
“I will never forgive you for what you did to my son and what you stopped him from becoming and achieving in his life.
“Every single day, I live with the unimaginable pain of wondering what he went through. Those thoughts do not leave me.
“They are with me when I wake up, and they haunt me when I try to sleep. The reality of how he suffered is something I will carry for the rest of my life.”
In his victim impact statement, Preston’s biological father, Gary Nolan, told of his grief at hearing the news of his son’s death.
“Hysterical and crying”, Mr Nolan was admitted to hospital for his own safety and still takes medication to help manage his anxiety and depression.
He said: “Preston was my first and only son. The fact that he has been taken away from me has stopped me from having a father-son relationship.
“I was looking forward to doing the simple things with him, playing football, teaching him how to ride a bike, having him ask me for help, seeing him learn to drive and of course celebrating his birthdays.
“This has deprived my three daughters and me of ever having these opportunities.”
Mr and Mrs Cooper, Preston’s foster parents, said his murder was the reason they decided not to retire from fostering as “we felt we had a duty to other children and could not sit back and enjoy ourselves knowing that other children were being abused, mistreated and could die”.
They said they had lost trust in the system and cannot express the pain they feel at Preston’s killing.
The trial heard Preston had been taken to Blackpool Victoria Hospital three times in the months before his death and was seen by a “battery of professionals” during his life, including multiple social workers, health visitors and medics, and a social services investigation is underway.
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