A mother has shared how the birth of her daughter ‘healed her heart’ after a deranged neighbour shot her in the head with a crossbow and killed her partner.
Crossbow killer Anthony Lawrence broke into the home of Laura Sugden and her boyfriend Shane Gilmer in Southburn, East Yorkshire, in 2018.
After fatally wounding Shane, Lawrence shot pregnant Laura in the head and she was forced to beg for the life of her unborn child before fleeing.
Lawrence was himself found dead days later during a nationwide manhunt.
After a jury concluded Shane had been unlawfully killed at an inquest into Shane’s death, Laura said she planned to campaign against the unregulated sale of crossbows like the one used by Lawrence to launch his deadly attack.
In her first interview since the inquest in Hull concluded, Laura has described how she has had to be strong for their daughter Ella, who is now two years old.
Lawrence (right) launched his attack over a belief Shane and Laura (left) had conspired with his letting agent to have him evicted after disputes over his cannabis use and his loud music
Laura Sugden, pictured outside court, said it was unbelievable the type of bow which killed her partner had gone under the radar during Downing Street’s purge on gun and knife crime.
The homes of Lawrence (believed to be on the left) and Mr Gilmer (believed to be on the right)
Speaking to the Mirror, Laura, 30, said: ‘I don’t think I’ll ever get over what happened but I have to be strong for Ella.
‘I didn’t know how I was going to manage on my own but the minute Ella was born something in my heart healed.
‘I’ve told her Daddy is a star and she’ll ask, ‘My daddy loved me didn’t he?’
‘Every milestone reminds me that Shane isn’t here, her first step, her first birthday and that will go on for ever.’
Describing her ordeal at Hull Coroners’ Court, Laura said she was shot in the head by Lawrence who also cut her throat with the arrow after she managed to remove it.
Laura, who was 27 at the time, told the inquest that she begged Lawrence not to kill her because she was pregnant.
She told the coroner: ‘Shane came into the bedroom and he was injured. I asked him [Lawrence] if what he had done would kill Shane.
‘He said it would and he was going to kill me too. I told him I was pregnant and he said he already knew. I asked him how he knew and he said he had been listening to our conversations for a year.’
The court heard Lawrence claimed the couple had got him evicted. Ms Sugden said: ‘I was trying to reason with him and said I didn’t know what he was talking about.
‘He said we had got him evicted. I said I would ring the letting agent and say it was nothing to do with us.
‘He then said I was lying, I was a lying b***h because he had been listening to Shane and I for a year. He shot me in the head. At the top of my head.’
She added: ‘I took the arrow out of my head.
‘He had left the room at that point but I think he must have heard me get up so he came into the bedroom and he managed to get the arrow I had in my hand and push it on my neck.’
Lethal: the crossbow used by Anthony Lawrence to carry out his fatal attack on Shane Gilmer
She said her and Shane reported Lawrence to the police and letting agent when they could smell cannabis in their house, coming from their neighbouring property.
But when the agent served him with an eviction notice, they told Lawrence it was for renovation works to the property to protect Shane and Laura.
However, after the notice was served, Lawrence twice dumped piles of manure on their drive.
Laura also said Lawrence had previously threatened to kill Shane with an axe when the tragic father asked him to turn his music down in the autumn of 2016.
Lawrence, who had the axe in his hand, told Laura: ‘I’ll f***ing kill you too’ when she left her house to see what the commotion was, the court heard.
She told the court: ‘It just seemed strange, he seemed to know it was Shane knocking on the door and why he would come to the door with an axe?
‘Shane hadn’t even got to the back gate before he came out carrying on and screaming at him.’
On the night of the attack, Laura and Shane had been out to Gino D’Acampo’s Italian restaurant in Hull, the inquest heard.
When they arrived home, Laura said she noticed a dark stain on the cream carpet underneath the loft hatch.
She said she opened her daughter’s bedroom door to find Lawrence stood with the crossbow.
Lawrence accused the couple of ‘cooking up a plan’ with the letting agent to get him evicted.
The 55-year-old pushed Laura into the main bedroom and ran back into the hall as Shane came upstairs, giving Laura a chance to call 999.
Laura told the Mirror: ‘I was terrified. It was surreal. I kept thinking this isn’t happening.
‘Then I heard Shane saying, ‘What the f*** is that?’. The next thing I heard him moaning.’
Shane Gilmer (above, with Laura), 30, died after a crossbow bolt fired by Lawrence broke his arm and a rib, damaged his liver and kidney and became embedded in his spine, court heard
An inquest into the death of Shane Gilmer who was killed by crossbow-wielding neighbour Anthony Lawrence has heard how armed police used stun grenades when hunting the suspect
Lawrence had shot Shane with the crossbow and a bolt had ripped through him before becoming embedded in his spine.
Lawrence then dragged Shane into the bedroom on his knees before shooting Laura in the head.
During the ensuing scuffle, Laura managed to remove the bolt but Lawrence forced it into her throat causing a wound so deep doctors would later tell Laura they could see her voice box.
She managed to fight Lawrence off and he fled the scene. Shane then instructed Laura to run and get help and to make sure she kept the baby safe.
Laura ran to a neighbours and armed police and paramedics arrived soon after but they were unable to save Shane’s life.
Speaking after the inquest earlier this month, Laura announced her plans to honour Shane’s memory by campaigning for safer laws over the sale of crossbows.
Appearing at Hull Coroners’ Court, Laura Sugden (pictured arriving at the inquest), said she was shot in the head by Lawrence who cut her throat with the arrow after she removed it
Fighting back tears and with her hands trembling with emotion, she read out her statement outside the coroner’s court in Hull, East Yorkshire.
She said: ‘Shane was a loving partner and a wonderful dad and step-dad; he is missed every day by me and the rest of his family.
‘It was clear from his final words how much he loved us all and I hope he knew how much we all loved him.
‘Shane was murdered in the most cruel and terrifying way imaginable.
‘It is unbelievable that the sale and ownership of such a lethal, medieval weapon remains unregulated in our modern society.
‘There are no laws in place to help prevent crossbows from falling into the hands of twisted and dangerous individuals like Anthony Lawrence.
Shane Gilmer was fatally wounded when crazed Anthony Lawrence shot him with a crossbow
The court heard Shane’s last words to Laura were instructing her to get out of the house
‘This lethal weapon has been forgotten about in the government’s strategy on tackling gun and knife crime.’
Laura, who gave birth to Shane’s daughter Ella Faith in June 2018, continued: ‘That’s why today, in loving memory of Shane, and to honour our beautiful daughter that he never got to meet, I am launching a campaign to call for legislation governing crossbows to be brought in line with firearms laws.
‘Over the coming weeks I will be speaking with MPs and the Home Secretary to see what can be done to reform crossbows laws.
‘I’d like to thank my family, friends and legal team for their unwavering support through such a truly harrowing experience.’
The jurors returned a unanimous conclusion of unlawful killing this afternoon after one hour of deliberations.
Prof Paul Marks also earlier spoke out after hearing victim Shane was doomed from the second he was struck by his killer’s arrow in ‘this sad and tragic case’.
Prof Marks said: ‘I’m most concerned – and this has been confirmed by police witnesses during the course of these proceedings- that crossbows of this nature and danger can be bought in an unregulated fashion by anyone over the age of 18 and are not controlled in the same way as shotguns and firearms.
‘It is my intention to issue a report to the Home secretary which will be shared with the National Police Chiefs Council and the family.
‘I will, of course, keep the family and other interested parties appraised of the outcome of this report.
‘I cannot begin to imagine the effect of Shane’s loss in this horrific and lethal way on his close family and the family at large.
‘They have conducted themselves throughout with dignity and forbearance.’
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