Wales: Man who tried to kill £5.5m lottery-winner partner jailed for 18 years

Wales: Man who tried to kill £5.5m lottery-winner partner jailed for 18 years
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Samantha Haynes

By Samantha Haynes


Published: 06/12/2021

- 14:22

Stephen Gibbs, 45, attacked his girlfriend of 11 years, at the home they shared in Lakeside, in Barry, Wales, on January 30 2021

A man who knifed his Lottery-winner partner seven times in the face when she tried to end their relationship has been jailed for 18 years.

Stephen Gibbs, 45, attacked Emma Brown, his girlfriend of 11 years, at the home they shared in Lakeside, in Barry, Wales, on January 30 this year.


The couple’s relationship had deteriorated after she won a multimillion-pound sum on the National Lottery in 2017.

Gibbs became increasingly paranoid and controlling of his “outgoing” partner, and after the attack it was discovered he had fitted a tracking device to her car.

The defendant initially denied attempted murder, but changed his plea to guilty on the first day of his trial in September.

Gibbs was previously jailed for six years for stabbing a former partner’s 11-year-old son six times with a kitchen knife.

At his sentencing hearing at Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court on Monday, Prosecutor Ieuan Bennett said: “The victim started dating the defendant in 2010.

Stephen Gibbs
Stephen Gibbs
South Wales Police

“The dynamics of the relationship changed permanently when in 2017 she had the good fortune of winning the National Lottery and in fact won a considerable amount of money.”

Mr Bennett said: “It seems the defendant had more of an issue of her being in control of her own life.”

He continued: “She had dreams of travelling the world but due to the fact the defendant didn’t like travelling abroad she never realised these dreams, and that must have caused some difficulties with their relationship.”

The court heard Ms Brown, then 49, owned the home she and Gibbs lived in, as well as a number of other properties in the surrounding area.

The prosecutor said Gibbs had been increasingly paranoid about Ms Brown’s relationship with an old school friend who was a tenant in one of her properties, and had once threatened to cut the man’s throat.

On the night of the attack, Ms Brown had driven to the home of her cleaner to deliver a birthday card, returning at around 8pm, but the defendant accused her of visiting the male tenant.

It was at that point she told Gibbs the relationship was at an end, prompting him to lose his temper and slam her against a wall.

Ms Brown remembered Gibbs choking her, dragging her outside and returning with a large kitchen knife.

He initially threatened to slit his own throat before straddling her and knifing her seven times to the face.

The victim was later found in a pool of blood by a neighbour who called an ambulance.

Ms Brown suffered multiple lacerations to her face, a fractured arm, bruising to her body, has partially lost the sight in her right eye, and only has very limited sensation in her face.

Gibbs fled the scene in his car, later calling a friend and telling her: “I’ve done something stupid, I’ve stabbed Emma – I found out she’d been messing around, cheating on me – I lost it and stabbed her in the face.”

He told her he had taken a lot of pills and was feeling drowsy, adding: “I think I’ve killed her.”

In a victim impact statement, Ms Brown said Gibbs had never previously been violent to her and she had suffered a huge loss of confidence in the wake of the attack.

She said she now struggles to socialise, adding: “It has completely ruined my self-confidence, I am also suffering from self-doubt because I trusted him.

“We were together for years and I can’t believe he was able to deceive me, I never thought he would do something like this but he did and I can’t even contemplate opening myself up to trust someone else.”

Police later found the tracking device fitted to the victim’s car.

The court heard Gibbs had been sentenced to six years in prison and four years on licence in July 2005 for stabbing his former partner’s 11-year-old son six times with an 8in kitchen knife.

After leaving Gibbs, the woman had driven her son to his property so he could pick up some belongings and waited outside in the car.

Gibbs knifed the child in his home, then went outside, smashed in his ex-partner’s car window and stabbed the woman in the thigh.

In the immediate aftermath of the 2005 attack, Gibbs attempted to take his own life.

Jailing Gibbs for 18 years, Judge Richard Twomlow said: “(This offence) has a number of aggravating features – being in the victim’s own home, the fact you simply left her there and drove away, and your previous convictions for similar behaviour.

“I am also of the view that because of your previous convictions of this type you pose a serious risk of further harm.”

Gibbs was told that he must serve two-thirds of his sentence in custody, instead of the usual half, and would serve an additional licence period of five years.

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