The biological father of slain 5-year-old Logan Mwangi claims that before the youngster’s sad passing, his ex-partner informed him he would never see his boy again.
Ben Mwangi said that after starting a connection with Logan’s murder accomplice John Cole, Logan’s mother Angharad Williamson broke off communication with him.
Logan’s body was discovered in the River Ogmore, close to his house in Sarn, Bridgend County, in July of last year, “fly-tipped like rubbish.” He had sustained ‘catastrophic’ inside wounds in addition to 56 exterior cuts and bruises.
Following their convictions for Logan’s murder, Williamson, 31, Cole, 40, and his stepson Craig Mulligan, 14, were all given life sentences last week.
Today, Mr. Mwangi disclosed how he had at first maintained communication with Logan and had relocated to South Wales just prior to Logan’s birth in March 2016 in order to assist with co-parenting.
However, he claimed in an interview with ITV’s Good Morning Britain that “as soon as Cole entered the picture (in 2019), things completely altered.”
He claimed I was speaking to her far too frequently. Of course, we would just discuss Logan. And then everything started to fall apart.
“She wrote me a horrible message,” I responded, “stating that Logan has a family now, he doesn’t need me, and I’ll never see my kid again.”
When Williamson visited his grandma, Mr. Mwangi kept in touch with Logan on occasion over the phone. That, however, quickly came to an end when Williamson forbade Logan from seeing her mother.
I was completely ignorant of what was happening because I hadn’t seen Logan in so long. I was completely unaware of what was happening to Logan,’ Mr. Mwangi claimed.
Logan was discovered to have been on the child protection registry during the trial as a result of worries about Cole. but was taken out of it a month before he passed away.
A day before Logan died, social officials made an impromptu visit to the house but were turned away because the child allegedly had Covid. Mr. Mwangi is currently advocating for a law change.
In the event that social services raise concerns about a child’s safety, he wants the child’s estranged parents to be notified.
He declared today, “I would have arrived first, without a doubt” (had I known).
‘They (social services) would have examined his wounds and concluded that he did not self-inflict them. There are three people in the house, so this is obviously a dangerous setting. We need to get in touch with his father and inform him of what transpired.
However, I was completely unaware of what was occurring to my son.
He mentioned this in reference to his cause, Logan’s Law, which he named in honour of his son: “This is exactly what Logan’s Law is accomplishing.”
The purpose of it is to inform divorcing parents, like myself, if their child is known to social services.
If I had even the slightest idea that Logan was well-known, I would have captured him.
I would have traveled with a police escort or collaborated with social services, and I would have said: “Okay, I’m gathering my son’s belongings, and I’m taking him out from this obviously hostile atmosphere.” Let’s make him safe if he’s in danger.
If I had known, I would have inquired why I hadn’t been notified, which is one of the major concerns that will be raised during the child protection assessment.
You’d think that as his biological father, if he was included on the social services record, I should have been aware of it.
As a result of social workers and family courts’ inability to stop Logan’s death, there are mounting calls for inquiries into children’s services to be conducted throughout the entire UK.
Since Mulligan had just recently returned to Cole’s custody five days before the murder in July of last year, a social services inquiry into the circumstances of Logan’s death is currently underway.
A national examination into the killings of 6-year-old Arthur Labinjo-Hughes and 1-year-old Star Hobson has started in England, and calls have been made for a comparable investigation in Wales.
David Fawcett, 62, the great-grandfather of Star, stated today that social services in the UK as a whole required an overhaul.
Before more children die, the entire system needs to be overhauled, he told MailOnline.
“There are numerous investigations, and while the failures are acknowledged, they continue to occur across the nation.
It is surprising to learn how much some of these individuals are paid while failing to protect children.