A four-year-old boy who died after
being deprived of food and locked in a homemade prison was abused for
putting his shoes on the wrong feet, his stepfather told a court today.
Daniel
Pelka, of Coventry, West Midlands, died of a suspected head injury in
March 2012 after being beaten and forced to sleep on a stained mattress
in an act of 'incomprehensible cruelty'.
Magdalena
Luczak, 27, and her partner Mariusz Krezolek, 34, who are being tried
at Birmingham Crown Court, both admit child cruelty but deny murder and
causing or allowing the death of a child.
On trial: Magdalena Luczak, 27, and her partner
Mariusz Krezolek (both left), 34, of Coventry, West Midlands, are being
tried at Birmingham Crown Court following the death of Daniel Pelka
(right) in March 2012
Today Daniel's stepfather gave
evidence for the first time in the trial, saying how his partner would
often shout at Daniel just for putting his clothes on inside out or his
shoes on the wrong feet.
He also claimed Luczak had an alcohol problem and often smoked marijuana, which led to her losing her tempter.
Speaking
through a Polish interpreter he said: ‘She shouted and sometimes would
shake him. For example, when Daniel put his clothes on he would put them
on inside out and confused his shoes.
‘Sometimes she wouldn't say anything and put them on for him herself - sometimes there was some shoving or shouting.’
Krezolek said of Daniel: ‘You know, normally like every child, he was a cheeky boy - but he was completely normal.’
He
then spoke of how little Daniel, - who spoke no English and only a few
words of Polish - preferred to play on his own when they would go to the
park.
He added: ‘Daniel
usually would stay on the side, he enjoyed playing on his own. He didn't
contact other kids, he didn't talk to them.
‘Often, in the park a child approached him and showed willingness to play with him, but Daniel showed no such interest.’
Hearing: Mariusz Krezolek (centre) gives
evidence at Birmingham Crown Court today through a Polish interpreter
(far left). Magdelena Luczak, 27 is also drawn (bottom right)
Defence barrister Nigel Lambert
QC went on to question Krezolek about his relationship with Daniel's
mother. Krezolek told the court Luczak was a 'wonderful woman' at first.
He
said: ‘We started to see each other on a daily basis. It was very good,
every day I came back from work, home to her, and on New Year's Day she
told me she was pregnant.’
'She
(Magdalena Luczak) shouted and sometimes would shake him. For example,
when Daniel put his clothes on he would put them on inside out and
confused his shoes'
Mariusz Krezolek
However within a few months he found
out his new partner had been lying about the pregnancy to trick him to
move in, jurors were told.
He added: ‘Most of the time she was a wonderful woman but sometimes out of the blue she would explode and cause arguments.
‘At
the very beginning it started with the computer, I couldn't stay in
touch - or maybe she didn't wish I did - with a female friend in Poland.
‘She would not wish me to speak to anyone, then the phone number erasing started.
‘I used to have many number of friends in
the UK and after three months they'd gone. Later she admitted she
deleted them when I was asleep so I wouldn't get a temptation to call
anyone.
Death: Daniel Pelka, of Coventry, West Midlands,
died of a suspected head injury in 2012 after being beaten and forced
to sleep on a stained mattress in an act of 'incomprehensible cruelty'
‘There was a sick jealousy that came - it is hard to explain.’
The
jury also heard how the couple regularly argued. He claimed Luczak
would 'smash computers' and that 'four or five' computers were broken in
total.
'Most of the time she was a wonderful woman but sometimes out of the blue she would explode and cause arguments'
Mariusz Krezolek
He also claimed how the couple were
forced to move from a property after her cannabis habit became more
frequent and she made friends with a neighbour, who was also a drug
dealer.
Luczak called police on numerous occasions claiming she had been assaulted by her partner, which he denied.
The
court heard how Krezolek left Poland in 2005 to come to the UK and was
employed at a bricklayer and plasterer within three days.
After arriving, he met a woman whom he married, although later found out she was having an affair.
He
said: ‘I focused on work, I took an extra job and this is how I pushed
her into another man's arms. I came back earlier one day from work and I
saw them together in bed.’
The trial continues.
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