Moment boyfriend wails to police when arrested for murdering partner
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In a tragic case that has left a community reeling, a man who held his partner captive for ten days before brutally murdering her has been sentenced to life in prison. The shocking moment of his arrest, captured on video, shows the abuser wailing as he is taken into custody.

Tony Devenport, aged 57, received the life sentence at Chester Crown Court for the horrific murder of 41-year-old Stephanie Blundell. The court heard the harrowing details of how Ms. Blundell was discovered with severe bruising all over her face and body.

During her captivity, Devenport subjected her to a horrific ordeal, keeping her confined and providing only vodka and ice lollies as she lay trapped in his home. The extent of her injuries was staggering, with more than 100 wounds, as she was left to die. Devenport will serve at least 22 years behind bars before being eligible for parole.

Ms. Blundell’s lifeless body was found by her father, Philip Blundell, last July in the Canal Street residence the couple shared in Chester. The discovery was a devastating blow to her family and friends.

After a trial that gripped those in attendance, the jury reached a guilty verdict for murder, bringing some measure of justice for the victim’s family. The trial concluded on Wednesday, confirming Devenport’s culpability in this appalling crime.

In the aftermath of the sentencing, law enforcement officials have expressed their dismay at Devenport’s complete lack of remorse for his actions. Meanwhile, Ms. Blundell’s family has paid a heartfelt tribute to her memory, describing her as “one of the most radiant souls you could ever hope to meet.”

Now Cheshire Police have released footage of when officers arrived to arrest Devenport, in whuch he whimpered and asked whether Ms Blundell was dead.

An officer is heard asking, ‘Why have you got blood all over you?’, before Devenport replies: ‘Why have I got blood all over me? Where?’

Stephanie Blundell (pictured), 41, was found dead lying on a mattress by her father Philip Blundell last July at the home she shared with Tony Devenport in Canal Street, Chester

Stephanie Blundell (pictured), 41, was found dead lying on a mattress by her father Philip Blundell last July at the home she shared with Tony Devenport in Canal Street, Chester 

Tony Devenport, 57, was found guilty of murder at Chester Crown Court and has now been given a life sentence with a minimum of 22 years behind bars

Tony Devenport, 57, was found guilty of murder at Chester Crown Court and has now been given a life sentence with a minimum of 22 years behind bars

Police have released footage of when Devenport was arrested and told of the murder charge

Police have released footage of when Devenport was arrested and told of the murder charge

As police urge him to ‘calm down’, Devenport begs, ‘Please help me – please help me’, while also insisting, ‘I’ve not done nothing to her’, and asking: ‘Is she alive?’

When put in the back of a police car in handcuffs, and on being told he has been arrested for murder, Devenport says: ‘So that means she’s dead?’ 

He added again: ‘I’ve not done anything.’ 

Passing sentence on Devenport on Friday, Mrs Justice Steyn told the defendant he had murdered his ‘compassionate, kind-hearted and courageous’ partner of two years.

The judge said: ‘Stephanie Blundell died on the morning of July 20 2025 as a result of fierce, repeated and sustained assaults inflicted by you over the preceding day or two.

‘Her father had the most terrible experience a parent can face of visiting her shortly after midday on that Sunday, only to discover that his beloved daughter lay dead, with the marks of the severe beatings you had meted out abundantly clear.’

The judge added: ‘She always saw the good in people, including you, never giving up on them. She had an enormous capacity to love and a bright smile that could light up a room.’

Ms Blundell’s father told the court in an impact statement that discovering his daughter will ‘stay with me for the rest of my life’.

He added: ‘The thought that she died alone in pain with nobody to comfort her haunts me every day.’

The court heard when Devenport met Ms Blundell, she had been suffering with an alcohol addiction for years, but the couple had been in a period of sobriety until they took a trip to Slovakia in May last year when they started to drink ‘heavily’.

Devenport was controlling and coercive towards Ms Blundell, and although they had lived together for nearly two years, she did not have a key to their house and he kept her bank card in his wallet, the court heard.

‘When intoxicated, you were abusive, aggressive and violent towards her on occasions prior to her death’, the judge said.

Devenport was arrested on suspicion of assaulting Ms Blundell 10 days before she died but breached his bail conditions ‘within minutes’ by calling her phone and she ‘never left’ his house again after he called a taxi to pick her up.

Between July 10 and 20, Ms Blundell had ‘no means of contacting anyone’ and was bed-bound, while Devenport bought more than 12 litres of vodka and 72 cans of beer.

The judge said that evidence showed Devenport strangled Ms Blundell twice in the day or two before her death and beat her causing significant injuries to her brain.

Mrs Justice Steyn said Ms Blundell, who had acute pancreatitis and alcoholic ketoacidosis, was ‘bound to be pleading with you for help’ in the days before her death, but he only gave her alcohol and ice lollies.

She told the defendant: ‘As a result of your actions, Stephanie would have been in pain and fear and you kept her there, offering little but vodka.’

She died from multiple injuries inflicted upon her, exacerbated by the effects of chronic alcoholism, a post-mortem examination found.

In a statement released after the sentencing, Ms Blundell’s family said: ‘Steph was, without question, one of the most radiant souls you could ever hope to meet.

‘She was kind-hearted, quick-witted and effortlessly stylish. Her warmth and compassion have been evident throughout this trial and that brings us some comfort that her true loving nature has been seen by so many.’

Detective Inspector Andrea Price, from Cheshire Constabulary’s Major Investigation Team, said: ‘Stephanie was loved and cherished amongst family and friends, and although today marks the day her killer is brought to justice, I want Stephanie to be the one who we remember.

‘While no sentence can ever bring Stephanie back, I hope today’s result provides her loved ones with some comfort in knowing that Devenport has now been held accountable for what he has done.’

Devenport had waged a campaign of terror against Ms Blundell, 41, which she likened to the horror movie The Shining.

The killing came just days after she told police: ‘He’s going to murder me.; 

She also told friends she was living in fear of his paranoid rages which she compared in messages to those featured in the 1980 film starring Jack Nicholson.

A remorseless Devenport told police he had ‘just slapped her about a few times the night before’ and insisted she had fatally hurt herself while drunk.

But she had multiple bruises on her face and body, and weighed just 48kg when she was found by her father Phil Blundell.

In a harrowing witness testimony, he told Chester Crown Court she looked ‘like a zombie’ when he found her at the apartment she shared with Devenport.

In the weeks before her murder, Ms Blundell, who once worked in Paris as a globe trotting executive for the luxury watchmakers Tag Heuer, had been on an 11-day holiday with Devenport to Kostice, in Slovakia.

She had posted social media pictures of the couple with the caption: ‘A genuine moment caught between all the staged pics.’

But the pair clashed over his heavy drinking during the trip – and following their return he kept her confined to their home in Chester and fed her vodka-laced ice lollies.

Mr Blundell made the nightmarish discovery on June 20, 2025, when he went to the couple’s apartment to find Devenport wandering around the flat in ‘an intoxicated daze’.

In a statement to police, the father said: ‘I hammered on the door and Tony came to the door quite quickly. 

‘He was in a right state, physically and mentally and he said: “I think she’s dead, I think she’s dead”.

‘I said, “What do you mean, you think she’s dead?”, but he [was] weeping and emotional and just psychotic. 

‘He said: ‘she’s in there’ and I go into the back bedroom, and it’s, it’s just a terrible, terrible sight. 

‘I knew straight away she was dead. She had been a beautiful girl but when I saw her, she looked like a zombie. 

‘Tony was behind me and I said to him, “I know she’s dead, you’ve killed her”.

‘The apartment was covered in filth, beer cans everywhere. It was absolutely disgusting. I regret not breaking that door down earlier.’

Devenport told police that the only violence he inflicted on Ms Blundell was when he grabbed her arms hard the previous evening and pushed her onto a mattress. 

He claimed the victim must have suffered an internal injury which was caused by her own abuse of alcohol and died unexpectedly, seconds before her father arrived.

The court heard he had told his brother he had been planning to ask Stephanie to marry him and added: ‘I just slapped her about a few times the night before.’

The ‘coward’ was found guilty of murder after a trial at Chester Crown Court. He denied wrongdoing. 

The court heard that Stephanie was a ‘talented young woman’ who, after leaving university, got a job as an intern in 2007 with watchmaker Tag Heuer. 

She impressed bosses with her work and after a series of job promotions would attend Formula One social events and arrange back stage access to celebrity guests.

During her ten-year career Ms Blundell rubbed shoulders with motor racing stars Lewis Hamilton, Stirling Moss and Damon Hill, as well as artists Pharrell Williams and Kanye West. 

She would travel to Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York, but her life began to deteriorate when she herself began drinking heavily, moved back in with her parents and met Devenport in 2024. 

He had previously been involved with his brother in a go karting business in Deeside, on the England-Wales border, before going on to buy and renovate properties in Chester. 

But he began abusing alcohol himself, following issues over a business deal.

Prosecutor Owen Edwards said: ‘When sober, he was described in messages from Stephanie as a kind man. But when in the middle of a binge his behaviour scared Stephanie. 

‘The defendant was described as possessive, angry and paranoid, and she wanted him to receive help.’

Devenport entered rehab at a Priory clinic and eventually quit drinking, but fell off the wagon last May during the couple’s trip to Slovakia when he was told his mother would have to move into a nursing home due to dementia.

Mr Edwards added: ‘Once again his behaviour became a source of real concern to Stephanie who messaged family members about his behaviour.

‘In many texts she made it clear that she would be deleting her messages since he would otherwise check them and become angry.

‘On their return from Slovakia they got a taxi home but the driver called the police because she had complained: ‘He’ll batter me when we go in – if I go in there now, he’ll just punch me.” 

The court heard police did attend the property following the cab driver’s call and arrested Devenport for assault but Ms Blundell asked that no action be taken against him. 

She told officers: ‘He’s like full on serious like gunna murder me… but I mither him and I shouldn’t do that. I am so sorry.’

In the days before her death, the couple booked into the Pied Bull hotel, a former coach house in Chester, for two nights in a bid to save their relationship. 

But staff were called to an argument and Devenport was thrown out in the early hours. 

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