Moment tragic Logan Mwangi’s murderer mother shows cruel punishment she meted out to him in police interview
- In new police interviews Anghragd Williamson’s vile behavior can be seen
- The evil mother, 32, was jailed for life for murdering her son Logan Mwangi, 5
The vile mother of Logan Mwangi revealed her guilt to police officers in his first interview following the murder of her son and even hinted at the cruel punishments she meted out to him, a body language expert has claimed.
Last year, Anghragd Williamson, 32, was jailed alongside John Cole, 40, and 15-year-old Craig Mulligan for killing Logan, 5, who was found with ‘severe injuries’ often found in victims of ‘high velocity car crashes.’
The tragic child’s body was discovered partially submerged in the River Ogmore in Bridgend, South Wales, on July 31 just 250 yards from his home. He was still wearing his dinosaur pyjama bottoms and Spider-Man top.
In new police interview footage taken from Williamson’s police interview two days after Logan’s murder, the full scale of the mother’s callous disregard for her some live can be revealed.
The video is the subject of a new Discovery+ documenatry titled Faking It, which examines how criminals try to deceive police investigators with false displays of emotion.
Evil Angharad Williamson showed police how she violently shook her son
Logan Mwangi, 5, was found with ‘severe injuries’ often found in victims of ‘high velocity car crashes.’
John Cole, 41, Angharad Williamson, 31, will have to serve minimum terms of 29 years and 28 years consecutively
Killer teen Craig Mulligan, 15, will serve a minimum term of 15-years inside prison
In a short clip, Williamson is seen defending her descision to grab Logan by the arms, saying: ‘I’ve grabbed my son in the past. I’ve held him and said ‘Stop fucking telling lies.’
According to body language expert Dr Cliff Lansley, who contributed to Faking It, the signs of her guilt including her sparse ‘dry sniffs’ were already clear.
He said: ‘She’s reliving some physical moments that she’s had in the past. And this happens because, when we’re telling lies, we’re fabricating a story, which is not easy, but we’ve also got to suppress the truth inside.
‘And sometimes when we’re recalling an episode, we go back there and we listen to the sounds and we replay the video, and sometimes, we re-enact the moments.
‘Her body is showing us what probably happened at the moment Logan got injured.’
In another fragment, Williamson can be seen visibly upset as she answers police questions about the last time she claims to have seen Logan alive.
The monster sobs: ‘Logan got washed and then I let him choose his pyjamas. He had his black bottoms with his little dinosaur ones on and he was wearing a black Spiderman top.’
Whilst she is speaking, Williamson makes no effort to look at the investigating officers and rocks back and forth gesticulating spasmodically.
In another fragment, Williamson can be seen visibly upset as she answers police questions about the last time she claims to have seen Logan alive
Body language expert Dr Cliff Lansley analaysed Williamson’s behavior during her interviews
Dr Lansley explained: ‘We can’t see the face clear enough to see if there’s genuine tears, but what we can see is the head going further down, the hands clamping, and we can hear the quality of voice, which fits more with the ‘whine’ rather than ‘genuine sadness.
‘In addition, there’s the illustrators she’s using. She’s trying too hard.
‘These kinds of excessive illustrators are to try and convince people, which you don’t need to do if you’re telling the truth.
‘If you watch the tip of the nose, we get this little head-shake ‘no’. So these affirmative claims of ‘I put him to bed’ and ‘I tucked him in’ are highly likely to be deceptive because we’re seeing the body tell us the truth that, ‘no, this is not what happened.’
Indeed what Williamson had actually done to her own son defied belief.
The schoolboy – who was just 3ft 5in and weighed 3st at the time of his death – was tortured, starved and forced to do push-ups until he collapsed.
Logan had suffered 56 external cuts and bruises, and ‘catastrophic’ internal injuries likened to a high-speed road accident, caused by a ‘brutal and sustained assault’ in the hours, or days, prior to his death.
Experts said his injuries were ‘consistent with child abuse’ and prosecutors said in the months and weeks leading up to his death, Logan had been ‘dehumanised’ by his family.
As the police interview continues, investigators question Williamson on a key flaw in her version of events; namely why on the night of his murder neighbours reported seeing lights flickering on and off in Logan’s room all night.
Throughout much of her own evidence in court, Williamson had portrayed herself as a victim – a mother grieving for her son who had been subjected to an oppressive relationship from Cole.
In a tearful display Williamson told how she slept through the night of Logan’s murder, having taken a cocktail of prescription medication for epilepsy and depression.
Logan Mwangi’s mother Angharad Williamson, 31, (left) and her partner John Cole (right), 40, have both been sentenced to life in prison for Logan’s murder
Logan (pictured) was found dead in the River Ogmore in Pandy Park, around 250 metres from the flat where he lived with his family in Lower Llansantffraid, Sarn, Bridgend on the morning of July 31, 2021
However, the CCTV evidence which showed lights being turned on and off in the family home at a time when she was the only one inside would later prove crucial in her conviction.
When asked by investigators why lights were turned on and off all night on July 31, Williamson suddenly snaps: ‘No I did not switch the light off. I was asleep.’
Responding to the change in mood, Dr Lansley surmised: ‘Wow, what a recovery. She’s now using a tone which is a little bit aggressive and saying she did not switch the light on.
‘But if we remember, seconds before this she was trying to perform sadness. Does this sound like she’s still in a sad state? She’s very forceful and definitive.’
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