Do you feel up to the challenge? Let’s put your observational skills to the test and see if you can identify the problem with the image! Testing our abilities and learning the details that we may have missed is always enjoyable. Are you prepared now? Now let’s investigate and see what’s off!
We’ve identified the oddity in the image after carefully examining it: the door hinges are on the other side. That is the primary aspect of the image that is incorrect.
Isn’t it amazing how a seemingly insignificant feature, like the location of door hinges, can drastically alter how someone perceives an image?
We can become increasingly aware of these minute variations in our environment by developing our observational skills. So, the next time you come across an image, look closely and see if you can identify anything that doesn’t look quite right! This enjoyable activity maintains our minds active and curious.
The mom who stabbed her baby to death is found dead in prison
Six years into her 17-year-long sentence for stabbing her baby with a pair of scissors, Rachel Tunstill dies in prison.
Back in 2017, she stabbed her baby girl, Mia Kelly, more than 15 times in the bathroom of their Burnley home and threw her lifeless body in a bin.
Tunstill was initially convicted of murder and handed a life sentence with minimum term of 20 years, but a re-trial proved the jury in the case should have been offered a verdict of infanticide to consider. During the re-trial she was once again convicted of murder and put behind bars for a minimum of 17 years.
“HMP Styal prisoner Rachel Tunstill died in custody on 1 August 2023. As with all deaths in custody, the Prisons and Probation Ombudsman will investigate,” a spokesperson from the Prison Service confirmed the news of her passing.
At the time she gave birth, her boyfriend was playing video games in the next room. She then told him she had a miscarriage and asked for the scissors after which she remorselessly stabbed the baby to death.
At the time of sentencing, the judge, Mr Justice King, said: “This must have been a sustained and frenzied attack on a victim who because of her age was particularly vulnerable. Her duty to her newborn baby was to cradle and comfort her – not to stab her to death.
“There was here in my judgement concealment of the body, albeit short-lived and in addition there was undoubtedly the indignity which was wrought upon the body by disposing of it in the way she did.”
Tunstill was a university master’s graduate in forensic psychology.
“She showed no emotion or remorse for stabbing her baby to death,” said Mr Justice King.
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