A VIOLENT boyfriend stabbed his partner seven times in the face leaving her partially blind after she won the Lottery. Emma Brown, 50, scooped £5.5million in 2017 but controlling Stephen Gibbs, 45, resented the life-changing sum of money. Instead of taking up her offer to travel the world, he became annoyed at Emma being “more […]
A VIOLENT boyfriend stabbed his partner seven times in the face leaving her partially blind after she won the Lottery.
Emma Brown, 50, scooped £5.5million in 2017 but controlling Stephen Gibbs, 45, resented the life-changing sum of money.
Instead of taking up her offer to travel the world, he became annoyed at Emma being “more in control of her own life”.
Gibbs also became convinced she was cheating on him and fitted a tracker on her Mercedes to keep tabs on her.
When Emma told him she wanted to end their 12-year relationship, raging Gibbs grabbed her by the neck and slammed her against a wall.
He then grabbed a nine-inch kitchen knife and stabbed terrified Emma in the face seven times.
Horrifying CCTV showed a silhouette of the monster as he repeatedly knifed his girlfriend while she told him: “Tell my mother I love her.”
Gibbs then fled in Emma’s car – leaving her dying on the patio of their luxury home in South Wales.
She was only saved when neighbours heard a faint cry of “help, help” coming from the property.
Gibbs has now been jailed for 13 years with a further five on licence after he pleaded guilty to attempted murder on the first day of his trial.
It can now be revealed Gibbs was previously jailed for six years for stabbing a former partner’s 11-year-old son six times with a kitchen knife.
Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court heard how Emma suffered multiple lacerations to her face, a fractured arm, bruising to her body, has partially lost the sight in her right eye and only has very limited sensation in her face.
In a brave victim impact statement, she said: “We were together for 12 years, I never thought he was capable of doing something like this to me.
“I used to be the life and soul of the party but now I can’t face being in a group of people. But I am conflicted because I’m also scared of being alone.
“I’ve been left with a lazy eye which has affected my confidence – I don’t know if I will fully recover from what has happened.
“We were together for 12 years and were happy – I don’t hate him and I do have good memories of the time we had together which makes what happened all the more shocking.
“I feel pity for him more than anything else.”
The couple started their relationship in 2010 but the “dynamics changed” when Emma scooped the prize on the National Lottery.
She used some of her winnings to buy several properties in the area – including one she rented to an old school friend.
Gibbs convinced himself Emma was having an affair with the tenant and threatened to “cut his throat”.
On the night she was attacked, Emma had driven to her cleaner’s house to drop off a birthday card but the thug accused her of visiting the tenant.
When she returned home, she told Gibbs she wanted him to leave after he confronted her but he launched into the brutal attack.
The brute dragged Emma outside and initially held the knife to his own throat before stabbing her from close-range seven times.
Women’s Aid has this advice for victims and their families:
If you are a victim of domestic abuse, SupportLine is open Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday from 6pm to 8pm on 01708 765200. The charity’s email support service is open weekdays and weekends during the crisis – messageinfo@supportline.org.uk.
Women’s Aid provides a live chat service available. from 10am to noon.
You can also call the freephone 24-hour National Domestic Abuse Helpline on 0808 2000 247.
After fleeing the scene, Gibbs later called a friend and told them: “I’ve done something stupid, I’ve stabbed Emma – I found out she’d been messing around, cheating on me – I lost it and stabbed her in the face.”
He was later found in a layby with a blood-stained kitchen knife in the passenger seat.
Sentencing, Judge Richard Twomlow said: “Emma Brown’s victim statement demonstrates the devastating effect this has had on her.
“She was in her home. You simply left her there and drove away.
“Because of your previous convictions you do pose a significant risk to members of the public of serious harm.”