'It's a kick in the teeth': Devastated family of Holby City actor's daughter say she has now been 'denied justice' after drug-dealing rapper who fed her 2-CP then filmed her dying has manslaughter conviction quashed

  • Ceon Broughton, 31, gave Louella Fletcher-Michie hallucinogenic 2-CP at Bestival ahead of her birthday
  • She died after taking drug while Broughton recorded footage on mobile phone for six hours of film
  • At one point she was seen in such distress she was eating thorns and screaming 'This ain't acid' 
  • Louella, who is the daughter of actor John Michie, was found dead in woods at the edge of the festival site 
  • Broughton was convicted in March 2019 of manslaughter by gross negligence despite claiming innocence
  • He was also jailed for more than eight years but the conviction was overturned by a Court of Appeal judge
  • Mr Michie and his family have been told the result of the case but were too upset to be able to comment 
The grieving family of the daughter of a Holby City actor who died from an overdose said she has been 'denied justice' after her rapper boyfriend - who gave her the drug and filmed her dying - was freed on appeal.
Dealer Ceon Broughton, 31, supplied John Michie's daughter Louella Fletcher-Michie with the hallucinogenic 2-CP at Bestival in Dorset but was released from prison yesterday after his eight year sentence was overturned. 
Today the ruling was a described as a 'kick in the teeth' for Louella's family which had added to their continued agony over her death.
A family source told MailOnline: ‘To say the family is devastated is an understatement. It’s been difficult enough coming to terms with Louella’s loss and now she’s been denied justice.
‘The justice system has let her and the family down. This decision is a kick in the teeth which has just added to our pain. It’s wrong and doesn’t make sense.’
Broughton walked free after a Court of Appeal judge ruled prosecutors failed to prove she could have lived if he had called for help.
Ceon Broughton pictured with girlfriend Louella Fletcher-Michie, who died in September 2017
Ceon Broughton pictured with girlfriend Louella Fletcher-Michie, who died in September 2017
Louella had been a keen festival goer and had been at Bestival when she overdosed
Louella had been a keen festival goer and had been at Bestival when she overdosed
He had originally been convicted after he shot harrowing footage of his younger girlfriend overdosing on his mobile phone for six hours, as she screamed 'This ain't acid. I was not expecting this'.
The videos had appalled former Taggart star Mr Michie and wife Carol, who had welcomed Broughton into their home and believed him innocent in the hours after Louella's death in September 2017. 
He was so trusted he had even spent Christmas at the Michies' £1.2 million house in North London, worked with Louella's brother Sam and had been a guest at Mr Michie's 60th birthday dinner.
But in court the hostility between them was laid bare, with Mr Michie staring him down as he spoke from the witness box. 
In heartbreaking evidence, he had declared 'I think Louella loved Ceon. I'm not sure he loved her. I don't know how you could ever say you loved someone if you left them to die in front of you'. 
Later they unexpectedly met outside court proceedings and the father had told him 'you're evil, evil', sparking Broughton into a rage where he threw a coffee table across a room and attacked a water cooler. 
Jurors at the 2019 Winchester Crown Court trial had sobbed as they viewed footage of Louella's distress as the effects of the drug showed her at one point trying to eat thorns.
Clips showed musician Broughton turn his iPhone on himself at one point to show him smiling and playing with a fidget spinner toy and also plugging his hoodie brand.
During one 50-minute video Louella had yelled: 'Make sure you're filming this. Put a camera on me now. You better be f****** recording Ceon. Don't f****** put this on YouTube.'
She had also repeatedly shouted for him to call her mum and when they were phoned the sound of their daughter overdosing was so harrowing they jumped in their car to carry out the 130-mile drive from London to the festival site in Lulworth Castle in Dorset. They tragically arrived too late to find her alive.
By 10.41pm that night footage showed Broughton holding Louella's severely scratched hand, with a still image taken by him at 11.24pm appearing to show her lifeless at his feet. 
Broughton, last year
Louella Fletcher-Michie
Broughton (left, pictured in February 2019) has had his conviction overturned for the manslaughter of Miss Fletcher-Michie (right), who died after taking the drug 2C-P at Bestival
Broughton was so trusted by the Michie family he was invited to their family Christmas as well as John's 60th birthday
Broughton was so trusted by the Michie family he was invited to their family Christmas as well as John's 60th birthday
Broughton in one of the videos he shot while Louella was overdosing in front of him
Broughton in one of the videos he shot while Louella was overdosing in front of him
But Broughton's conviction was overturned after his barrister said prosecutors had 'failed to prove' that she would have survived had she received treatment by a certain point - the key point of the original case against him.
After the appeal hearing Broughton's lawyers said he remained 'devastated' by Louella's death.
In a statement, they said: 'The Court of Appeal has today found that Louella's death occurred not as a result of criminal negligence but was instead a tragic accident.
'Ceon remains devastated by her death.
'He has always wished that he could have done more to save her.
'He loved Louella and she him, but he knows that no words will ever be sufficient to convey his sense of responsibility for what happened or to begin to remove the pain that others have been caused.'
Miss Fletcher-Michie was found dead in woods at the edge of the festival site at Lulworth Castle on the morning of her 25th birthday on September 11, 2017.
Broughton, who raps under the stage name CEONRPG, was convicted in March 2019 of manslaughter by gross negligence and jailed for eight years and six months.
Jurors were told that instead of phoning 999, Broughton stayed in the secluded wooded area with Louella.
Prosecutors claimed he avoided going for help because 'didn't want to be arrested' while on a suspended sentence. A medical centre was nearby to the area where they were sitting.
But at the High Court in London today, Lord Burnett quashed the conviction, saying: 'In our view, this is one of those rare cases where the expert evidence was all that the jury had to assist them in answering the question on causation.
'That expert evidence was not capable of establishing causation to the criminal standard.
Louella Fletcher-Michie and Ceon Broughton inside a tent at Bestival
Louella and Broughton were seen playing with fairy lights in the clip
Footage of Louella and Broughton at Bestival joking around the day before she took the drug that would kill her 
'Miss Darlow's final submission that at 9.10pm Louella was deprived of a 90 per cent chance of survival was an accurate reflection of Professor Deakin's evidence but, for the reasons we have explained, that is not enough.
'Put another way, if an operation carried a personal 10% risk of mortality, both patient and clinicians would be able confidently to say that the chances of survival were very high or very good but none could be sure. 
'In respectful disagreement with the judge, we conclude that the appellant's main argument, that the case should have been withdrawn from the jury, is established. 
 'Applying the Galbraith test, taken at its highest, the evidence adduced by the prosecution was incapable of proving causation to the criminal standard of proof. The appeal against conviction for manslaughter must be allowed.' 
The trial at Winchester Crown Court heard Broughton did not get help because he had been handed a suspended jail term a month earlier and feared the consequences.
At the appeal hearing, Broughton's barrister Stephen Kamlish QC argued the conviction was unsafe because prosecutors had 'failed to prove' that Miss Fletcher-Michie would have survived had she received treatment by a certain point.
He also argued Broughton's sentence was 'excessive' in any event.
Mr Kamlish QC told the Court of Appeal: 'The Crown cannot prove, now or at trial, that she would have lived had she been treated.   
'What the Crown are arguing now is that by depriving the deceased of the chance of surviving via medical treatment she would have lived but that also means she might or might not have lived.
'That is hardly the correct text on which the Crown can prove causation. The appellant was trying to get help. So he cannot be described as criminally grossly negligent.'  
He said Broughton had felt unable to leave Miss Fletcher-Michie alone in the woods while she was suffering a 'bad trip', and he had not realised she was at risk of death. 
Mr Kamlish added: 'So in our submission when one looks at the learned judge's direction as to the ease or difficulty of obtaining help, if Louella could walk by herself it was difficult.'
He said Professor Charles Deakin addressed whether medical intervention could have helped at trial while other experts focused on the cause of death.
Mr Kamlish said the prosecution evidence did not prove causation against the defendant.
In her final moments captured on camera, Miss Fletcher-Michie said: 'My mum and dad, my brother and sister, I love you lot.'
Her mother, Carol Fletcher-Michie, said she 'dropped everything' and travelled with her husband to the festival site after making contact with Broughton and hearing her daughter in the background.
Broughton, from Enfield, North London denied but was convicted by the jury of manslaughter and supplying class A drugs. 
His conviction for manslaughter was quashed. He did not appeal his conviction for supplying class A drugs.
Broughton previously admitted supplying drugs to Miss Fletcher-Michie at Glastonbury festival, in June 2017, and was in breach of a suspended prison sentence imposed for possessing a lock knife and a Stanley knife blade.
Prosecutors told jurors during his trial that Broughton failed to take 'reasonable' steps to seek medical help for Miss Fletcher-Michie.
Harrowing footage shown to the court showed videos he had shot of her as she was under the influence of the drug.
The first was timed at 5.53pm, with the 50-minute clip showing Louella wildly hallucinating.
'This is the best trip I've ever f***ing had,' she repeatedly told the camera. 'I'm seeing colourful taxis… Magical monkey riding the forest.'
Actor John Michie and his wife Carol Fletcher-Michie at Winchester Crown Court on February 27, 2019
Actor John Michie and his wife Carol Fletcher-Michie at Winchester Crown Court on February 27, 2019
Later she was seen shouting 'This is the happiest I've ever been. This is mad. I'm so happy, the best day of my life. I've taken acid before. This ain't acid. I was not expecting this.'
Broughton previously admitted supplying drugs to Miss Fletcher-Michie at Glastonbury festival, in June 2017, and was in breach of a suspended prison sentence imposed for possessing a lock knife and a Stanley knife blade.
Prosecutors told jurors during his trial that Broughton failed to take 'reasonable' steps to seek medical help for Miss Fletcher-Michie.
They said he did not get help because he had been handed the suspended jail term a month earlier and feared the consequences.
Lord Chief Justice Lord Burnett, Mr Justice Sweeney and Mr Justice Murray gave their ruling this morning.   
A representative for Mr Michie declined to comment.
Louella Fletcher-Michie and Ceon Broughton together at Bestival 2017
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3 comments:

  1. Hang around with "thugs" and this is what you get for your white privilege.

    ReplyDelete
  2. that nigger rapper need a bullet

    ReplyDelete
  3. $50 to take that nigger out

    ReplyDelete

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