A MONSTER has been found guilty of murdering his girlfriend by stabbing her 27 times as she asked “am I gonna die?”
Rebekah Campbell, 32, was attacked by Michael Ormandy, 34, at her home in Huyton, Merseyside.
She ran out into the street screaming “I’ve been stabbed” before she collapsed outside the block of flats.
As emergency crews battled to save her life, Rebekah asked an officer: “Am I gonna die?”
The cop replied: “You are hurt, but you are in the best place now.”
Rebekah tragically could not be saved and was declared dead the following day.
Former cage fighter Ormandy – who has a tattoo on his neck reading “The Hitman” has now been found guilty of murder.
Liverpool Crown Court heard in the hours leading up to the killing, he had sex with a woman in a hotel he previously met at a pub.
He then made his way to Rebekah’s home where she was on the phone with pal Faye Henderson.
Faye heard Rebekah shout “go away, get out Mick” followed by a “loud bang and puppies barking in the background”.
David McLachlan KC, prosecuting, said: “Thereafter, Faye Henderson did not hear anything else. So concerned was Faye Henderson, that she rang 999.
“Faye Henderson was right to be concerned about her friend, because, inside that flat in Huyton, on the fifth floor, Michael Ormandy, the man in the dock, stabbed his partner Rebekah Campbell many, many times.
“In reality, he stabbed her to death.”
A post mortem revealed she had suffered 18 stab wounds and nine slash wounds.
Her cause of death was recorded as stab wounds to the chest.
Ormandy and Rebekah had been together for around four months prior to her death but she complained the relationship “was not going well”.
She also told a friend she was “ready to end it”, the court heard.
One pal claimed Ormandy would “call Rebekah a s**g or just stand at the bar and stare at her”.
Domestic abuse – how to get help
DOMESTIC abuse can affect anyone – including men – and does not always involve physical violence.
Here are some signs that you could be in an abusive relationship:
- Emotional abuse – Including being belittled, blamed for the abuse – gaslighting – being isolated from family and friends, having no control over your finances, what you where and who you speak to
- Threats and intimidation – Some partners might threaten to kill or hurt you, destroy your belongings, stalk or harass you
- Physical abuse – This can range from slapping or hitting to being shoved over, choked or bitten.
- Sexual abuse – Being touched in a way you do not want to be touched, hurt during sex, pressured into sex or forced to have sex when you do not consent.
If any of the above apply to you or a friend, you can call these numbers:
Remember, you are not alone.
1 in 4 women and 1 in 7 men will experience domestic abuse over the course of their lifetime.
Every 30 seconds the police receive a call for help relating to domestic abuse.
On April 12, Rebekah was said to have thrown a shoe at her boyfriend and slapped him while out drinking, jurors were told.
Ormandy later struck her face after a second row erupted on the night out.
Following his arrest on suspicion of murder, Ormandy told police she had screamed “I’ve got a knife” when he had entered her home.
He claimed he managed to disarm her but Rebekah remained on top of him and was “attacking him”.
Ormandy said he responded by punching her “in self-defence” before pushing her on the couch.
Referring to the April 12 row, he suggested if the police had “arrested Rebekah on this date, there would have been no further incident which led to him acting in self-defence.”
Ormandy will be sentenced tomorrow.