
Mother of Joanne Tulip calls for tougher restrictions on violent offenders after release from prison
On Christmas Day 1997, 29-year-old Joanne Tulip was raped and stabbed 60 times by Steven Ling. The violent attack happened at Ling's home in Stamfordham, Northumberland. He was jailed for life.
After serving 27 years, Ling was recommended for release from prison. Joanne's mother Doreen Soulsby called on the Parole Board to reconsider, but the request was rejected and Ling was released in January 2025.
Now, Doreen would like tougher restrictions for violent offenders once they're out of prison, including where they can go. Ms Soulsby met Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood on Tuesday to discuss tougher restrictions.
Speaking on Good Morning Britain on Wednesday (16 July) Ms Soulsby said Justice Secretary "listened attentively" and had looked in great detail at the document sent by Ms Soulsby ahead of the meeting.
Among the changes to the parole system she's campaigning for are a change to the restraining orders placed on offenders.
Soulsby would like to see exclusion zones (which prevent a perpetrator from entering an area where their victims live) replaced with inclusion zones (which instead restrict the movements of perpetrators to a set perimeter). This would mean victims would be free to roam the country in the knowledge their aggressor is contained in a single zone.
"At the minute with an exclusion zone, he's got the freedom of the rest of the country, whereas if there was an inclusion zone, we would have the freedom, because the victims haven't done anything wrong."
She also called for victims to be able to access more information on perpetrators progress in prison.
Soulsby told ITV's Good Morning Britain: "once an offender goes into prison a brick wall goes up. You get nothing back.
"I just want to know what he's doing, has he shown any remorse? What work is he doing? What courses?
"All we get on an annual basis is what category of prison he's in."
Soulsby confirmed the justice secretary had committed to looking into what more information could be given to victims.
Following his fifth parole hearing, Ling was recommended for release into the community, subject to conditions including informing authorities of any relationships he might develop; being subject to monitoring and a curfew, and remaining outside an exclusion zone to avoid contact with his victim's family.
The Justice Secretary and Lord Chancellor Shabana Mahmood asked the Parole Board to reconsider the recommendation to release him on the basis that it was 'legally irrational'.
However, on the Parole Board confirmed this application had been rejected and its original decision had been upheld, meaning the killer would be released.
A spokesperson for the Parole Board said: 'A Judge at the Parole Board considered the application for reconsideration and has decided, based on the evidence, that it will be refused.
"Decisions of the Parole Board are solely focused on what risk a prisoner could represent to the public and whether that risk is manageable in the community.
"When assessing the reconsideration application, the Judge recognised the very significant gravity of the case and the profound ongoing impact on the victim's family."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
6 hours ago
- The Guardian
Maurene Comey: prosecutor in Jeffrey Epstein case fired by DoJ, sources say
The justice department has fired Maurene Comey, the daughter of former FBI director James Comey and a prosecutor in the federal cases against Sean 'Diddy' Combs and Jeffrey Epstein, two people familiar with the matter told the Associated Press on Wednesday. There was no specific reason given for her firing from the US attorney's office in the southern district of New York, according to one of the people who spoke to the AP on the condition of anonymity to discuss personnel matters. Her termination comes shortly after she prosecuted Combs, who was acquitted of sex trafficking and racketeering charges. The rapper was convicted of lesser prostitution-related offenses. The justice department recently appeared to acknowledge the existence of an investigation into James Comey, though the basis for that inquiry is unclear. He was abruptly fired by Trump during his first administration in 2017. More details soon …


Daily Mail
9 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Illinois woman with flying saucer tattooed on her forehead commits unhinged crime
An Illinois woman with a flying saucer tattooed on her forehead was sentenced to 30 years behind bars for murdering her girlfriend. Alexia Telles, 28, pleaded guilty to first-degree murder last week in connection to the tragic death of Annissa Ellen-Williams, 25, the Kendall County State's Attorney's Office announced Monday. Telles, who has several other face tattoos, was charged in connection with the February 2023 slaying after Ellen-Williams died of a traumatic head injury at a home in Oswego - about an hour outside of Chicago. Life-saving attempts were made on Ellen-Williams, but she died at the scene, according to prosecutors. After her death, authorities discovered the couple, who appeared to be in a long-term relationship, had gotten into some sort of disagreement while Ellen-Williams was driving just before they arrived at the home. Forensic and digital evidence, along with statements made to police, soon revealed Telles 'intentionally killed' her partner and made it look like Ellen-Williams had committed suicide, investigators concluded. Investigators did not specify what sparked the argument and how the killing was carried out. 'These cases can be difficult to prosecute because only two people know exactly what occurred that fateful night,' Kendall County State's Attorney Eric Weis said. 'However, the investigative work done by law enforcement and the Coroner's Office led to the successful prosecution of Telles for the murder of Ms. Ellen-Williams.' Telles, who has remained in custody since her arrest, was ordered to serve her entire 30-year prison sentence, followed by three years of supervised release, prosecutors said. 'This sentence ensures that justice is served, and the victim's family does not have to endure the pain of a trial,' Weis stated. 'Telles has accepted responsibility for the heartless act she committed against someone she professed to care so much for.' Daily Mail contacted Weis and Telles' attorneys, Josh Adams and Alana De Leon, for comment. The couple appeared to be in a relationship for years, as their first ever post on Telles' Facebook was from 2016. In a post from 2019, Telles wrote: 'Love you fo [sic] ever,' alongside an image of her and Ellen-Williams. This story comes months after a 22-year-old woman was found naked and discarded in the grass after getting into a domestic dispute with her abusive boyfriend. Nahomi Citttadini, of Miami Beach, Florida was found abandoned on the side of the highway in early December. Lorent Pion, a 29-year-old convicted felon, was charged with his girlfriend's murder murder, despite initially telling officers that she had been struck by another car during an argument, CBS News reported. Disturbing video footage from August captured Pion violently beating Cittadini along a street in Miami Beach, relentlessly chasing after her before grabbing her hair and aggressively throwing her to the ground.


Powys County Times
11 hours ago
- Powys County Times
Man told friend he was scared of ex accused of stabbing him to death
A father-of-six who was allegedly murdered on Christmas Day by his 'abusive' ex-partner told a friend he was scared of her and feared 'something bad' would happen to him if he did not leave the relationship, a court has heard. Kirsty Carless, 33, is accused of plunging a knife into 31-year-old Louis Price's heart in the early hours of December 25 2024 in an attack 'motivated by anger and jealousy and fuelled by cocaine and alcohol' after a friend sent her a picture of his dating profile on Tinder, Stafford Crown Court heard. Prosecutors allege Carless, of Haling Way in Cannock, Staffordshire, took a kitchen knife in a taxi from her home to Mr Price's parents' address in Elm Road, Norton Canes, where she expected to find him with a woman. CCTV showed Carless 'stalking' him around the garden before he was later found with a single stab wound to the chest on the conservatory floor. The court was told Mr Price was considered by police to be 'at very high risk of domestic abuse' before his death. Giving evidence on the second day of the trial, friend Demi-Louise Deakin said Mr Price had confided in her about his on-off relationship with Carless when they attended a funeral at the end of November 2024. Asked by prosecution counsel Jonas Hankin KC what Mr Price had said, Miss Deakin said: 'He said he was scared of Kirsty and if he didn't leave soon something bad would happen to him… 'He said she can be violent towards him.' Miss Deakin, who lived near the defendant, said she also witnessed another incident where Carless allegedly poured bleach over his clothes and threw a shoe out of the window which hit him on the head. Another neighbour also told the court she had called the police on another occasion after witnessing Carless chasing and hitting Mr Price in the ribs with a metal pole outside the house while he had his arms up protecting his head. Jurors were shown police body-worn video footage from when officers attended Carless' address on November 11 2024, after Mr Price phoned 999 to say she had poured bleach over tracksuits worth £400, had thrown a glass candle holder at him, pulled him down the stairs and choked him. As he was moved away from the house by one of the officers, Mr Price appeared to become emotional, saying: 'It's f****** embarrassing … it can't keep happening, man.' In a witness statement after the incident, he said the relationship 'on the whole, has been abusive'. He said: 'She has constantly been abusive towards me, stopped me doing things I enjoy like football, and physically abused me.' He added: 'She has abused me for years now yet I'm always the one that gets arrested.' The trial was told of several previous incidents in which the police had been called, including an incident on March 5 2023 in which Carless had said Mr Price had punched her and been violent and he was arrested. Carless retracted her statement in July that year, telling police: 'It was 50/50 and we hit each other, I hurt him as much as he hurt me, I felt so pressured to make it sound one-sided by my social worker at the time. 'It is wrong what I said in my original statement, I don't want to go to court and lie about what happened.' In another incident on September 26 2023, Carless called police to say her partner had hit her before the call ended and later claimed a neighbour had stolen her phone and pretended to be her when officers traced her. The court was also told Carless admitted to police she had made up allegations that Mr Price had grabbed her by the throat three times after she confronted him about messages on his phone in November 2023, telling officers it was a 'way of getting back at him for speaking to other women'. Carless denies murder and possessing an offensive weapon in a public place in relation to the fatal incident on December 25 2024 and one count of intentional strangulation and one count of assault occasioning actual bodily harm in relation to the incident on November 11 2024.