Man who murdered girlfriend before texting her mother pretending to be her jailed
Ewan Methven was sentenced to a minimum of 23 years behind bars on Monday after admitting murdering his 21-year-old girlfriend Phoenix Spencer-Horn.
Methven murdered her in the home they shared in East Kilbride on 16 November 2024.
He also admitted decapitating her body and texting her mother, pretending to be her.
Methven, who is now 27, killed Ms Spencer-Horn after the couple ordered a takeaway.
Earlier that day, he had complained to his girlfriend that her waitress shifts made him 'lonely'.
The High Court in Glasgow was told that Methven attacked Miss Spencer-Horn, stabbing her 20 times, including 10 times in the face, before mutilating her body and severing her head.
Methven had also strangled her, searched for internet pornography 170 times and made repeated attempts to buy cocaine, before spending the weekend driving around in Miss Spencer-Horn's red Corsa, and texting her mother pretending she was still alive, according to prosecutors.
He texted: 'Hey sorry I've just woken up xxx' before searching for pornography, the court heard.
On 18 November, at about midday, he dialled 999 and told a call-handler: 'I had a psychotic break and killed my wife.'
He said: 'We were messing about, I take steroids and was taking cocaine and alcohol, I think there was something else in it … it was f****** horrible.'
He was transferred to a senior police officer, and said: 'I just want to go to jail', and added: 'I have been out my face, I can't remember what happened. I have been driving about all weekend.'
Police officers discovered Miss Spencer-Horn's mutilated body hidden under a towel. Methven admitted attempting to remove the limbs and torso from her body with a knife or other instrument.
Defending, Tony Graham KC, said, in 2024, Methven realised he had an addiction problem, and had written a letter to the judge saying 'in relation to the harm that could cause, it could only be harm to himself', regarding cocaine, steroids and other drugs.
Mr Graham read from the letter, which said: 'I know how loved Phoenix was and how she made her family complete. I can't believe I've taken her from them.'
He told the court: 'Mr Methven is in a position where he can offer no explanation as to why the course of events which led to Phoenix's death took place, other than his own self-administration of drugs.'
He said that Methven 'insists he has taken the life of a person he loved, and appreciates he has caused an enormous void in that family', and 'struggles to reconcile how he could have caused that destruction', the court heard.
Mr Graham said that Methven had been 'taken into family home of Phoenix's family and appreciates in that that two-year period he was adopted into that family', and described the murder as 'a betrayal', the court heard.
However, he said Methven could not explain why it happened, and added: 'He has flashbacks but no real memory as to how things progressed to this destruction of human life.'
Imposing a life sentence, Judge Lord Matthews said Methven had admitted a 'truly dreadful crime'.
Lord Matthews said: 'At 21 years old, she was standing at the threshold of what should have been a long and fulfilling life. You were a trusted member of her family but betrayed that trust.
'For reasons no one will ever understand you strangled her and stabbed her 20 times, including 10 in the face. You robbed her of all dignity in death by decapitating her and trying to dismember her.
'For two days after, you indulged in drug abuse and watching pornography, contacting her mother and pretending to be her.'
He added: 'The way you treated this innocent young woman after her death meant her family did not have the comfort of saying goodbye to her.'
The judge told Methven: 'The letter by you answers none of the questions which must be plaguing the family. You blame the effect of substances but that is no excuse.'
Hashtags

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


Fox News
26 minutes ago
- Fox News
Hollywood heir accused of beheading wife, in-laws dies in custody days before release of key evidence
Sam Haskell IV, the Hollywood scion accused of chopping up his wife and in-laws before tossing a disembodied torso into a dumpster, has died in a Los Angeles jail while awaiting trial, according to authorities. Los Angeles District Attorney Nathan Hochman revealed in a statement that prosecutors had damning new evidence against him that was going to be made public at an upcoming preliminary hearing — including that he was having an affair with a 27-year-old woman and had been arrested with a bloodsoaked knife containing the DNA of all three victims. Corrections officers found the 37-year-old dead in his cell Saturday, days before the hearing, where prosecutors were expected to outline the case against him. He previously pleaded not guilty. "Instead of standing before a judge and answering for the crimes he's been charged with, the defendant managed to escape justice," Hochman said in a statement. "This is one last cruel act by someone who did the most horrific things for reasons we will never entirely know. A family that has been dealing with unimaginable loss now has been robbed of their chance to face him, hold him accountable for his barbaric actions, and openly share their grief and their cherished memories of their loved ones." Haskell's attorney did not immediately respond to a request for comment. He previously told Fox News Digital that the court's assertion his client was at risk of self-harm was "wild speculation" and condemned a judge's decision that forced him to appear shirtless or wear a protective vest at prior hearings. Haskell, who opted to face the court without a shirt, was facing three counts of murder for the Nov. 6, 2023 slayings of his wife Mei Haskell, 37, her mother Yanxiang Wang, 64, and her stepfather Gaoshan Li, 71, as well as additional special circumstance allegations. He would have faced life in prison without parole if convicted. "He was obviously an unhinged individual," said Joshua Ritter, a former Los Angeles deputy district attorney and a Fox News contributor. "The crime itself speaks to his mental unrest. It's not so uncommon that we see people commit murders based on financial or marital difficulties, but the idea of going as far as killing your in-laws and chopping their body parts up is very extreme." Hochman's office released a summary of the evidence prosecutors planned to unseal at the hearing. After killing and dismembering all three victims, he allegedly paid $500 to a group of day laborers he asked to remove a series of heavy black trash bags from the home, where they all lived together, according to prosecutors. After picking up the bags, one of the workers looked inside and saw human remains. The day laborers gave the money and the bags back to Haskell and called police. Investigators previously said that by the time officers arrived at his house, Haskell and the bags were gone. Fox News Digital also reported that surveillance cameras at a gym in Encino showed him placing a heavy bag in the dumpster outside. A homeless man looking through the trash made the gruesome discovery and called 911. Police found his wife's car, which had her stepfather's blood inside, Hochman's office revealed Monday. They tracked Haskell to an Airbnb nearby, which investigators allege he had rented for himself and the children he shared with Mei Haskell after the murders. When police arrested Haskell, he was carrying a pocket knife and a Home Depot receipt from a few days earlier listing plywood, a moisture barrier, coveralls and diamond saw blades, Hochman's office said Monday. In his rented SUV, he had a loaded .357 revolver, 32 rounds, a blood-covered knife, the family's passports and a one-way ticket to Japan, according to authorities. They separately seized $67,000 cash during a search on his office. DNA testing on the knife matched blood to all three victims, according to prosecutors. "You do have to take into account the timing of all of this," Ritter told Fox News Digital. "He's been in prison for some time. I imagine he had opportunities for this kind of action before now. But it does seem interesting that it would come on the eve of a date that would expose all of the horrible things that he'd been up to." Police later recovered eight more bags containing bloody evidence, but not the remains of his in-laws — and they said that "large amounts of blood" had been cleaned up at the family home. As for Haskell's alleged 27-year-old mistress, authorities say she told them Haskell told her in October 2023, shortly before the murders, that his parents would be taking over care for his children. Then he invited her on a trip to Japan. In addition to the one-way ticket he had, prosecutors say he bought her a round-trip ticket. "It's interesting to me that, here's a guy looking at life in prison without parole, multiple murders, it's as bad as it's going to get," Ritter said. "There's a strong likelihood that he will never see the outside of the prison again, but he is such a narcissist that he is more concerned with the embarrassment of perhaps his extramarital affair becoming exposed than he is with life in prison — if that is what motivated this." The remains of Mei Haskell's parents have not been found. Haskell's parents, Hollywood producer Sam Haskell III and beauty queen and actress Mary Donnelly Haskell, are known for a series of Christmas movies. His father was also a former talent agent who represented George Clooney and Dolly Parton, among other A-list stars. He declined to comment.


CBS News
27 minutes ago
- CBS News
Man fatally shot by 2 Philadelphia police officers in Fairhill identified
Philadelphia police identified the 25-year-old man who was shot and killed by two officers in North Philly's Fairhill neighborhood in May. Police identified the 25-year-old man shot at the intersection of Mutter and Somerset streets on May 21 as Bruce Harry Garcia. The two officers who fired their weapons were identified as Edward Lane and Matthew Galdo. According to police, Lane and Galdo were in a marked Philadelphia police patrol car in full uniform just before 6:45 p.m. when they saw Garcia holding a black bag in the area of Front and Somerset streets. Police said that Garcia fled on foot when Lane and Galdo attempted to stop him. He ran westbound on Somerset Street. Lane and Galdo caught up to Garcia at the intersection of Mutter and Somerset streets, where a struggle ensued, according to police. Police said Lane and Galdo tackled Garcia to the ground to prevent him from accessing a handgun in his bag. During the struggle, Garcia grabbed the gun and discharged it through the bag, police said. Police said Lane and Galdo then both fired their weapons and struck Garcia in the chest area. Garcia then dropped the weapon and the black bag. Police didn't say if anything else was inside the bag besides the weapon. Garcia was pronounced dead at Temple University Hospital at 6:55 p.m., according to police. Police said that Galdo and Lane were both wearing active body cameras. The cameras captured "portions of the incident," according to police, but they were "knocked off during the struggle." Police said other cameras from the scene depict the shooting, along with body camera video from another officer. Police said that investigators believe that because Garcia's firearm was inside a bag at the time of discharging, it wasn't able to recoil properly. Because of this, police believe this may have led to a malfunction that caused the bullet to not eject from the chamber. Lane, 32, has been with the Philadelphia Police Department for 11 years, while Galdo, 29, has been with the department for five years. Both of the officers sustained scrapes during the incident, but didn't require medical attention. Both Lane and Galdo have been placed on administrative duty, per Philadelphia Police Department policy. The shooting is under investigation.
Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Man arrested in 2024 murder of mother, grandmother in Etobicoke
A man has been arrested in connection with the murder of his mother and grandmother in Etobicoke last summer, police say. On Aug. 23, 2024, police were called to a home in the area of Sheldon and Silvercrest avenues for a well-being check, Toronto police said in a news release Monday. When officers arrived, they found two women injured in the home. They were pronounced dead at the scene. The two victims were identified as Sharon Fraser, 60, and Colleen Fraser, 82, both of Toronto, police said. Police said last year that they were searching for a male suspect that was considered dangerous. On Monday, police said Joseph Ayala, 34, from Toronto, had been arrested and charged with two counts of second-degree murder. The man was the son of one woman and the grandson of the other, police told CBC News. Police have not determined a motive for the deaths.