CCTV footage shows Kyle O’Callaghan confronting victim Marcus Carpenter outside a Wetherspoon pub in Gwent before delivering a fatal punch
Disturbing CCTV footage shows a killer confronting his victim outside a Wetherspoon pub shortly before delivering a fatal punch.
Kyle O’Callaghan, 30, has been jailed for 10 years and six months, with an extended licence period of four years, for killing 37-year-old Marcus Carpenter by assaulting him outside the Picture House in Ebbw Vale, Gwent, on February 21 this year.
CCTV footage played to Newport Crown Court shows O’Callaghan asking his victim: “Do you want to come outside and have a word with me a minute?” The pair then walked to an alleyway outside the pub, where O’Callaghan punched Mr Carpenter in the face.
The two men continued speaking for several minutes before Mr Carpenter tried to walk away, but O’Callaghan grabbed his fleece and delivered a second punch. Mr Carpenter had his arms by his side when O’Callaghan threw the “fatal, sickening blow” to his head, the court heard.
Separate police body-worn footage shows O’Callaghan attempting to escape through a bedroom window when officers arrived at his home to arrest him, Wales Online reports. On Friday, Judge Daniel Williams sentenced O’Callaghan, of no fixed abode, after he pleaded guilty to manslaughter at an earlier hearing.
The court heard both Mr Carpenter and O’Callaghan had visited the Picture House on the evening of February 20 with separate groups of friends. O’Callaghan approached Mr Carpenter at around midnight, asking him “who are you then?” and telling him to follow him outside. It was in an alleyway outside the JD Wetherspoon pub that O’Callaghan struck Mr Carpenter twice, “unprovoked”, before fleeing the scene.
Mr Carpenter collapsed and was pronounced dead in hospital on February 24, having suffered severe head injuries.
Judge Williams said: “You headed to the table where Marcus Carpenter and his friends were, you recognised one of his friends from him working in a pub in Tredegar.
“You then approached Marcus Carpenter and asked who he was … You had heard that Marcus Carpenter had been saying things about you to other people. You are very quick to think that you’ve been wronged by others, whatever the truth of the situation.”
The court heard there “didn’t appear to be any bad feeling” between the two men before Mr Carpenter followed O’Callaghan outside. The judge said: “What happened outside the pub was caught on CCTV, you were spoiling for a fight, you felt disrespected.”
Judge Williams said O’Callaghan behaved “in an overbearing, aggressive and intimidating way towards Mr Carpenter, who at no stage was hostile, let alone aggressive,” towards him. “But you were determined to harm Mr Carpenter, whatever he did, and however uninterested he was in engaging with you,” the judge said.
The court heard that after Mr Carpenter collapsed, O’Callaghan attempted to drag his body and slapped him before fleeing the scene. O’Callaghan later told police he had acted in “self-defence”, claiming Mr Carpenter had been aggressive towards him.
Judge Williams said: “Your selfishness seems limitless. You claimed at first to be acting in self-defence – it was, of course, nothing of the sort. Your actions have caused unimaginable grief, loss and sadness.”
In a tribute issued after his death, Mr Carpenter’s family described him as a “beloved son, partner and dad”. They said: “Marcus was one of a kind with the kindest of hearts who would help anyone out he could. His passing has left a massive hole in the lives of everyone close to him.”









