Killer jailed for 'brutal and sustained assault'

Ellen Knightin Stafford
News imageWest Mercia Police A man with brown hair and short facial hair is wearing a grey top in the photo. He is looing at the camera. There is a West Mercia Police logo in the top left corner of the image. West Mercia Police
Adam Rowson was found guilty of murdering 46-year-old Alexis De Naray

A man who murdered a chef in Shrewsbury has been sentenced to life in prison with a minimum term of 16 years.

Adam Rowson, 26, of no fixed address, carried out what the prosecution described as a "brutal and sustained assault" on Alexis De Naray, 46, last year.

The men had met at the Royal Shrewsbury Hospital in the early hours of 24 June, and Rowson offered De Naray somewhere to stay. The chef's body was found three days later in an empty garage near the Shelton Water Tower in the town.

The killer subjected him to a "fierce, sustained and relentless attack" and "left him to die", judge Avik Mukherjee told Stafford Crown Court.

The court heard De Naray suffered a traumatic brain injury, with severe rib fractures that it was told are associated with stamping and kicking.

Rowson, who was convicted of murder last month, stole the victim's bank card, using it to buy alcohol and scratch cards.

The judge said: "[De Naray] was a damaged and vulnerable person who was struggling with alcoholism up until his passing."

He added: "By the time you [Rowson] left him in the disused garage, probably on the 25th June, he had been so severely beaten by you he was dying or dead.

"Rather than calling for help, you left him to die."

News imageWest Mercia Police A man with glasses and dark hair is looking at the camera in this portrait-shaped photo.West Mercia Police
Alexis De Naray [pictured] was a "very talented chef", his father said

The victim's father, Constantine De Naray, said "no parent should have to bury their own child".

His son was a "very talented chef" and his death had had a "life-changing" impact on family, the father stated.

Younger brother Alexandros De Naray said his sibling was "my best friend", a "very charitable character" and "extremely funny and outgoing".

The judge stated Rowson "lied to emergency services and you lied to police at the scene".

"You threw clothes away that you thought might implicate you," he stated.

Defending, Michelle Heeley KC said Rowson was sorry and alcohol and drugs had contributed "significantly" to what he had done.

She said he "recognises the pain he has caused the family" and that he was now clean of drink and drugs.

Det Insp Jo Delahay, from West Mercia Police, said it was "a brutal and senseless attack on an innocent man" and the force hoped the sentence "brings them [De Naray's family] some measure of comfort".

She stated they had shown "remarkable strength, dignity and courage as they have listened to the harrowing details of what happened to him".

Rowson was sentenced to life with a minimum term of 16 years, less 311 days on remand.

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