Finley Boden: Safeguarding review published after tragic death of murdered Chesterfield baby on Christmas Day

His parents were handed life sentences.
Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

A 10-month-old baby who was murdered by his parents just weeks after being placed back into their care "should have been one of the most protected children in the local authority area", a safeguarding review has concluded.

Finley Boden's parents, Shannon Marsden and Stephen Boden, inflicted 130 injuries on their son before he fatally collapsed at his family home in Old Whittington, ChesterfieldDerbyshire, on Christmas Day 2020.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Finley had been returned to their care on November 17 that year by a family court, despite social services raising concerns over Boden and Marsden's drug use and the state of the family home.

Finley Boden. The 10-month-old baby who was murdered by his parents just weeks after being placed back into their care "should have been one of the most protected children in the local authority area", a safeguarding review has concluded.Finley's parents, Shannon Marsden and Stephen Boden, inflicted 130 injuries on their son before he fatally collapsed at his family home in Old Whittington.Finley Boden. The 10-month-old baby who was murdered by his parents just weeks after being placed back into their care "should have been one of the most protected children in the local authority area", a safeguarding review has concluded.Finley's parents, Shannon Marsden and Stephen Boden, inflicted 130 injuries on their son before he fatally collapsed at his family home in Old Whittington.
Finley Boden. The 10-month-old baby who was murdered by his parents just weeks after being placed back into their care "should have been one of the most protected children in the local authority area", a safeguarding review has concluded.Finley's parents, Shannon Marsden and Stephen Boden, inflicted 130 injuries on their son before he fatally collapsed at his family home in Old Whittington.

After returning home, Finley was subjected to a campaign of abuse and was found to have 130 separate injuries at the time of his death, as well as conditions including sepsis and pneumonia.

Marsden and Boden were handed life sentences with respective minimum terms of 27 and 29 years at Derby Crown Court in May.

On Wednesday, the Derby and Derbyshire Safeguarding Children Partnership published the findings of a Local Child Safeguarding Practice Review into Finley's death.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The review, which has been anonymised, said: "In this instance, a child died as the result of abuse when he should have been one of the most protected children in the local authority area."

Shannon Marsden and Stephen Boden inflicted 130 injuries on their son before he fatally collapsed at his family home in Old WhittingtonShannon Marsden and Stephen Boden inflicted 130 injuries on their son before he fatally collapsed at his family home in Old Whittington
Shannon Marsden and Stephen Boden inflicted 130 injuries on their son before he fatally collapsed at his family home in Old Whittington

The review stated that, while Finley's parents were responsible for his death, "professional interventions should have protected him".

It said the "most significant professional decision" was that he should live with his parents, and concluded that "the safeguarding environment in which that decision was made had been incrementally weakened by the decisions, actions, circumstances and events which preceded it".

Most of what had been experienced by Finley in the final weeks of his life "was unknown to professionals working with the family at that time", the report said.

Baby Finley Boden pictured here before he was returned to Boden and MarsdenBaby Finley Boden pictured here before he was returned to Boden and Marsden
Baby Finley Boden pictured here before he was returned to Boden and Marsden
Hide Ad
Hide Ad

But it added: "The review has found, nevertheless, that safeguarding practice during that time was inadequate."

At their sentencing last year, Mrs Justice Amanda Tipples said Marsden and Boden were "persuasive and accomplished liars" who "brutally assaulted" their son.

Derbyshire County Council's children's services apologised for the "missed opportunities".

The council's executive director for children's services, Carol Cammiss, described Finley's death as "a tragedy for everyone who knew him and everyone involved in his care".

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

She said: "Despite the significant Covid restrictions placed on our work at the time, we know there were missed opportunities for stronger practice and we apologise for that."

She said the council had acted quickly after Finley's death to "review and strengthen our systems and continue to monitor the way we work with babies and families" and that it accepts the findings and recommendations of the review "and takes full responsibility for its actions in this case".

The Derby and Derbyshire Safeguarding Children Partnership said it accepts the review's recommendations in full and will "take the additional action necessary to further reduce the risk of a repeat of a similar incident".

The review made 11 recommendations in total, including that the partnership carries out "a multi-agency audit" of recent parenting assessments to consider the quality of analysis and conclusions, involvement of partner agencies, evidence of scrutiny by managers. and, effectiveness of information-sharing and professional challenge.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Other recommendations included that the local authority should provide evidence by the end of June of improved practice in distinguishing between informal family arrangements and formal placements - in which the local authority has responsibility to provide support - since 2020.

The review also made recommendations on the safeguarding children partnership working with local public health commissioners of substance misuse services, and to ensure arrangements are in place "to deliver an effective local response to domestic abuse".