'Unofficial carer' found guilty of man's murder

Maisie OlahWest Midlands
News imagePA Media A bald man with a white beard and brown-tinted sunglasses inclines his head as he looks towards a camera. He is outside on a sunny day.PA Media
The decomposing body of Leon Pratt was found wrapped in a duvet at his Telford home in October 2024

An "unofficial carer" has been found guilty of murdering a man whose body went undiscovered for 12 days.

The body of Leon Pratt, 64, was found wrapped in a duvet at his home in Downemead in Hollinswood, Telford, in October 2024.

Jason Trundle was found guilty at Worcester Crown Court on Thursday, and previously pleaded guilty to preventing a lawful burial and fraud by false representation after using Pratt's bank card in a shop while he lay dead.

The 52-year-old will be sentenced on Friday.

News imageWest Mercia Police Blurry mugshot of a bald man with brown eyes wearing a navy topWest Mercia Police
Trundle was found guilty of murdering Pratt

Trundle had moved in with Pratt, who had several health conditions and used a wheelchair and walking sticks, after they met on social media, the court previously heard.

Jurors were told Trundle had nowhere to live and moved in with Pratt to provide him day-to-day care.

The pair had known each other for about a year-and-a-half.

During a previous hearing, prosecution counsel Richard Barraclough KC said: "He told Mr Pratt he was homeless and was invited to live with him. He was Mr Pratt's unofficial carer."

News imagePA Media A bald man in a black t-shirt and dark trousers sits on a cream armchair in a room with dark floral wallpaper behind and a single bed next to him with brown duvet and pink cushions. He is seen talking to a male paramedic, in dark green uniform, whose face can't be seen. A dog's bowl is on the left and a clothes airer.PA Media
Footage released by West Mercia Police revealed Jason Trundle speaking to paramedics in Leon Pratt's home

Pratt was discovered after neighbours called emergency services on 26 October 2024 to report they had not seen Pratt, who was "very switched on".

The paramedics told the court how they could "smell something putrid like rotting flesh coming from the property".

Bodycam footage worn by them showed Trundle pointing to a closed bedroom door, and saying: "He's been dead for about 12 days."

A post-mortem examination found Pratt had internal injuries to his ribs, lower back and his throat and neck structures.

The court heard previously that he had several fractured ribs, that would have been caused by a force equivalent to a fall from standing height onto a hard surface, with seven fractures to part of the neck "most probably caused by manual strangulation".

Follow BBC Shropshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.