Covid lockdown allowed son to live with his mom's body for two months — what the police found in their flat shocked everyone – We Got This Covered
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TENBY, WALES - JULY 14: A general view of Castle Hill and the Prince Albert Memorial which is located behind holiday apartments on July 14, 2020 in Tenby, Wales. United Kingdom. As from the 13th of July 2020, self-catering accommodation in Wales has now been allowed to open long as they have their own private facilities. (Photo by Huw Fairclough/Getty Images)
Photo by Huw Fairclough/Getty Images

Covid lockdown allowed son to live with his mom’s body for two months — what the police found in their flat shocked everyone

The alibi that came free with the lockdown.

Covid-19 gave the world a lot of things nobody asked for, but perhaps the most chilling was the realization that “she’s isolating” could double as a murderer’s alibi.

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On February 20, 2021 (per a report by the BBC) police in Pembroke Dock forced open the door of a one-bedroom flat on Market Street after neighbors reported something that had been nagging at them for weeks: the bedroom window had been open all winter. What officers found inside had been there for two months. And the man who committed the crime had been answering the phone calls the whole time.

Judith Morgan, 68, was the kind of person a neighborhood notices when she’s gone. Not because she made a fuss, but because her friends described her as reminding them of the Keeping Up Appearances character Mrs. Bouquet due to her warm and approachable character.

In December 2020, right in the thick of the strictest pandemic restrictions in Wales, Dale Morgan, then 43, beat his mother to death with a hammer in her one-bedroom flat in Market Street, Pembroke Dock. Then he stayed. For two months, he remained in that flat with Judith’s remains, fielding calls from concerned neighbors, reassuring police over the phone, and spinning increasingly elaborate lies about her whereabouts.

His neighbor Michelle had already noticed something was off. Judith’s bedroom window had been left open all winter — strange, especially when Morgan’s explanation was that the cold air “does her asthma good.”

When Michelle asked to chat with Judith over the garden wall (as they’d done a hundred times before), Morgan said she wasn’t well. When infection rates soared and people grew more worried, he told anyone who asked that she’d “took a turn for the worst” and was in hospital.

And that’s probably the most chilling part. Under normal circumstances, any of those welfare checks might have triggered a follow-up. But in the winter of 2020, “she’s isolating” was the most airtight excuse a person could offer for their absence.

Eventually, the neighbors called emergency services, and when officers arrived at the flat and got no response, they peered through the window. What they saw forced them to break down the door. Judith lay beside her bed, partially clothed, her head covered with a bag tied with a cord. She had been there for two months.

Morgan turned himself in a little while later and refused to explain why he killed his own mother. According to notes that Judith left behind, Dale had been stealing from her to sustain his drug addiction. The most likely theory is that Judith confronted Dale about the stealing, and things got out of hand from there.

Dale Morgan is serving a minimum of 21 years, and he still hasn’t decided to talk.


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Author
Image of Jonathan Wright
Jonathan Wright
Jonathan is a religious consumer of movies, TV shows, video games, and speculative fiction. And when he isn't doing that, he likes to write about them. He can get particularly worked up when talking about 'The Lord of the Rings' or 'A Song of Ice and Fire' or any work of high fantasy, come to think of it.