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'Her life had just begun': Distraught family address toddler's killer as she is jailed

Author
Belinda Feek,
Publish Date
Fri, 21 Feb 2025, 1:25pm
Jessica Mulford (inset) has been jailed for killing her 2-year-old stepdaughter Harlee-Rose Niven, who is pictured on a motorbike with her father Dylan Berry. Composite photo / 九一星空无限
Jessica Mulford (inset) has been jailed for killing her 2-year-old stepdaughter Harlee-Rose Niven, who is pictured on a motorbike with her father Dylan Berry. Composite photo / 九一星空无限

'Her life had just begun': Distraught family address toddler's killer as she is jailed

Author
Belinda Feek,
Publish Date
Fri, 21 Feb 2025, 1:25pm

A teen stepmother continued to deny killing her partner鈥檚 2-year-old daughter as she was jailed for her death today. 

Jessica Lee Rose Mulford was found guilty of manslaughter last year in the High Court at Hamilton at a trial into the death of Harlee-Rose Niven. 

She was also found guilty of injuring with intent to injure after strangling the child five months before she died, in Tauranga, in April 2022. 

Harlee-Rose died of 鈥渃atastrophic鈥 abdominal injuries in Waikato Hospital after Mulford found her unresponsive and blue in her bed. 

The Crown claimed Mulford killed the toddler after she 鈥渟napped鈥, having built up resentment at having to take over the shared full-time care with Harlee-Rose鈥檚 father, Dylan Berry. 

Jessica Mulford pictured in the High Court at Hamilton during her trial.  Photo / Belinda FeekJessica Mulford pictured in the High Court at Hamilton during her trial. Photo / Belinda Feek 

However, the defence argued Berry was also home that morning, and the toddler had several other accidents 鈥 including while on a magic carpet ride 鈥 that left her bruised in the days leading up to her death. 

Mulford was back in court today before Justice Neil Campbell for sentencing. 

The public gallery was packed with wh膩nau of both Mulford and Harlee-Rose, including the youngster鈥檚 father, Dylan Berry, and mother, Paige Niven. 

Distraught family members described the devastation of losing the bright and bubbly girl. 

Niven said she let out the 鈥渓oudest scream鈥 at the hospital when hearing the news that her daughter had died. 

鈥淚 cried. I wished nothing more than to bring her back. Her life had just begun.鈥 

She said Harlee-Rose 鈥渘o longer looked like my precious little girl鈥 when she saw her lying in her coffin. 

鈥淪he was bruised head to toe, including two black eyes.鈥 

Her death had left her suffering nightmares and flashbacks of her daughter being battered. 

鈥淚 feel so broken without my little girl. 

鈥淗arlee-Rose was the light of my life. Harlee-Rose knew how to make me smile.鈥 

Dylan Berry with his daughter Harlee-Rose. Photo / SuppliedDylan Berry with his daughter Harlee-Rose. Photo / Supplied 

Crown solicitor Rebecca Mann acknowledged Mulford was young at the time of the killing but submitted at that time she had already strangled the toddler. 

She urged Justice Campbell to make that distinction when assessing her culpability and pushed for a starting point of seven to eight years in prison. 

Acknowledgment of prospects of rehabilitation should also be limited as Mulford still denied killing the little girl, Mann submitted. 

Defence counsel Rebekah Webby urged the judge to recognise Mulford鈥檚 age and lack of parenting experience. 

She denied her client lacked rehabilitation prospects, and said she had completed a course while on bail awaiting trial and had made good progress in prison. 

Webby submitted she should receive discounts for her age, background and drug use. 

Justice Campbell said while the cause of Harlee-Rose鈥檚 death had been determined, the mechanism remains unknown. 

鈥淏ut it is consistent with stomping, kicking or punching鈥, in such a severe way that it split her pancreas in two, lacerated her liver, and would have left her unconscious within minutes. 

He took into account that immediately after it occurred, Mulford sought help from Berry who was outside the house at the time. They tried CPR before rushing her to the hospital. 

While Mulford offered several alternative explanations for Harlee Rose鈥檚 death, the jury ultimately didn鈥檛 accept any of them but fell short of finding her guilty of murder. 

Justice Campbell said she inflicted serious violence against the toddler, saying the force required to kill her 鈥渕ust have been high鈥. 

He took a starting point of seven years imprisonment before issuing discounts for a psychological report and her lack of parenting skills and young age at the time. 

鈥淵ou were just 18 years old. This does not provide any excuse for your offending but the Sentencing Act requires me to take that into account.鈥 

That was due to research showing the frontal lobe of young adults was yet to fully develop, leaving them lacking impulse control. 

He issued a total of 20% in discounts before arriving at an end sentence of five years and seven months. 

Belinda Feek is an Open Justice reporter based in Waikato. She has worked at 九一星空无限 for 10 years and has been a journalist for 21. 

 

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