A “jealous” man who stabbed his pregnant ex-partner after stalking her for weeks has been jailed for attempted murder – after a court heard how his victim was convinced he would kill her and her unborn child.
Daniel Mihai Popescu, of no fixed abode, previously pleaded guilty to the attempted murder of Andreea Pintili in Aberfan, Merthyr Tydfil, last December.
Ms Pintilii was 37 weeks pregnant at the time of the attack.
Image: Aberfan, Wales
The 29-year-old also pleaded guilty to stalking Ms Pintili between 25 October and 6 December 2023.
He was sentenced to 17 years and four months in prison and a further three years on licence as part of an extended sentence. He denied an additional charge of intimidating a witness.
Merthyr Tydfil Crown Court heard on Wednesday afternoon that Popescu had been in a relationship with Andreea Pintili since about September 2020.
The prosecution said Popescu then developed a “gambling habit” and the couple separated around the time of August 2023.
Prosecuting, John Hipkin said Popescu had become “obsessed” with Ms Pintili in the months before the attack.
In one incident, on 31 October, Popescu “left two bags of his clothing outside her address”.
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“He proceeded to leave her a voicemail saying, ‘Don’t touch my clothes, I’m not going from the street until you get back together with me’,” Mr Hipkin said.
“He then repeatedly knocked her window. As a result of this, the defendant was arrested and released on bail, with a condition not to contact Andreea Pintili.”
Victim ‘tried to break free’
Ms Pintili then moved to the Aberfan area but Popescu found out.
At the time, he had been staying with a man called Stephen Phillips.
The prosecution said Mr Phillips had noted how Popescu had become “agitated and annoyed over a period of time” and that he had told him he was “going to stab his ex-girlfriend’s new partner”.
“On 5 December, the defendant travelled to Moy Road, Aberfan, where Andreea Pintili was then living,” Mr Hipkin added.
“The defendant had armed himself with a knife from the address at which he was staying. The knife had a seven-to-eight-inch blade.”
Image: The scene on Moy Road on 5 December after the stabbing. Pic: PA
Local schools and nurseries were placed under a precautionary lockdown for several hours when Popescu attacked Ms Pintili on 5 December 2023.
Officers from South Wales Police were called shortly before 9.10am to reports of a woman having been stabbed in Moy Road.
Ms Pintili sustained three superficial injuries to her thumb and two penetrating wounds to her back.
Scans revealed that her unborn child’s signs of life were normal and she was discharged from the University Hospital of Wales in Cardiff the following day.
The court was shown two pieces of footage, a 19-second clip which appeared to show Popescu crouching behind a vehicle with a knife in his hand, and another which showed the attack itself.
“The defendant told her that he had a knife and was going to kill her,” Mr Hipkin told the court.
“She tried to break free but fell to the floor. The defendant then proceeded to stab her a number of times.
“Perhaps fortunately a woman named Kira Terrett was walking her dog nearby. She screamed and ran to try and help and with that the defendant then ran off.”
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‘He wasn’t going to stop until he killed me and my unborn child’
In a victim’s statement read out in court on her behalf, Ms Pintili said she felt “lucky to be alive after this harrowing experience”.
“I have no doubt that, had he got me into the house, he would have killed me. This was clearly his intention that day, to kill me and my unborn child,” she added.
“He was very jealous and couldn’t handle the fact we’d split up and I had no intention of ever getting back with him. He wasn’t going to stop until he killed me.”
She said the attack had left her feeling “very anxious when leaving the house” and that she had to “relive this day over and over”.
In mitigation, Mr David Aubrey KC said Popescu entered a guilty plea and that he “desisted from the attack”.
Mr Aubrey also told the court that Popescu suffers from “low mood and anxiety”.
“He has expressed his remorse and regret, which is genuine,” he added.
But, while mitigating, Mr Aubrey said he did not seek to “minimise the terror that the victim experienced at the time of the attack”.
Sentencing Popescu, Judge Lloyd-Clarke said Popescu felt “very little true remorse”.
“In my judgement, the aggravating factors outweigh the mitigating factors,” she added.
Popescu was forbidden from contacting Ms Pintili or any of her children and was also banned from entering Merthyr Tydfil.
A power outage caused major travel disruption on London’s Tube network on Monday, stretching into rush hour.
The Elizabeth, Bakerloo, Jubilee and Northern lines were among the routes either suspended or delayed, with several stations closed and passengers forced to evacuate.
A spokesman for Transport for London (TfL) said there was an outage in southwest London for “a matter of minutes” and “everything shut down”.
National Grid confirmed a fault on its transmission network, which was resolved in “seconds”, but led to a “voltage dip” that affected some supplies.
The London Fire Brigade said the fault caused a fire at an electrical substation in Maida Vale, and it’s understood firefighters destroyed three metres of high-voltage cabling.
Image: The scene in Piccadilly Circus as passengers were evacuated
That came just weeks after a fire at the same substation, which saw elderly and vulnerable residents among those moved from their homes.
But today’s fire – between Cunningham Place and Aberdeen Place – is understood to have involved different equipment to the parts in the 29 April incident.
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TfL’s chief operating officer Claire Mann apologised for the disruption, adding: “Due to a brief interruption of the power supply to our network, several lines lost power for a short period earlier this afternoon.”
Passengers told Sky News of the disruption’s impact on their plans, with one claiming he would have had to spend £140 for a replacement ticket after missing his train.
He said he will miss a business meeting on Tuesday morning in Plymouth as a result.
Another said she walked to five different stations on Monday, only to find each was closed when she arrived.
“Supermax” jails could be built to house the most dangerous offenders following a spate of alleged attacks on staff, the prisons minister has said.
James Timpson told the Politics Hub with Sophy Ridge that “we shouldn’t rule anything out” when asked if the most dangerous criminals should be placed in top security prisons.
It comes after Southport triple killer Axel Rudakubana allegedly threw boiling water from a kettle at an officer at HMP Belmarsh on Thursday. Police are now investigating.
Speaking from HMP Preston for a special programme of the Politics Hub, Mr Timpson told Sophy Ridge: “We inherited a complete mess in the prison system.
“Violence is up, assaults on staff is up. But for me, we shouldn’t rule anything out.”
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He added: “What we need to do is to speak to our staff. They’re the experts at dealing with these offenders day in, day out. “
Mr Timpson – who was the chief executive of Timpson Group before he was appointed prisons minister last year – said the violence in prisons was “too high”.
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1:06
Are we sending too many people to prison?
He continued: “The number of people when you have prisons are so full, and the people in there are not going to education or into purposeful activity.
“You get more violence and that is totally unacceptable. Our staff turn up to work to help turn people.
“They want to turn people’s lives around. They didn’t turn up to work to get assaulted. It’s totally unacceptable.”
Reflecting on the crisis facing the UK prison system ahead of the government’s sentencing review, Mr Timpson said a major problem was the high rate of reoffending, saying “80% of offending is reoffending”.
He said people were leaving places like HMP Preston “addicted to drugs, nowhere to live, mental health problems – and that’s why they keep coming back”.
Asked whether every prison had a drugs issue, he replied: “100%.”
“If we want to keep the public safe, we need to do a lot more of the work in here and in the community. But also we need to build more prisons.”
Put to him that making more use of community sentences – thought to be one of the recommendations in the government’s sentencing review – might be considered a “cushy option” compared to a custodial sentence, Mr Timpson said: “There are some people in this prison tonight who would prefer to be in prison than do a community sentence – but that’s not everybody.
“Community sentences need to be tough punishments outside of prison, not just to help them address their offending behaviour, but also the victims need to see punishments being done too and for me, technology has a big part to play in the future.”
Nigel Farage has told Sky News he would allow some essential migration in areas with skill shortages but that numbers would be capped.
The Reform UK leader said he would announce the cap “in four years’ time” after he was pressed repeatedly by Sky’s deputy political editor Sam Coates about his manifesto pledge to freeze “non-essential” immigration.
It was put to Mr Farage that despite his criticism of the government’s migration crackdown, allowing essential migration in his own plans is quite a big caveat given the UK’s skills shortages.
However the Clacton MP said he would allow people to plug the gaps on “time dependent work permits” rather than on longer-term visas.
He said: “Let’s take engineering, for argument’s sake. We don’t train enough engineers, we just don’t. It’s crazy.
“We’ve been pushing young people to doing social sciences degrees or whatever it is.
“So you’re an engineering company, you need somebody to come in on skills. If they come in, on a time dependent work permit, if all the right health assurances and levies have been paid and if at the end of that period of time, you leave or you’re forced to leave, then it works.”
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28:27
‘We need to reduce immigration’
Reform’s manifesto, which they call a “contract”, says that “essential skills, mainly around healthcare, must be the only exception” to migration.
Pressed on how wide his exemption would be, Mr Farage said he hopes enough nurses and doctors will be trained “not to need anybody from overseas within the space of a few years”.
He said that work permits should be separate to immigration, adding: “If you get a job for an American TV station and you stay 48 hours longer than your work permit, they will smash your front door down, put you in handcuffs and deport you.
“We allow all of these routes, whether it’s coming into work, whether it’s coming as a student, we have allowed all of these to become routes for long-term migration.”
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1:51
Sky’s Sam Coates questions PM on migration
Asked if he would put a cap on his essential skills exemption, he said: “We will. I can’t tell you the numbers right now, I don’t have all the figures. What I can tell you is anyone that comes in will not be allowed to stay long-term. That’s the difference.”
Pressed if that was a commitment to a cap under a Reform UK government, he suggested he would set out further detail ahead of the next election, telling Coates: “Ask me in four years’ time, all right?”
Mr Farage was speaking after the government published an immigration white paper which pledged to ban overseas care workers as part of a package of measures to bring down net migration.
The former Brexit Party leader claimed the proposals were a “knee jerk reaction” to his party’s success at the local elections and accused the prime minister of not having the vigour to “follow them through”.
However he said he supports the “principle” of banning foreign care workers and conceded he might back some of the measures if they are put to a vote in parliament.
He said: “If it was stuff that did actually bind the government, there might be amendments on this that you would support. But I’m not convinced.”