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TWO EX-CONVICTS RELEASED FROM A PREVIOUS 'LIFE' SENTENCE ROBBED TORTURED AND BURNT WOMAN TO DEATH

Two ex-convicts Stephen Unwin and William McFall, who were convicted for separately robbing and killing a pensioner each in 1998 and 1996 respectively were released from HM prison Swaleside only to kill again.    The victim, Quyen Ngoc Nguyen, had employed Unwin as a handyman who lured her to his home in Shiney Row, near Sunderland, robbed her, then proceeded burn her alive in her car near allotments on August 15, 2017.
Quyen Ngoc Nguyen
Two ex-convicts Stephen Unwin and William McFall, who were convicted for separately robbing and killing a pensioner each in 1998 and 1996 respectively were released from HM prison Swaleside only to kill again.
The victim, Quyen Ngoc Nguyen, had
employed Unwin as a handyman who lured her to his home in Shiney Row, near Sunderland, robbed her, then proceeded burn her alive in her car near allotments on August 15, 2017.
Two ex-convicts Stephen Unwin and William McFall, who were convicted for separately robbing and killing a pensioner each in 1998 and 1996 respectively were released from HM prison Swaleside only to kill again.    The victim, Quyen Ngoc Nguyen, had employed Unwin as a handyman who lured her to his home in Shiney Row, near Sunderland, robbed her, then proceeded burn her alive in her car near allotments on August 15, 2017.
William McFall, 51
Unwin, 40, was found guilty of rape and McFall, 51, will be sentenced to their second life imprisonment next month after they were both found guilty of murder.
In an outburst, McFall shouted: '
"You've found an innocent man guilty, so you have. I have never had a fair trial."
Two ex-convicts Stephen Unwin and William McFall, who were convicted for separately robbing and killing a pensioner each in 1998 and 1996 respectively were released from HM prison Swaleside only to kill again.    The victim, Quyen Ngoc Nguyen, had employed Unwin as a handyman who lured her to his home in Shiney Row, near Sunderland, robbed her, then proceeded burn her alive in her car near allotments on August 15, 2017.
Stephen Unwin, 40
The victim's sister, Quynh Ngoc Nguyen, said the British justice system is "too kind to evil men."
Prosecutor Jamie Hill, QC, told the Court she was killed for "a combination of violent, warped sexual fantasy and greed."

On the night of the murder McFall sent a text message to Unwin, it reads:
"Are we raping the c****?"
Two ex-convicts Stephen Unwin and William McFall, who were convicted for separately robbing and killing a pensioner each in 1998 and 1996 respectively were released from HM prison Swaleside only to kill again.    The victim, Quyen Ngoc Nguyen, had employed Unwin as a handyman who lured her to his home in Shiney Row, near Sunderland, robbed her, then proceeded burn her alive in her car near allotments on August 15, 2017.
The victim's family with sympathizers
Forensics discovered that the mother-of-two was still alive when she was doused and set on fire in her car. The sick pair went to the bank to make some withdrawals from the victim's account.
They were arrested by the police who tracked them on CCTV.

They both blamed each other telling different stories in a failed attempt to escape justice. Unwin claimed McFall strangled their victim with a ligature, a scene he walked in on while buying cigarettes at the local Coop. McFall said he watched Unwin smother her before he went to the shop but a letter McFall sent to Unwin while on remand reads: 
"Destroy once you have read bro."
"Spent last week going through a law book in the library. With a bit of luck I've found a legal loophole."

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The Parole Board and probation service face possible lawsuit as their decision to free McFall and Unwin on licence is being heavily criticized by the family of the victim and a National Victims Association executive, David Hines agrees with suggesting that the Parole Board and probation service must be held accountable for McFall and Unwin being freed to kill again.

He said:
"The Parole Board makes these decision about who is and who is not fit to be freed from prison and when it goes wrong, as it has so catastrophically in this case, they are never held accountable and that is wrong."
"We need to put some fear into these people, some sense that the decisions they are making are vital to the safety of the general public but as things stand no action is ever taken when things go wrong."
"Someone involved in freeing these two people, in failing to monitor them correctly, in allowing this young woman's murder, should themselves be standing in front of a court to answer for their failings."
"It's another appalling example of how the justice system is failing the people it is set up to protect."

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The victim's sister, Quynh, 32, through an interpreter said:
"I don't want to blame anyone but it seems that the Government is too kind to these people, because what they have done is terrible."
"My sister has passed away and nothing can change that. But I believe that if these two people were released at some point in the future, then definitely some innocent people could be harmed."
"I think they should never be released, they are evil."
The sisters ran a nail bar in Gateshead, and lived together in Killingworth, North Tyneside, bringing up their children in the same house.

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Quynh, holding a framed photo of Quyen, said:
"I took all the courage that I have in order to know exactly what happened to my sister."
"But sometimes when I hear the stories from the two defendants, I was so resentful, I couldn't control myself."
"They make up stories that you just cannot imagine how they do things like that."
Quyen came from Vinh, a city in the north of Vietnam, and moved to the UK in 2010 to study business in London.

As well as working in the nail bar Quyen helped Vietnamese people who may not have had the correct documents to find accommodation.

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