YouTube removes account of man who murdered Natalie McNally
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Natalie McNally was 15 weeks pregnant when she was murdered by McCullagh in her home in December 2022.
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YouTube removes account of man who murdered Natalie McNally 16 minutes ago Share Save Cormac Campbell South east reporter, BBC News NI Share Save The YouTube account of Stephen McCullagh, the content creator convicted of the murder of Natalie McNally, has been removed by the platform. Ms McNally was 15 weeks pregnant when she was murdered by McCullagh, her partner, in her Lurgan home in December 2022. He had pre-produced and outputted a six hour gaming stream on his YouTube account that he had presented as being live on the night of Natalie's death. He used this as cover to travel to her home and brutally kill her. He then presented it as an alibi to police and her family whilst continuing to blame a former boyfriend of Natalie's for her death. Although it is understood that the gaming stream, entitled Violent Night, had already been demonetised, it remained on his YouTube account throughout the court process. How content creator killer hoped a YouTube alibi would help him avoid justice 'I'll always remember Natalie's dark, witty humour' 'We treated Natalie like a princess, we'll love her forever' Some of those involved in his prosecution had raised concerns that dozens of other sci-fi and gaming videos produced by McCullagh on the account still had the potential to make him money. But following his conviction a YouTube spokesperson confirmed to BBC Newsbeat that: "We terminated the channels owned by this individual for violating our creator responsibility policies." McCullagh was told in court that he faces a life sentence . In May he will learn the minimum term he will serve. 'Profiting from infamy concerning' Justice Minister Naomi Long said that "anyone profiting from being infamous is always a major concern" and that she does not believe that anyone "should profit from criminal activity of any kind". Speaking on Good Morning Ulster, she described how "in many cases" social media companies are "like the wild west and trying to corral it and control it can be inc...
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