Mark 'Iceman' Fellow's life inside 'Monster Mansion' as guards on 'high alert' because hitman has 'nothing to lose'

Mark 'Iceman' Fellow's life inside 'Monster Mansion' as guards on 'high alert' because hitman has 'nothing to lose'
© liverpoolecho.co.uk

Mark Fellows, 45, known as "Iceman," is believed to be one of 60 prisoners now living a segregated and isolated life in Monster Mansion, HMP Wakefield. The hitman, who previously shot dead gangland kingpins Paul Massey and John Kinsella, was convicted alongside David Taylor, 64, and Lee Newell, 57, of murdering child killer Kyle Bevan at the notorious Yorkshire prison.

The three men conspired to kill Bevan, who had been serving a life sentence for murdering his two-year-old stepdaughter Lola James in Wales. Bevan was stabbed 25 times in his cell with an improvised weapon on November 4 last year. His body was placed in his bed and covered with a blanket to give the impression he was asleep. CCTV footage showed the three killers following Bevan into his cell, leaving less than five minutes later. Bevan was never seen alive again. Fellows was also caught checking on the body to ensure it had not been discovered before prison officers found Bevan dead the following morning.

Massey was blasted with an Uzi sub-machine gun outside his own home in July 2015. Then in May 2018, Fellows shot Kinsella as he walked his dog with his pregnant partner in Rainford. Fellows has been handed his second whole life order at Leeds Crown Court, meaning he will never have the chance of freedom again.

The father-of-two, who prior to his incarceration was a hygiene-obsessed fitness fanatic, will now live the rest of his life behind prison walls. A prison source told the Echo that officers are expected to remain on high-alert as Fellows has nothing to lose while behind bars, though they believe he poses a greater risk to fellow inmates than to prison staff.

He will likely be kept apart from other prisoners under close supervision within a close supervision centre, one of six high-security facilities holding around 60 of the nation's most dangerous offenders. This means Fellows will have minimal human interaction, spending most of his days alone.

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