YouTuber who staged fake livestream to give himself alibi to murder his pregnant girlfriend is jailed for 31 years

A YouTuber staged a ‘sinister’ fake gaming livestream to cover up his pregnant girlfriend’s murder – then pretended to discover her body a day after beating and stabbing her to death.

Stephen McCullagh has been sentenced to a life term with a minimum of 31 years after killing Natalie McNally in Lurgan, Co Armagh on December 18 2022.

He had concocted a twisted alibi ahead of time, having pre-recorded himself playing Grand Theft Auto on a Christmas-themed stream he entitled ‘No Time To Die’.

During the stream, he repeatedly told viewers it was Sunday and claimed the ‘live chat’ functionality was malfunctioning – both covering the fact he wasn’t really sat in front of his computer.

In fact, McCullagh used the six hours of fake gameplay to travel to his partner’s home where he beat, strangled and stabbed her to death. 

She had logged in to YouTube watch his livestream shortly before he arrived, believing him to be at home. He was there for just 40 minutes.

Ms McNally, 32, suffered three stab wounds to the neck, multiple traumatic blows to the head and injuries consistent with strangulation. She was 15 weeks pregnant with his unborn child, named Dean. McCullagh left her face down in a dog bowl.

Not yet done, he returned to the house a day later and made a mock-hysterical 999 call after ‘discovering’ her body, telling an operator: ‘No… she’s cold. There’s blood everywhere.’

Stephen McCullagh killed his pregnant girlfriend while pretending to broadcast live on his YouTube channel, which had 37,000 subscribers

Natalie McNally, 32, was 15 weeks pregnant when she was violently attacked and killed

Natalie McNally, 32, was 15 weeks pregnant when she was violently attacked and killed

McCullagh had pre-recorded a Christmas-themed livestream of himself wearing a Santa hat and playing Grand Theft Auto that he sought to use as an alibi

McCullagh had pre-recorded a Christmas-themed livestream of himself wearing a Santa hat and playing Grand Theft Auto that he sought to use as an alibi

McCullagh sought to frame his partner’s ex-boyfriend for the murder – and turned to his victim’s family for comfort as he maintained his illusion of innocence.

He attended her wake on Christmas Day at her parents’ home and a public rally in her memory on January 28, where he was described as her ‘loving partner’.

Police had initially ruled him out as a suspect – but at the end of January they arrested him having deduced that the livestream was a fake.

Wearing a grey t-shirt and grey tracksuit bottoms as he stood in the dock, McCullagh was impassive as he was handed a life sentence prison tariff of 31 years by a judge in Belfast Crown Court today.

The fake livestream remained available to view on his YouTube channel – which had 37,000 followers – until he was found guilty of murder in March.

It was described by trial judge Mr Justice Kinney as an ‘integral’ part of his plan to murder his partner, whom it emerged had slept with a former boyfriend in October 2022, two months after she had begun dating the gaming streamer.

She had also been in contact with other men, one of whom had asked if she and McCullagh were planning to break up. 

Prosecutors suggested that he may have been driven to kill her after seeing the messages. He had previously assaulted a former ‘on-off’ girlfriend after she had shared intimate images with another man.

He has never given any explanation for his actions – and had even been comforted by his victim’s family at her wake on Christmas Day. 

In a social media post written weeks after killing Ms McNally, he wrote: ‘I don’t think I ever will fully be myself again. I’ve just lost too much. But I’m still here.’

The judge said his culpability for the attack was nevertheless ‘extremely high’, describing his attack as ‘brutal and frenzied’.

He told the murderer: ‘Stephen McCullagh, you have committed a brutal and senseless murder. You planned this murder in remorseless detail. 

‘You attacked someone you profess to love in a frenzied assault, which was characterised by its excessive and gratuitous violence.

‘Despite that frenzy, the killing was cold-blooded and calculated, as evidenced by the extensive planning leading up to the murder and your actions afterwards. 

‘Your behaviour towards the McNally family showed your absolute determination to cover your tracks.’

McCullagh gave no reaction as the sentence was handed down, and Ms McNally’s loved ones watched in silence as he was led from the dock before hugging one another.

Speaking outside court, Ms McNally’s father Notel said he hoped the sentence would act as to deter others from committing violence against women and girls.

‘Over the past three and a half years, our family have been through unimaginable pain and grief from the loss of our beautiful Natalie,’ he said, alongside his wife Bernie.

‘Today is not a celebration of the sentence handed down as Bernadette, my boys and myself are serving a life sentence since the murder of our beloved Natalie, but hopefully it will serve as a deterrent to help stop violence against women and girls in this country.’

Ms McNally's parents Noel and Bernie (pictured above with a photograph of her) said they hoped the sentence would serve as a deterrent against violence towards women

Ms McNally’s parents Noel and Bernie (pictured above with a photograph of her) said they hoped the sentence would serve as a deterrent against violence towards women

A social media post McCullagh made advertising his livestream - another element of what prosecutors called his 'sinister' plan to cover his tracks

A social media post McCullagh made advertising his livestream – another element of what prosecutors called his ‘sinister’ plan to cover his tracks

Stephen McCullagh is seen on a bus heading towards his girlfriend's house in Lurgan - where she was about to tune into his fake livestream believing it was real

Stephen McCullagh is seen on a bus heading towards his girlfriend’s house in Lurgan – where she was about to tune into his fake livestream believing it was real

Prosecutors said they have never encountered a murder with ‘such a level of premeditation’ after McCullagh recorded himself playing video games, drinking Guinness and eating crisps for six hours.

Catherine Kierans, of the Public Prosecution Service for Northern Ireland, said it had been ‘absolutely chilling’ to watch the pre-recorded broadcast knowing what he was planning to do in its wake.

‘We’re dealing with a domestic murder, then you’ve got these really unusual features, the level of planning, the premeditation here was off the scale,’ she said.

‘I have been a lawyer for 27 years. I’ve never seen a case like this in terms of domestic murder with such a level of premeditation, planning, thinking of every possible aspect, the wearing of a disguise, the forensic awareness, the framing of the ex-partner.’

McCullagh was snared thanks to CCTV evidence that showed him travelling from Dunmurry to Lurgan before returning home via taxi after missing the last train home, where he was seen disposing of clothing in a bin that was emptied the next day.

Phone data also showed that his mobile phone was ‘inactive’ during the killing, Ms Kierans said, only to be reactivated upon his return home.

McCullagh is seen walking along the street late at night on Sunday - shortly after beating and stabbing his girlfriend to death

McCullagh is seen walking along the street late at night on Sunday – shortly after beating and stabbing his girlfriend to death

McCullagh later sought to further cover his tracks with a self-indulgent social media post in which he said: 'I've just lost too much. But I'm still here'

McCullagh later sought to further cover his tracks with a self-indulgent social media post in which he said: ‘I’ve just lost too much. But I’m still here’

Bodyworn footage shows the moment McCullagh is arrested for the first time - before police let him go, initially discounting him as a suspect

Bodyworn footage shows the moment McCullagh is arrested for the first time – before police let him go, initially discounting him as a suspect

She added that she considered the fake livestream – which included references to murder – was ‘sinister’: ‘I found the six-hour video to be absolutely chilling, because we know that it was made as an alibi with this murder in the planning.

‘We will never know, because McCullagh has not explained himself, but we have to assume that everything in that video is intentional and deliberate.

‘[We have to assume] these apparent references to murder, to Natalie, that they are intentional, and that’s really chilling, because you think there’s a level of brazenness, there’s a level of enjoyment, potentially.’

At the heart of the case, however, was ‘the brutal murder of a young woman’ who should not be forgotten, she added.

‘Natalie was pregnant, she had everything to live for, a very intelligent woman, vibrant, full of life, full of excitement about her little baby coming, and, you know, we never lost sight of that, and we’re just so pleased that we got justice for her family.’

Natalie McNally’s murder: Timeline of key events 

– August 7 2022: Stephen McCullagh sends his first WhatsApp message to Natalie McNally after they made contact on the online dating app Bumble. His first message read ‘Hey Nat, it’s that robot weirdo from Bumble’ and they discussed meeting for their first date that week.

Over the next 133 days the two were to exchange hundreds of messages. The prosecution in McCullagh’s murder trial said that he had also accessed Ms McNally’s phone and saw messages she had exchanged with other men.

– October: McCullagh meets Ms McNally’s family for the first time.

– November: The McNally family are told that the couple are expecting a baby.

– December 14/15: McCullagh pre-records The Violent Night Christmas Live Gaming Stream. The six hour and four minute gaming session shows McCullagh playing Grand Theft Auto while drinking alcohol, swearing and at one point repeatedly shouting at a character in the game to die. During the session McCullagh makes repeated mention that it is being broadcast live on the Sunday (December 18).

– December 16/17: McCullagh tells friends he will broadcast a gaming session live on Sunday evening.

– December 18: Ms McNally is in McCullagh’s home in Woodland Gardens in Lisburn while he is searching timetables for a bus from Dunmurry to Lurgan and a later train from Lurgan back to Lisburn. Ms McNally later leaves McCullagh’s house to go to her parents’ home to watch the World Cup final between Argentina and France before returning to her own house at Silverwood Green in Lurgan.

4pm: McCullagh posts an advert on YouTube about his ‘live’ gaming session.

5.57pm: McCullagh messages Ms McNally saying that he is ‘off to stream the night away’. She replies: ‘Good luck, I might have a peek at your livestream later.’

6pm: The pre-recorded livestream begins. McCullagh’s telephone becomes inactive.

6.36pm: A man is captured on CCTV walking with a bag close to McCullagh’s house. The prosecution in the trial said the man was McCullagh.

7.36pm: Bus CCTV shows the man with his face covered travelling from Dunmurry to Lurgan. After getting off the bus in Lurgan, he is tracked on a number of cameras travelling down Market Street towards William Street, Lough Road and into Silverwood Green, where Ms McNally lives.

8.24pm: Ms McNally logs in to YouTube to watch part of McCullagh’s livestream gaming session.

8.51pm: McCullagh enters Ms McNally’s house.

9.31pm: McCullagh leaves Ms McNally’s house.

9.49pm: A man is seen on CCTV getting into a taxi near Fa Joe’s bar in Lurgan.

11.12pm: The taxi arrives at McCullagh’s house at Woodlands in Lisburn. He is seen on CCTV throwing two items over a hedge.

11.16pm: McCullagh’s phone is unlocked and becomes active.

– December 19:

12.05am: The recording of the gaming broadcast is manually stopped.

12.08am: McCullagh messages Ms McNally.

5.05pm: McCullagh messages Ms McNally ‘Are you ok?’.

5.25pm: He messages ‘Getting a little worried, let me know you are safe’.

6.55pm: McCullagh orders a KFC.

9.07pm: He messages Ms McNally stating he is ‘very concerned now’.

9.59pm: McCullagh arrives at Ms McNally’s house in Lurgan and makes a 10-minute 999 call. He tells emergency services ‘Please come as soon as you can, she’s pregnant, she’s cold’. He is asked by the call handler: ‘Is the patient breathing?’ and responds tearfully ‘No, she’s gone’, adding ‘there’s blood everywhere’. He tells the call handler Ms McNally was 15 weeks’ pregnant.

The trial heard that the victim had suffered a ‘horrendous beating’. Prosecutor Charles MacCreanor KC said: ‘Three stabs to the neck, multiple traumatic blows to her head. Injuries consistent with throttling and choking of her neck. I’m sorry to say it, left with her face in a dog bowl, like an animal’.

McCullagh is questioned by police about the death. In his initial interview he tells police he was doing a livestream at the time of her death and that he believes Ms McNally’s ex-boyfriend is the ‘only one that would harm her’.

He is asked by police ‘Had you anything whatsoever to do with the death of Natalie?’ to which he replied: ‘No comment’. His solicitor tells him: ‘Sorry, I think you could answer that.’ McCullagh tells police ‘No, no, no comment.’

– December 20:

7.34am: McCullagh is released by police.

– December 24: The McNally family are told McCullagh is no longer a suspect for the murder.

– December 25: McCullagh attends a wake for Ms McNally at her parents’ home on Christmas Day.

– January 26 2023: McCullagh visits the McNally family home again. When he departs the house, he leaves his phone behind and makes a 39-minute recording of the family speaking. He returns later to retrieve the phone.

– January 28: More than 1,000 people attend a rally in Lurgan in memory of Ms McNally. McCullagh attends the event. A video montage of images of Ms McNally is played and the crowd is told it was put together by McCullagh, ‘Natalie’s loving partner’.

– January 31: McCullagh is arrested again by police.

– February 1: During police interview McCullagh replies ‘no comment’ to a series of questions about Ms McNally’s murder. He is confronted for the first time with evidence that his gaming session had been pre-recorded. A detective tells him that his devices had been examined and there was no user generated activity during the hours when he claimed to be broadcasting live. He answers: ‘That is literally impossible because you can see it on YouTube.’

Following the interview McCullagh provides a statement to police in which he says the gaming session had been pre-recorded.

He added: ‘I think it is obvious the true killer of Natalie has left a clear circumstantial trail to link me to the murder.’

– February 2: McCullagh is charged with the murder of Ms McNally.

– February 23 2026: McCullagh goes on trial for the murder of Ms McNally at Belfast Crown Court.

– March 23: McCullagh is found guilty by the jury.

– June 3: McCullagh is told he must serve at least 31 years in jail before he can be considered for release.

You May Also Like

That Time Harley Quinn Tried to Make Joker Jealous By Kissing…Batman!?

Summary “My Boyfriend’s Back” highlights the twisted dynamic between Harley Quinn and…

Breaking Bad and 9 Other TV Shows That Were Hits From the Pilot

TV’s decades of existence and the ever-growing places to watch it have…

Biden References Iowa Shooting Then Pushes Gun Control That Wouldn't Have Stopped It

While giving a speech Monday at Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South…

High school gunman set to be freed as judge OKs resentencing

The latest headlines from our reporters across the US sent straight to…