Thea Wilson: Nineteen days
Failed to add items
Add to basket failed.
Add to wishlist failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
Thea June Wilson of Greenock lived for nineteen days. She was healthy, thriving, and — in her grandmother's word to the High Court — perfect. On 14 July 2023, her mother, Nicole Blain, killed her, then spent nearly three years blaming another young child while posting tributes online. This spring, a jury in Glasgow convicted Blain of murder; on 28 May 2026, Lord Scott sentenced her to life with a minimum of nineteen years, dismissing her account as "absurd" and finding not a shred of remorse.
Tay covers this devastating, very recent case under the podcast's strictest harrowing-case protocol: the evidence stated once and clinically, no graphic dwelling, no amateur psychology — and Thea, her family, and the truth at the centre. Also in this episode: what Scots law means by "wicked recklessness"; why the judge's words — "struggling… but she had not accepted help" — are the moral centre of the case; the modern phenomenon of self-published, performed grief; and a closing message for any new parent at the end of their rope.
Content warnings: murder of an infant, child death, grief. Injuries referenced once, clinically. Listener discretion strongly advised, particularly for new or expectant parents and bereaved parents.
If you need support:
• Children 1st Parentline (Scotland): 08000 28 22 33 — support for any parent or carer who is struggling
• NSPCC helpline (concerns about a child): 0808 800 5000
• Cruse Scotland bereavement support: 0808 802 6161
• SANDS (baby loss support): 0808 164 3332
• Samaritans: 116 123 (free, 24/7)
• If you believe a child is in immediate danger, call 999
Key sources for this episode: contemporaneous court reporting of the trial and sentencing (STV News, The Scotsman, Sky News syndication, May–June 2026); Police Scotland statements following conviction and sentence; sentencing remarks of Lord Scott as reported.
Editorial note: the young child whom Blain attempted to blame is not identified or described in this episode in any way, and we ask listeners to extend that child the same protection in comments and discussion. No appeal had been confirmed at time of recording; we will report any developments with full sourcing.
*music by universfield from pixabay