Man who murdered family by setting fire to their flat in Nottingham jailed for 44 years
A man who murdered a mother and her two young children by setting fire to their flat in Nottingham has been jailed for life with a minimum term of 44 years.
Jamie Barrow, 31, poured petrol through the letterbox of the first-floor flat where neighbour Fatoumatta Hydara lived with her daughters Fatimah and Naeemah Drammeh â aged three and one â before setting it alight in November 2022.
He then stood outside the property watching the fire take hold on Fairisle Close, Clifton, ignoring the screams of the family.
Although a specific motive has never been determined, Barrow held what prosecutors described as a âgrievanceâ over rubbish being left in an alleyway.
Reading a victim impact statement for almost an hour at the cityâs Crown Court on Friday, Mrs Hydaraâs husband and the childrenâs father, Aboubacarr Drammeh, said: âI was hopeless, and I was left helpless, because I didnât have a family, and it was the people who mattered most to me.
âSince then, it has been a downward plunge into darkness and the unknown. It was unthinkable, it was unplanned, and I wish this on no one else, including you.â

Addressing Barrow, who remained silent throughout, he later said: âYou had choices, but you chose otherwise.
âHate, anger, destruction, I donât know, but of all the choices you had, you chose the most damaging of all.
âI am angry, I am sad, I am hurt, I am heartbroken. At the same time, I am grateful for them being a part of me. I am grateful for Fatoumatta and the kids, as they made me a better person.
âMy life will never be the same. I am not even going to try. I have cried more often than I can admit to my family and friends.
âEvery single day is different. Will I get better today? I donât know. The only comfort I have is that you, as a person, cannot do this to anyone else in this world. I am afraid to start this all over again.
âYour impact is infinite, it is immeasurable, it is innumerable. I cannot quantify the impact of your actions.â
In her statement read to the court, Mrs Hydaraâs mother, Aminata Dibba, called Barrow a âmonsterâ and a âheartless human beingâ.
Barrow drank several cans of lager before drawing the petrol from his motorbike, then used a Clean âN Fresh spray bottle to decant it â chosen deliberately because its slim neck would fit through a letterbox.

Prosecutor Simon Ash KC previously told the trial that Barrow âwalked casually awayâ after lighting the petrol with some tissue paper, having watched the flames take hold for âabout five minutesâ.
He âdid nothing to helpâ his victims who were trapped inside the burning flat, with Fatimah and Naeemah dying in the fire and Mrs Hydara, 28, dying two days later, all from smoke inhalation.
Barrow, himself a father, was seen going to buy alcohol twice in the hours before the fire.
After starting the blaze, he was seen walking his dog and smoking a cigarette on CCTV and later asked officers how âbadâ the fire was.
Hours later, while officers were conducting routine inquiries with neighbours, Barrow said: âI need to tell you something about the fire next door,â and held out his hands to be handcuffed.
In his sentencing remarks, Mr Ash accepted that âthe defendant took a decision and acted on it almost straight awayâ.
But he said that Barrow had âtaken a series of preparatory stepsâ, such as siphoning petrol from his motorbike into a specific bottle, and was acting âthoughtfully and deliberately in a calculated wayâ.
He said: âHe started the fire inside the front door knowing that it was a first-floor flat and the front door was the only way out.
âAt about 5 in the morning on 20 November, when speaking to the Housing Officer, [Barrow] asked whether he could claim compensation from Nottingham City Homes if any of his belongings were damaged by smoke.
âThat conversation happened at a time when Mrs Hydara and the children had been brought out of the flat and were at the Queens Medical Centre and were either dead or in a very serious condition.â
While a specific motive has never been determined, Mr Ash said during the trial that several reasons could have caused Barrow to start the fire, including the âgrievanceâ over rubbish being left, anger over noise, and a desire to be rehoused by Nottingham City Council to be closer to his son.
Having previously admitted manslaughter, Barrow said during his evidence that he âcanât explainâ why he chose his neighbourâs flat as a target.
He said he had drunk several cans of San Miguel lager and was âwallowing in self-pityâ by the time he decided to carry out his lethal actions due to a âvery, very low moodâ caused by emotionally unstable personality disorder (EUPD).
He claimed he believed the flat was empty when he lit the fire and had no intention of hurting anyone, apologising to the victimsâ family while in the witness box.
He also said he found fires âcatharticâ and that fire âchills me outâ, having first deliberately started one as a teenager.
But his EUPD also meant he gave âzeroâ consideration to the consequences of his actions, he said.
However, prosecutors said Barrow would have been able to see a light coming from the hallway and a pram left outside the flat before lighting the fire.
The jury â four members of which returned to watch sentencing on Friday â dismissed Barrowâs assertions within seven hours, unanimously convicting him of three counts of murder and a count of arson being reckless as to whether life was endangered on Tuesday.
Jailing him for life, Mrs Justice Tipples said the offence âplainly involved planning and thoughtâ and said Barrowâs alcohol intake was âthe main reasonâ behind his actions.
She said: âFatoumatta and her two small children were asleep in their beds in their own home. You knew they were all home, asleep, and you knew they would have no chance whatsoever.
âSeconds after you lit the fire you heard the fire alarm in the flat go off. You did nothing. Seconds after that you heard Fatoumatta screaming from the flat. You did nothing.
âRather, you stood and watched the fire take hold, and you stood there watching the fire develop and spread for five minutes, which was an enormous length of time in the circumstances.
âYou were well aware of what you were doing and I am quite sure from what you did that you wanted to kill Mrs Hydara and her children.
âI do not accept that you have shown any genuine remorse for what you have done.â
As Barrow was taken down, members of the packed public gallery shouted âGoodâ and âthey should hang youâ, with Mrs Justice Tipples extending the courtâs condolences to the family of the victims.
Barrow was given a concurrent 10-year sentence for the arson charge, and will also pay a victim surcharge of ÂŁ228.