The boyfriend of Lucy Harrison, the 23-year-old British graduate shot dead by her father in Texas, has recalled being bundled into a police car as she lay dying in an ambulance.
Speaking out for the first time, Sam Littler said he spent agonising hours not knowing whether his girlfriend was dead or alive, despite begging for updates.
Lucy was shot through the heart on January 10, 2025, by her father, Kris Harrison, a British citizen, while he was ‘showing off’ his gun at his home in Prosper, Texas.
Harrison, 52, was never arrested for fatally shooting Lucy, hours before she and Mr Littler were due to fly home to Warrington, Cheshire, despite admitting he had been drinking on the day.
A jury in Texas last year decided not to issue an indictment but, in February, a UK coroner recorded a verdict of unlawful killing. After taking time to process this, Mr Littler released a statement detailing his recollection of the tragic events.
He wrote: ‘I was not allowed to go with Lucy in the ambulance. Instead, I was placed in the back of a police car for more than two hours without any updates, despite repeatedly asking for information about her condition.
‘During that time, I was asked to write a statement alone in the back of the police car, while still not knowing whether Lucy was alive.’
Mr Littler recalled that, after a few hours, he and Kris were taken to a police station for further interviews – still without information on Lucy’s condition.
Sam Littler with his girlfriend, Lucy Harrison, who tragically died in January 2025 after being shot by her father
Mr Littler has released his version of events for the first time, recalling what the ‘most painful’ moment was
Lucy, from Warrington, Cheshire, died from her injuries – but no indictment was issued against her father who pulled the trigger
He continued: ‘While waiting, I could hear part of a phone conversation through a door nearby.
‘I heard someone discussing what had happened and referring to it as an “accident”, along with comments about the uncertainty over whether the bullet had passed through fatally.’
Mr Littler then came face-to-face again with Kris, who bizarrely told him: ‘Everything is going to be alright,’ before trying to put his arm around Mr Littler – who ‘moved away’.
The statement continued: ‘There was no discussion of what had happened, only that comment, moments before I was told that my girlfriend had died.’
A Texas ranger then came and confirmed Mr Littler’s worst fears, that his girlfriend had died from her injuries.
When he called 911, Mr Littler did not actually know Lucy had been shot, according to his statement.
He wrote: ‘I was trying to explain an emergency without understanding what had actually happened.
‘That confusion, and the delay in understanding the true nature of the situation has stayed with me ever since.’
Lucy was shot through the heart by her father Kris Harrison, a British citizen, while he was ‘showing off’ his gun
In bodycam footage captured as police arrived at the house, Mr Harrison insisted the gun ‘just went off’
This is Kris Harrison’s house in Texas where Lucy was fatally wounded, and where Mr Littler was bundled into a police car with no updates on her condition
He also recalls feeling ‘confused’ by Harrison’s behaviour in the moments after the shooting, which he still struggles to understand.
And one of the ‘most painful’ parts of going back over the evidence came from a police officer’s bodycam footage.
It captures someone saying: ‘They were due to go back today,’ to which the reply was: ‘Well they’re not now.’
Mr Littler also described the sense of isolation and desperation that washed over him, being ’23 years old, alone in Texas, [having] just been told that my girlfriend had died’.
On top of the agonising loss, he was also aware Lucy’s father had already been released, and that the incident had been chalked as a ‘terrible accident’ before any proper investigation.’
Mr Littler said he agreed with the coroner’s conclusion of unlawful killing, and that hearing the ‘devastating’ evidence at inquest had confirmed his fears.
In the wake of the tragedy, Mr Littler and Lucy’s grieving family have felt let down by the British authorities, with their MP accusing then-Foreign Secretary David Lammy of failing to provide adequate emotional or legal support.
Sarah Hall, the Labour MP for Warrington South, has joined forces with the family in their campaign to have the investigation reopened.
The MP said Lucy’s mother and stepfather, Jane and Sam Coates, ‘have been let down from day one by everyone’.
Lucy (pictured) had been due to fly back to Manchester on the day she was shot after spending Christmas in the States
Sarah Hall, the Labour MP for Warrington South, has joined forces with her mother Jane Coates and Mr Littler – who have been campaigning for the US to reopen the investigation
She said: ‘[We know from] the coroner’s report that from the trajectory of where she had been shot, there’s no other way that it could have happened other than him standing in front of her, and having pointed a gun at her’.
She plans to raise Lucy’s case in parliament and call on the Government to pressure US authorities to review the case.
Ms Coates hopes the coroner’s findings around Harrison’s ‘recklessness’, while under the influence of alcohol, could lead to a fresh US investigation.
While she does not think Harrison intended his actions, she believes he acted carelessly after drinking – which was the conclusion Cheshire coroner Jacqueline Devonish also reached.
Lucy, a fashion graduate from Manchester Metropolitan University, was raised in a single-parent household by primary school deputy headteacher Ms Coates, who divorced Harrison when her daughter was four.
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Moment Brit tells police he shot his daughter dead at Texas home – but insists gun ‘just went off’
Lucy remained in touch with her father, former CEO of a telecoms company, who moved to Saudi Arabia and later Texas. In the US, he remarried and had two daughters with second wife Heather.
She regularly visited him and her half-sisters during the summer and at Christmas.
But the inquest heard she expressed concern to friends about her father owning a Glock 9mm semi-automatic pistol in the house where her siblings lived.
Harrison, who had no licence or training, bought the pistol for $500 (£370) two years before his daughter’s death – but in Texas, owning a firearm at home without a licence is legal for self-defence.
Mr Littler, Lucy’s boyfriend of five years, recalled how on the morning of the tragedy she and her father argued about sexual assault claims against Donald Trump.
He said Lucy asked her father: ‘How would you feel if I was the girl and I’d been sexually assaulted?’.
Lucy was ‘left upset’ when her father replied ‘he had two other daughters so it would not bother him much’.
Later in the afternoon, Mr Littler said Harrison led his daughter into his bedroom, telling her ‘I have a gun, do you want to see it?’
Seconds later, there was a loud bang and Harrison screamed for his wife, Heather.
Mr Littler, who called 911, recalled how while he was speaking to emergency services, Harrison spoke out but never said Lucy had been shot – instead claiming she had passed out.
After reviewing the US post-mortem examination report and other police statements, the UK coroner ruled: ‘To shoot her through the chest whilst she was standing would have required him to have been pointing the gun at his daughter without checking for bullets and pulled the trigger. I find this action to be reckless.’
A campaign called For Luce has since been launched by her family in her memory, in the hopes of applying pressure on US authorities to reopen the case and lobby for framework to support families in the UK whose loved ones are killed overseas.



