A NEW mother’s partner punched her so hard he felt her “skull give way” during a row about bacon and dumped her naked body in the bush.

Leeann Lapham went missing in Queensland eight years ago, but it was only in February that Graeme Evans told police what happened and led them to the remote Cowley Beach.

Her had left dumped the 30-year-old’s body in dense north Queensland bushland on the night of April 19, 2010, in the hope it would never be found. On Wednesday, her tormented family finally heard how Evans senselessly killed her.

Evans appeared in the Townsville Supreme Court where he was sentenced to nine years’ jail for manslaughter and interfering with the corpse. He also became the first person in Australia to be affected by tough new “no body, no parole” laws, which were introduced in Queensland in August. The 43-year-old was initially charged with the murder of Ms Lapham in February 2017, but little was known about her death.

The court heard Ms Lapham became annoyed at Evans after she arrived back at their Innisfail hotel room with their three-week-old son to find an empty bacon packet and knife in the kitchen sink.

An argument started before she came toward him with the two items and swung the knife in his direction, knocking a beer from his hand.

Justice David North said the physical altercation that followed could only be described as a “brutal bashing”.

He said Evans had told a psychologist he felt Ms Lapham’s “skull give way” when he punched her. “You took your time after you beat her senseless, then gathered her body and disposed of her naked, depriving her of the opportunity of a funeral and a burial,” he said.

“You disposed of her clothes in a different position and then you set about telling the police and everyone else a lie about what had happened.” The court heard Evans did not intend to kill Ms Lapham.

He went outside for a smoke after punching her repeatedly in the head, only to return 20 minutes later to find she had died. It was then that he panicked.

Justice North described Ms Lapham’s death as senseless. “It arose out of a trivial domestic argument that got out of hand and can only have done so because of an inability to step back and take account of or control your anger,” he said.

Despite the fact he lied for eight years, Justice North conceded Evans was remorseful.

Kerry Johnson told the court through a statement her daughter’s death had ruined her life. “I’ve lost a part of my soul that can never be replaced and a part of my heart that will never recover,” she said.

Ms Lapham will finally be laid to rest in Innisfail, while Evans will be eligible for parole after he has served four years.

Justice North reduced the amount of time he had to spend in jail before he applied for release on account of his co-operation with police.