Birmingham pastor faces manslaughter charge after 61-year-old man drowns during home baptism
A 48-year-old pastor in Birmingham, England, has been charged with gross negligence manslaughter after a 61-year-old grandfather drowned during a baptism ceremony held in a children's paddling pool inside a home. Robert Smith died on October 8, 2023. His pastor, Cheryl Bartley, now faces a court date, and a trail of video evidence that raises hard questions about accountability, judgment, and the duty of care owed to vulnerable people in informal religious settings.
West Midlands Police announced the charge on a Wednesday, as reported by the Associated Press, stating that emergency services had been called to the home but that Smith was already dead when they arrived. A post-mortem examination confirmed the cause of death as drowning.
Bartley is expected to appear in court on May 14. She has been charged with one count of gross negligence manslaughter in connection with Smith's death during what was described as a Life Changing Ministries ceremony.
A baptism livestreamed on Facebook, then the feed cut out
The ceremony was livestreamed on Facebook. The New York Post reported that the stream suddenly cut out as Smith was being baptized in the kiddie pool inside the Birmingham home. What happened in those final moments remains unclear. The exact sequence of events before the feed went dark has not been publicly detailed by police.
Smith, originally from Jamaica, worked as a barber in Brixton. He was a grandfather of seven. He reportedly had Parkinson's disease, a movement disorder that affects the nervous system, as described by the Mayo Clinic, and had wanted to be baptized again as a born-again believer.
That a man with a serious neurological condition was submerged in water during an informal ceremony, inside a house, in a pool designed for small children, with no apparent medical safeguards, and that this was broadcast live on social media, is the kind of fact pattern that speaks for itself.
Bartley's post-incident claims
What Bartley did after Smith's death may prove as damaging as what happened during the baptism. Breitbart reported that Bartley appeared in a video following the incident claiming she had seen Smith in heaven, "dancing with Jesus."
In another recorded statement attributed to Bartley, she described the moments after Smith was pulled from the water:
"Still breathing... so we took him out of the water. His heart rate was okay, there was nothing... but this time he was, he had a glimpse of heaven. He had a glimpse of heaven."
Emergency services found Smith dead. Whatever Bartley believed she observed, the post-mortem told a different story: he drowned.
In yet another clip, Bartley spoke about her ministry in terms that will likely draw scrutiny as the case moves forward. She described herself as working alongside angels and claimed direct divine authority for her role:
"I work with angels, numerous angels, as you can see, you come, I wasn't touching people or anything. It's angels. So I will tell the angel to do stuff and they'll do it. I'm not under anybody. I've been taken to heaven where he has anointed me and appointed me for this. So, people is wondering how I work in this field. I have been appointed by God."
Those words may carry weight in a courtroom. Gross negligence manslaughter under English law requires proof that a defendant owed a duty of care, breached it in a manner that was grossly negligent, and that the breach caused the death. Bartley's own recorded statements, asserting that she answers to no earthly authority and attributing events to supernatural forces, could undermine any defense built around reasonable care.
The broader question of safety in informal worship
This case sits at the intersection of religious freedom and basic accountability. No one disputes the right to hold a baptism. But when a pastor takes physical responsibility for submerging a 61-year-old man with a degenerative neurological disease in water, in a children's pool, inside a private home, with no medical personnel present, the question is not about faith. It is about negligence.
Informal and home-based religious gatherings have grown across the United Kingdom and the United States in recent years. Many operate outside any denominational structure or institutional oversight. Life Changing Ministries, the organization tied to Bartley's ceremony, does not appear to be affiliated with any major church body based on available reporting.
Tragic incidents involving pastors and church leaders are not confined to any one country or denomination. In the United States, a Houston pastor was recently killed by a stray bullet during a home burglary, a reminder that those who lead small congregations often do so in settings with few protections.
The Smith case is different. This was not a random act of violence. It was a planned religious ceremony that ended in a preventable death, one that was broadcast live on social media for anyone to watch.
What remains unanswered
Several key facts remain unclear. Police have not publicly detailed how long Smith was submerged, whether anyone else was present who attempted intervention, or whether Bartley had any training or protocol for conducting baptisms involving individuals with physical limitations.
The exact Facebook account or page that hosted the livestream has not been identified in public reporting. Nor has the precise location of the home beyond the city of Birmingham been disclosed.
Safety at religious gatherings has drawn attention in multiple recent incidents. A church security guard in Houston tackled an armed man carrying 100 rounds at a worship service, highlighting the growing awareness that congregations, formal and informal, face real risks that demand preparation, not just prayer.
Across the Atlantic, a fire recently devastated a historic Scottish church, another reminder that houses of worship are not immune to disaster and that the people inside them deserve responsible stewardship.
A court date approaches
Bartley's May 14 court appearance will begin the formal legal process. The charge, gross negligence manslaughter, is serious. It does not allege intent to kill. It alleges a failure of care so severe that a man lost his life.
Robert Smith wanted to renew his faith. He trusted his pastor. He stepped into a children's pool in a Birmingham home and never walked out. His family, seven grandchildren among them, now waits for answers.
Religious liberty is a bedrock right. But liberty without responsibility is just recklessness wearing a collar. When someone claims divine appointment and then a man dies on their watch, the law has every right to ask hard questions, and a jury should hear the answers.






