The violent misogyny promoted by the likes of Andrew Tate fuelled a former soldier's rape of his ex-girlfriend and the murder of her along with her mother and sister, the prosecution argued in court.
Warning: This article contains distressing details.
Kyle Clifford, 26, had been searching YouTube for the 38-year-old controversial influencer's podcast the day before he carried out the four-hour attack, it was said in legal argument ahead of his trial.
It can only now be reported because Judge Mr Justice Bennathan excluded the evidence from the trial, saying that it was of "limited relevance" and too prejudicial.
But he added that anyone who takes a close interest in Tate, a "poster boy for misogynists", could also be seen as a misogynist.
Clifford tricked his way inside the family home in Bushey, Hertfordshire, on 9 July last year on the pretext of returning a bag of 25-year-old Louise Hunt's clothes 13 days after she dumped him.
He made sure her father, the BBC and Sky Sports racing commentator John Hunt, wasn't home before stabbing her mother Carol Hunt, 61, to death with a 10-inch butchering knife.
Clifford laid in wait for more than an hour until Louise returned from work at the dog grooming business she ran from a pod in the garden, tied her arms and ankles with duct tape, gagged her and raped her.
He held her captive for hours before shooting her through the chest with a crossbow, using the same weapon to kill her sister Hannah Hunt, a 28-year-old beauty therapist, when she returned home minutes later.
Clifford pleaded guilty to three counts of murder, false imprisonment, and two counts of possession of offensive weapons but denied raping Louise - claiming the DNA found on her body was from 16 days earlier.
He has now been found guilty of the charge by a jury at Cambridge Crown Court.
Interest in Andrew Tate
Clifford had been searching YouTube for Tate's podcast the day before the murders and is believed to have watched up to 10 of the influencer's videos.
One of Louise Hunt's friends had previously asked why he was watching one of Tate's videos involving drugged animals and he said: "Because it's funny," it was said during legal argument before the trial.
Prosecutors argued the "violent misogyny promoted by Tate" was the same kind that "fuelled both the murders" and the rape" committed by Clifford.
Alison Morgan KC said his interest in the "widely known misogynist" helped to explain why he became so "incandescent with rage" after she ended the relationship.
In throwing out the evidence, the judge said that there was likely to be ongoing reporting about Tate after he and his brother Tristan, 36, flew to the US from Romania on Thursday after travel restrictions imposed on the pair were lifted.
A criminal investigation has since been launched into the British-American pair - who are already subject to an ongoing probe into alleged people trafficking in Romania - in Florida.
They are also due to be extradited to the UK after that case to face separate accusations of rape and trafficking dating back to between 2012 and 2015.
The brothers deny any wrongdoing.
'Misogynistic and sexualised' comments
Clifford had recently been sacked from his job at a catering supply firm in Waltham Cross.
It also emerged in legal argument that he was said to have made "misogynistic and sexualised comments" about female colleagues in the workplace.
He hid two relationships with women he knew through work from Louise during their 18-month relationship, which started after they met on a dating website.
It can now be reported Clifford went on dating apps Hinge and Tinder moments after Louise ended their 18-month relationship in a message on 26 June last year.
Clifford then started planning his attack, buying a length of rope just two days later, and on 30 June he researched crossbows before searching for a pornographic video of a Wandsworth prison officer having sex with an inmate.
Brother serving life sentence for murder
He also discussed crossbows with his brother Bradley Clifford, who he would visit in prison every other week, where he is serving a life sentence for murdering a teenager in 2017.
Bradley Clifford drunkenly mowed down 19-year-old Jahshua Francis, who was riding a moped, and his pillion passenger Sobhan Khan, 18, after his "prized" red Mustang was damaged.
Police said Kyle Clifford had plenty of opportunities to back out of the 9 July attack but was "absolutely cold-blooded and calculated in his actions".
In legal argument not before the jury, Ms Morgan said "highly sexualised violence played a part in what took place" and that Clifford was trying to "misogynistically control Louise Hunt for one more time".
'Sense of entitlement'
She described him as a man whose identity was based on "whether he has the right number of women and the admiration of women" and "doesn't like to be told, 'No,' by women".
Ms Morgan said his "sense of entitlement" and the "spite and the sleight" of being dumped fuelled the sexualised violence.
After the murders, CCTV footage shows Clifford calmly leaving the Hunt family home in the quiet cul-de-sac of Ashlyn Close carrying a backpack and holding the crossbow hidden under a blanket.
He drove to a cemetery near his home in Enfield, north London, where he shot himself in the chest with the weapon as armed police descended the next day following a manhunt.
A makeshift noose was found in a nearby tree, but police and prosecutors don't believe he made a genuine attempt to end his life, although he was left paralysed from the chest down.
The trial was held in Cambridge to accommodate him as a wheelchair user, but he refused to attend.
'Underwhelming individual'
His victims' friends and family, including John Hunt - who has one surviving daughter Amy - sat in the public gallery to hear the harrowing details of the case.
Detective Chief Inspector Nick Gardner described Clifford, who served in the army from 2019 for around three years, as an "entirely underwhelming individual" with a failed military career who couldn't hold down a job.
He worked as a private security guard for a few months in 2023, then was sacked from his job at Reynolds shortly before the murders.
Louise had told a friend Clifford had a "nasty temper", while friends and family members described him as "odd" or "disrespectful, rude and arrogant".
Clifford came to the attention of police in London in relation to alleged offences of possession of cannabis, assault without injury and theft when he was a juvenile between 2012 and 2013, but they didn't result in charges or convictions.
Police say there were no obvious red flags that he would go on to commit such a crime.
(c) Sky News 2025: Kyle Clifford: Violent misogyny of kind promoted by Andrew Tate 'fuelled rape