After a teenager admitted murdering three girls at a dance class, Keir Starmer said people were being radicalized into violence for its own sake and terrorism laws might need to change.
SOUTHPORT terrorist Axel Rudakubana has pleaded guilty to murdering three girls at a Taylor Swift dance class. The 18-year-old, who had a “sickening interest in death”, knifed Bebe
A British teenager will go on trial on Monday, accused of murdering three young girls in a knife attack in the northern English town of Southport last July, a crime that horrified the nation and was followed by days of nationwide rioting.
COPS wanted to tell the public more about Southport knifeman Axel Rudakubana but were prevented from doing so by Crown Prosecution Service lawyers. In October Merseyside Police confirmed he had
Axel Rudakubana, 18, pleaded guilty on Monday to murdering three girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport, Merseyside, in July. Speaking to BBC Breakfast on Wednesday morning, Lord Alex Carlile said: “This is not the first case where the failure to share information has caused very serious offences.
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer defended the decision taken by authorities not to share information about the case earlier on.
TalkTV host Mike Graham and Lord Alex Carlile got into a heated on-air row about the failures which preceded the Southport murders.
Here is a timeline of what was known when about Southport killer Axel Rudakubana: Axel Rudakubana becomes known to a range of local agencies due to anxiety, social isolation and challenging behaviour. In October he takes a knife to school, and in December attacks another child with a hockey stick.
People buying knives online will be asked for two types of identification as the government plans to prevent underage sales following the murder of three girls in Southport.
LONDON (Reuters) -The murder of three young girls in Southport last July shows that Britain faces a new type of terrorism threat in the form of extreme violence perpetrated by loners who were inspired
The seven people jailed so far over protests in Tamworth have received an average term of 35 months behind bars. One man who pleaded guilty to rioting and assaulting an emergency worker at Tamworth was given a jail term of six years and 17 weeks.