UK
teenager who killed herself was ‘highly affected’ by terrorism arrest, inquest
finds
Rhianan Rudd
died of ‘self-inflicted act’ after facing charges but coroner says failures in
her case were ‘not systemic’
Hannah
Al-Othman and Raphael Boyd
Mon 9 Jun
2025 19.50 BST
A vulnerable
teenage girl who died five months after terrorism charges against her were
dropped was “highly affected” by her arrest but failures in her case were “not
systemic”, a coroner has concluded.
Rhianan Rudd
died at a children’s home aged 16 in May 2022, as the result of a
self-inflicted act, said the chief coroner of England and Wales, Alexia Durran.
Delivering a
narrative verdict at Chesterfield town hall on Monday, Durran said: “In the
circumstances I do not consider I should make a prevention of future deaths
report.
“I’m not
satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, Rhianan intended to take her own
life. Rhianan’s death … was the result of a self-inflicted act but it is not
possible to ascertain her intention.
“Rhianan was
known, to family and professionals, to be vulnerable, to have autistic traits
and have a history of self-harm.”
The coroner
added: “I find she was highly affected by her arrest and was concerned about
being sent to prison.”
It was not
known what Rhianan was told by her legal team when the charges were dropped but
this may have had a “psychological impact” on her, the coroner said.
When Rhianan
was arrested in October 2020, she was so small that no handcuffs would fit on
her wrists. Aged 15, she became the youngest girl ever to be charged with
terror offences in the UK after being groomed online by an American “neo-Nazi”.
Less than 18
months later, she was found dead at the Bluebell House residential home in
Nottinghamshire.
Once a
“bubbly, kind and loving” teenager, who loved animals and liked to bake,
Rhianan had gradually become quiet and withdrawn. At first she told her mother
that it was the coronavirus lockdown that had led to her change in behaviour,
but in reality the teenager was being exploited.
Rhianan
remained under police investigation for more than two years before the charges
were dropped, in light of evidence that she had been groomed and sexually
exploited. Five months later, she took her own life in a children’s home.
She had
remained under investigation by MI5 until the day she died.
Rhianan had
been speaking online to Chris Cook, an Ohio-based 18-year-old far-right
extremist. Cook, who was later convicted of being part of a terrorist plot, had
messaged the then 14-year-old on WhatsApp, sending her links to “racially
motivated, violent extremist books”.
Evidence
also showed she had been influenced by Dax Mallaburn, her mother Emily Carter’s
former boyfriend, and a member of the Arizona Aryan Brotherhood, a neo-Nazi
group.
Carter knew
her daughter had been radicalised; she had even referred her to the
government’s de-radicalisation programme, Prevent, in September 2020, after
Rhianan came downstairs and told her she had downloaded a bomb-making manual.
“It was
really scary. I knew it had to be done, but it doesn’t stop it being scary,”
Carter said. “I was hoping that it was just going to take her two or three
times a week to work on her mind, unpick her head, and turn her back into
Rhianan, not end up with all these police officers turning up arresting her and
pulling my house apart. You don’t expect that at all.”
At the time
of her arrest, Rhianan had a shrine to Adolf Hitler in her bedroom, and
described herself as a fascist. She had sent messages on WhatsApp saying she
“wants to kill someone in the school or blow up a Jewish place of worship” and
she “does not care who she kills and nothing matters any more”.
The inquest
heard police had initially refrained from arresting the teenager as they
thought to do so may “risk some impact on her mental health” and “could
possibly lead to further self-harm and suicide attempts”.
But in
October 2020, a day after she had been treated in hospital after carving an
image of a swastika into her forehead, 19 police officers and three detectives
turned up at the family home in Bolsover, Derbyshire, to take her into custody.
“They were
going to put her in handcuffs, but the handcuffs didn’t go small enough. They
just fell off her hands,” Carter said. “Even on the smallest ones, they just
fell off her hands. So they just held her arms and just walked around. That’s
how small she was.”
She added:
“She was 5ft one, weighed seven stone,” she added. “And she was 15 years old
when she said it, she was tiny. I don’t know what people thought she could do,
but I don’t believe that she was ever a threat. It was just what people would
put in her head. Brainwashed her, basically.”
When she was
arrested, Rhianan’s engagement with Prevent stopped.
During
police interviews, Rhianan described being coerced and groomed, telling
officers she had sent sexually explicit images of herself to Cook.
However, a
referral order was only made to the Home Office’s national referral mechanism
(NRM), which identifies potential victims of human trafficking and modern
slavery, in August 2021.
“She was a
vulnerable child that was groomed,” Carter said. “The NRM should have been done
at the very beginning, not 10 months into it, and it should have all been put
together properly, before you even sit them down at a table and start
questioning them.
“She was a
child, a vulnerable child, a child with mental health issues. She should have
been treated as a victim more than anything.”
Durran found
there were multiple failures in Rhianan’s investigation and care.
She said
“the information available constituted a sufficient basis to classify Rhianan
as a victim of modern slavery” during her indoctrination into far-right
beliefs, and that she should have been referred to the NRM sooner.
She added
that “it is arguable that Rhianan not being referred until 2021 is evidence of
the systems failure to provide adequate care for her”, but said it would be
difficult to link these failings to her eventual death and that her arrest was
“reasonable and proportionate in the circumstances”.
The
coroner’s conclusion provided some vindication for Carter, who had always
believed her daughter’s death was preventable. “One of the things I’ve said all
the way along the line, I’ve admitted it to court, I’m not perfect,” she said.
“I’ve made
mistakes, and I want the organisations to put their hands up and admit they’ve
made mistakes and to rectify their mistakes so it doesn’t happen again.
“And then
that way everybody can be happy, except me, because I’ve already lost my
daughter.”
.jpeg)
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário