U.K.
Teenager Who Killed 3 Girls in Southport Sentenced to Life in Prison
Axel
Rudakubana, 18, will probably never be released, a judge ruled as he condemned
the “extreme violence” of his crimes.
Megan Specia
By Megan
Specia
Reporting
from London
Jan. 23,
2025
Updated
11:49 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/23/world/europe/uk-southport-stabbing-sentence-axel-rudakubana.html
The teenager
who killed three young girls and wounded 10 other people in a knife attack on a
children’s dance class in Southport, England, last summer was sentenced on
Thursday to life in prison, with a minimum term of 52 years.
The
attacker, Axel Rudakubana, 18, pleaded guilty to his crimes earlier this week.
He refused to attend the sentencing after a number of outbursts earlier in the
day prompted the judge to order him removed from court.
“The harm
that Rudakubana has caused to each family, to each child, to the community has
been profound and permanent,” said Judge Julian Goose, who presided over the
case. “It was such extreme violence of the utmost and exceptionally high
seriousness that it is difficult to comprehend why it was done.”
The judge
was not able to sentence him to a whole life order — a life sentence with the
stipulation that the perpetrator should never be released from prison on parole
— because he was just 17 at the time of the deadly attack. But Mr. Rudakubana
must serve a minimum term of 52 years, according to the sentence, before he
could possibly be paroled, with the judge adding that it is unlikely that he
will ever be released.
Judge Goose
noted that Mr. Rudakubana had been “determined to disrupt the hearing” so that
he would not have to face his victims’ families.
Mr.
Rudakubana had appeared in Liverpool Crown Court wearing a gray sweatsuit on
Thursday morning, with a blue medical mask covering his mouth and nose. As
prosecutors began reading out the details of the case, Mr. Rudakubana screamed,
“I need to speak to a paramedic because I feel ill.”
The judge
noted that medical specialists had examined Mr. Rudakubana that morning and
determined him fit to attend the hearing. He continued to yell for several
minutes.
Judge Goose
said: “These proceedings are being conducted under my control, not yours, Mr.
Rudakubana. Do you understand?” He then ordered Mr. Rudakubana removed from the
court, saying, “I won’t have him disrupting.”
Prosecutors
proceeded to read out the details of their case against him, revealing the
harrowing nature of the attack on July 29. Deanna Heer, a lawyer for the
prosecution, said he “targeted the youngest, most vulnerable in order to spread
the greatest level of fear and outrage, which he succeeded in doing.”
She told the
courtroom that while Mr. Rudakubana was under arrest at the police station
after the attack, he was heard to say, “It’s a good thing those children are
dead” and “I’m so glad.”
Ms. Heer
recounted how he had traveled by taxi to Hart Space, where a sold-out Taylor
Swift-themed dance class for children ages 6 to 11 was underway during the
summer break from school.
Visual
evidence shown in court, taken from CCTV footage and police-worn body cameras,
showed Mr. Rudakubana arriving outside the dance studio that was crowded with
26 children.
He entered
the building and rampaged through the room, stabbing several children as well
as Leanne Lucas, who had organized the class. Moments later, screams could be
heard on outdoor CCTV footage, before children began running from the building.
Some were
covered in blood and collapsed before bystanders helped them.
Several
people wept in the courtroom as the footage was shown, and some chose to leave,
overcome by emotion.
The injuries
suffered by Bebe King, 6, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, 7, were so severe that they
died inside the building, the police said. Alice da Silva Aguiar, 9, ran
outside with the other children but soon collapsed. She was taken to the
hospital and died the next day. Eight other children and two adults were
wounded in the attack.
But amid the
horror, there was also heroism. The court heard how after Ms. Lucas was stabbed
in the back, she still managed to usher the children out the door and urge them
to run for safety, even as she bled from a severe wound.
Another
teacher in the dance studio at the time of the attack, Heidi Liddle, also
encouraged children to flee, before one girl ran toward the bathroom. Ms.
Liddle followed her inside, locked the door and braced her foot against it to
protect them. She told the girl not to make a sound. The police later rescued
them.
Two window
cleaners working nearby, Marcin Tyjon and Joel Verite, heard the commotion and
rushed to the scene. Mr. Verite followed the police into the building, picked
up Bebe and carried her out of the building, screaming as he did so because of
the severity of her injuries. Mr. Tyjon gave CPR to Alice in a parking lot
outside.
“I, as do
the girls, have scars we cannot unsee, scars we cannot move on from,” she said,
adding, “To discover that he had always set out to hurt the vulnerable is
beyond comprehensible. For Alice, Elsie, Bebe, Heidi and the surviving girls,
I’m surviving for you.”
Since Mr.
Rudakubana pleaded guilty, a portrait of a deeply troubled young man obsessed
with violence has emerged, as has the fact that he was on the radar of the
local authorities for years before the attack in Southport, a town north of
Liverpool.
After the
attack, a series of anti-immigrant riots broke out in Britain after
disinformation about the perpetrator’s identity swirled on social media and
messaging apps. False claims that he was an undocumented immigrant or newly
arrived asylum seeker were amplified by far-right agitators. Mr. Rudakubana is
a British citizen who was born in Wales to parents originally from Rwanda.
At age 13
and 14, he was referred three times to Prevent, a British counterterrorism
program. The first time was for researching school shootings during class, in
2019. Then in 2021, he was referred for uploading images of Col. Muammar
el-Qaddafi, the Libyan dictator, to his Instagram account, and for researching
the London Bridge terrorist attack. But those referrals were ultimately dropped
because it was determined each time that he did not meet the threshold for
intervention.
There was no
evidence that he ascribed to any particular political or religious ideology,
the police and prosecutors said. Content found on Mr. Rudakubana’s computer and
tablets showed a longstanding fascination with violence, killing and genocide.
The material
included a history of Nazi Germany, reports on violence in modern Sri Lanka,
documents about war in Chechnya, a book on clan cleansing in Somalia, academic
reports on the Rwandan genocide, and a paper on punishments used on enslaved
people on 18th-century British plantations.
Prime
Minister Keir Starmer said on Tuesday that the attack was a sign that terrorism
in the country was evolving, and that young people were being radicalized by “a
tidal wave of violence freely available online.”
Speaking
during the sentencing hearing, Stan Reiz, the defense lawyer for Mr.
Rudakubana, said that his client showed a “total lack of empathy” but added:
“There is no psychiatric evidence before the court that a mental disorder
contributed to the defendant’s actions.”
The case has
raised questions about how the authorities missed opportunities to stop the
violence before it began. The government has said it will conduct a public
inquiry into the case to better understand what happened and what needs to
change. But the case has also highlighted the issue of young people fixated on
extreme violence who gain access to online images and messages that drive that
obsession. Still, at the end of the day, the authorities said that on the day
of the sentencing, the focus should remain on the victims.
“Today is
about the families,” Serena Kennedy, the chief constable of Merseyside Police,
said in a statement. “It’s about the three gorgeous little girls, Elsie, Bebe
and Alice, and all those victims who were injured on the day, but also
traumatized, and just remembering the impact that this has had on them and will
continue to have on them for the rest of their lives.”
Megan Specia
reports on Britain, Ireland and the Ukraine war for The Times. She is based in
London.
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