
Teenage killers stabbed prison inmate six months after being jailed for murder
The pair had lain in wait for Khayri outside his Huddersfield school, wearing masks and carrying large knives, before attacking him in front of other horrified school children.
Leeds Crown Court heard that six months after being sentenced for the murder, Pusey and Harriott were serving their sentences together at HMP Wetherby when they and two other teenagers launched a group attack on another inmate in the prison's gym.
They used 'improvised weapons' to stab him more than 20 times across his arm, lower back and head while he was helpless on the ground.
Pusey and Harriott both pleaded guilty to grievous bodily harm and possession of a knife in prison.
Pusey, who was 16 at the time, was sentenced to 32 months in prison, on top of his sentence for murdering Khayri.
Harriott, who was 18 at the time, was sentenced to a further 38 months in prison.
Judge Ray Singh lifted a reporting restriction that prevented Pusey from being identified due to his age, saying he had already been named in the murder case.
The court heard footage of the prison attack in November 2023 showed Harriott and Pusey standing against the gym wall, watching the victim while he was working out.
As he knelt on the bench to do some weights, one of their co-defendants, who the judge said could not be named as he is 17 and has never been identified publicly, hit the victim in the face.
The court heard that it appeared to be the trigger for the planned attack, as within a split second of the punch, Pusey and Harriott came off the wall and started to punch the victim.
The three of them chased him across the gym floor into a corner and punched, kicked and stamped on him. Pusey and Harriott also stabbed him with improvised weapons.
A judge heard that a fourth person, Thomas Murray, 18, joined in the attack, which lasted just under a minute before it was broken up by security staff.
The court heard it was unclear what the cause of the attack was, but the victim appeared to have 'beef' with the 17-year-old who threw the first punch.
In mitigation for Pusey, the court heard at that early point in his sentence, he hadn't engaged with psychiatrists and has now 'started to make progress in terms of starting to think about why these offences have been committed'.
The judge heard Harriott is to undertake an anger management course and that 'a great deal can change' before he is in his 30s and can be considered for release.
Murray, who, like Pusey and Harriott, pleaded guilty to a Section 18 assault causing grievous bodily harm, was sentenced to 30 months' imprisonment.
The 17-year-old, who pleaded guilty to a Section 20 assault, was sentenced to 36 months' imprisonment.
Khayri Mclean, 15, was stabbed while making his way home from North Huddersfield Trust School (NHTS), in the West Yorkshire town, on September 21 2022.
A trial heard he was stabbed in the chest by then 15-year-old Pusey, who was described by prosecutors as 'jumping into the air and swinging a knife with a 30cm blade'.
Harriott followed up the initial attack, running after Khayri and stabbing him in his lower leg.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
5 days ago
- Daily Mail
Paedophile fitted curtains to his car so he could rape 11-year-old schoolgirl: Predator obsessed with taking the virginity of young girls is jailed for 13 years
A predatory paedophile who fitted curtains in the back of his car so he could rape an 11-year-old girl has been jailed for 13 years. Christopher Rowbottom, 35, added the schoolgirl, who is from the Leicester area, on TikTok before bombarding her with messages on several other platforms, including Snapchat, Discord and Roblox. Leeds Crown Court was told that Rowbottom 'inserted himself into every facet of this young child's life'. She believed they were in a romantic relationship, he made lewd sexual suggestions about what he planned to do with her and he even called her his 'wife'. The schoolgirl also sent naked pictures of herself to the father-of-two, of Featherstone, West Yorkshire. Rowbottom bought privacy curtains for his car and travelled from his home to Leicester on at least four occasions to meet the girl. The warehouse worker drove her to the secluded corner of a car park where he raped her on the back seats. After the trial, he was found guilty of rape, sexual communication with a child, two counts of meeting a child following sexual grooming, digital penetration and making indecent images of children. Following his arrest, he gave a no-comment interview to police, and his devices were seized and analysed. Prosecutor Christopher Bevan said his searches on the internet 'clearly showed and interest in children' and 'had a desire to take the virginity of the child'. Mitigating, Mohammed Rafiq said: 'He knows he will be getting a significant sentence. He has to accept that.' Mr Rafiq added that Rowbottom was 'showing signs of autism' and was a 'bit of a loner'. Sentencing, Judge Tahir Khan KC told Rowbottom: 'You became besotted with her despite the fact she was only 11-years-old. 'You referred to her as your wife and you took advantage of her immaturity, emotionally and sexually. You bombarded her with disturbing and highly-sexualised images. 'You travelled at least four times to Leicester to have sexual contact with her in a car park. 'None of your history can explain, let alone justify anything that you did.' Rowbottom is on the sex offender register for life and is subject to a life-long sexual harm prevention order.


BBC News
04-08-2025
- BBC News
Pontefract teenager Alfie Clark jailed after stabbing boy, 14
A teenager who stabbed a boy he had previously called a "dirty little immigrant" has been jailed. Alfie Clark was walking his dog with his mother in Pontefract on 25 May when he attacked the 14-year-old, who was out celebrating his 13-year-old girlfriend's birthday. Eighteen-year-old Clark, of Eastbourne Terrace, Pontefract, had also previously threatened to kill the boy on social media and told him he would "break his knees in front of his family", Leeds Crown Court heard. He pleaded guilty to wounding with intent and was sentenced to four years and three months at the same court on Monday. He was jailed for 21 months, to run concurrently, after admitting possession of a bladed article. Clark was also handed a 10-year restraining order banning him from contacting the victim or the victim's girlfriend. 'Without warning' The court heard Clark and the victim fell out on social media after Clark made comments "of a sexual nature" about the victim's girlfriend and the victim told Clark to "stop saying weird stuff". The social media conversation escalated, with other youngsters getting involved, and it culminated in Clark boasting he was going to "undig a gun" to kill the victim with and using a racial slur against him. Anthony Moore, prosecuting, said in the social media conversation leading up to the attack, Clark wrote, among other things: 'I will kill him, the dirty little immigrant'.The court was told that on the evening of the attack, Clark and his mother came across the victim and his girlfriend by chance and Clark "immediately and without warning" pulled out a knife and stabbed the victim three times - twice in the ribs and once on the arm. After the attack, all four kept walking and the victim said he could hear laughing behind him. He returned home where an ambulance was called and he was taken to hospital, where he required surgery due to a blood clot. In an impact statement read out in court, the victim said he now suffered from anxiety, had physical and emotional scars and "no longer trusts adults". 'Life or death results' Passing sentence, Judge Robin Mairs said: "This case highlights the danger of young men carrying knives, which they invariably produce and use. "This can have catastrophic life or death results. It is sheer luck this case did not prove to be fatal."There was a significant degree of planning and you walked away unconcerned - it was not a spur of the moment decision." He said aggravating factors included that the attack was racially motivated, the victim was four years younger and, therefore, "vulnerable" and the fact it also happened in front of a child - the victim's girlfriend. Clark's age and "immaturity" were the only reasons the sentence was not longer, Judge Mairs added. Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.


BBC News
23-07-2025
- BBC News
Sheffield man, 20, jailed for role in Harehills disorder
A man has been jailed for two years and eight months after admitting taking part in widespread disorder in the Harehills area of Leeds last Budai was sentenced at Leeds Crown Court on Monday and is the 24th person to be sent to prison over the disturbance, which happened on 18 July 20-year-old, of Spring View Close in Sheffield, pleaded guilty to offences of arson and violent trouble started when crowds gathered around a Harehills home where social workers were removing children on the orders of a family court. Police officers were attacked and public property was heavily damaged over the course of the night, with the overall cost of the disorder estimated to be around £300,000. Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.