
Southport inquiry to examine ‘wholesale failure' to prevent attack
Sir Adrian Fulford said the murder of three girls appeared 'far from being an unforeseeable catastrophic event' given Axel Rudakubana's well-known obsession with extreme violence.
The inquiry at Liverpool town hall will examine missed opportunities to prevent the killing of Bebe King, six; Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven; and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine; and the attempted murder of 10 others at a Taylor Swift-themed holiday club in Southport on 29 July last year.
Fulford, a retired senior judge, said the hearings would not turn into an 'exercise of papering over the cracks' but would be a 'real engine for change' in exposing failures. He said it would recommend 'all of the changes that urgently need to be made'.
He said he would consider sweeping changes to the justice system, including whether courts should be given powers to impose restrictions on individuals known to pose a risk but when there was insufficient evidence to justify an arrest.
Rudakubana, 18, was referred to Prevent three times between December 2019 and April 2021 after expressing extremist views but his case was never escalated. The teenager, who was born in Cardiff to Rwandan parents, had been on the police radar since he was 13, when he admitted having murderous thoughts about another pupil. He later attacked a fellow student and was found with a knife on a bus.
He had a deep interest in extreme violence, which was known to social services, and had bought a cache of weapons including machetes, a bow and arrow, a sledgehammer, materials to make petrol bombs and had started producing ricin, a deadly poison.
Rudakubana, who lived with his parents in the Lancashire village of Banks, five miles from Southport, had also downloaded a version of an al-Qaida training manual which was banned under terrorism laws.
He was jailed for a minimum of 52 years in January after pleading guilty to the offences on the first day of his trial.
In his opening remarks on Tuesday, Fulford said it appeared clear that 'far from being an unforeseeable catastrophic event, the perpetrator posed a very serious and significant risk of violent harm, with a particular and known predilection for knife crime'.
He said Rudakubana's ability to access gravely violent material, order knives on Amazon and leave home unsupervised to commit the atrocity 'speaks to a wholesale and general failure to intervene effectively, or indeed at all, to address the risks that he posed'.
Fulford said he would assess whether the state should have new powers to impose restrictions on individuals when there was strong evidence they intended to carry out an attack but not enough to justify an arrest.
He will examine whether courts should impose a curfew, require a tag, limit internet use or require psychological intervention. However, Fulford added: 'Would such a development run counter to the basic underpinnings of our democracy and our core civil liberties?'
He said Rudakubana was responsible for 'one of the most egregious crimes in our country's history' and would only be referred to as 'AR' or 'the perpetrator' for the remainder of the inquiry.
He added: 'However hard we try, ordinary language simply fails to reflect the enormity of what he did on 29 July last year. None of the most powerful adjectives even begin to suffice: there are no words that adequately describe what occurred and I am not going to try, and then fail, to find them.'
The inquiry will on Wednesday hear evidence from the parents of three of the surviving girls who were stabbed and one who witnessed the attack. Hearings will resume on 8 September with evidence from other families before concluding in November.
Hashtags

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


The Independent
5 minutes ago
- The Independent
Cat shot five times amid rise in air rifle attacks
RSPCA data reveals a 30 per cent increase in air gun attacks on cats in the last year, with 70 incidents reported in 2024. The charity has also noted a surge in other weapon attacks on animals, including pets and farm animals, using catapults and crossbows. These attacks cause horrific pain and suffering, often resulting in severe injuries or death, with rescue cat Ronnie found screaming in pain after being found with five air gun pellets in him. Overall, nearly 500 weapon attacks on animals have been reported to the RSPCA over the past three years, with catapult incidents doubling this year compared to last. The RSPCA has launched its 'Summer Cruelty Appeal' and is supporting 'Operation Lakeshot' to combat these cruel incidents.


The Independent
5 minutes ago
- The Independent
Treasury looks at inheritance tax ahead of autumn budget
The Treasury is reportedly considering tightening inheritance tax rules to address a £50bn shortfall in public finances. Proposed measures include scrapping the 'seven-year rule' for gifts and introducing a potential lifetime cap on gifts to limit pre-death asset transfers. Inheritance tax, which applies to estates worth more than £325,000, generated a record £6.7bn in 2022-2023 and is seen by some as a de facto wealth tax. The move comes amid pressure on Rachel Reeves to find solutions for a projected £41.2bn shortfall by 2029-2030, with calls for a broader wealth tax. Despite suggestions for wealth taxes from some Labour figures, the Treasury's official stance is to focus on economic growth and avoid raising income tax, National Insurance, or VAT.


The Independent
5 minutes ago
- The Independent
Palestine Action terror ban risks ‘I am Spartacus' moment, Labour peer warns
A Labour peer has warned that the government's ban on Palestine Action is at risk of becoming an 'I am Spartacus' moment, suggesting the decision to proscribe the group as a terrorist organisation was disproportionate. Shami Chakrabarti, a former shadow attorney general and civil liberties campaigner, urged the government to 'think again', warning that the group's ban may lead to more people, not fewer, taking to the streets to support it. She said her concerns are 'greater now even than they were before' after more than 500 people were arrested over the weekend, demonstrating in support of the group. An "I Am Spartacus" moment – from the 1960 film, Spartacus - refers to a situation where a group of people collectively claim to be one person, often in solidarity or defiance, to protect that individual or to confuse an authority figure. The Metropolitan Police confirmed on Sunday that 532 arrests were made, 522 for displaying an item in support of a proscribed organisation at the march in central London over the weekend. Asked whether the government had got it wrong on the issue, Baroness Chakrabarti told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: 'I'm afraid that my concerns are greater now even than they were before. This is in danger of becoming a sort of 'I am Spartacus' moment where more people, not fewer people, are taking to the streets.' She added: 'There are blurred lines now… some people are, as always, protesting about the horrific events they're watching unfold in Gaza, but others think they're standing up for civil liberties because this ban was disproportionate.' The Labour peer warned that 'even criminal damage is not terrorism'. 'Spraying paint on airplanes, which is a serious criminal damage, is not the same as being the IRA or al Qaeda or a group that actually wants to blow people up. 'And so we've got more people taking to the streets, a bigger headache for the police. Frankly, I'm very sympathetic to the police on this issue. I think it may be time to think again.' It comes just days after she told The Independent that the 'proscription of Palestine Action is in danger of becoming a mistake of poll tax proportions' – a reference to Margaret Thatcher's unpopular policy that triggered civil disobedience and riots. The group hit the headlines earlier this year when four members were accused of causing around £7m worth of damage to aircraft at RAF Brize Norton. The mass detention of protesters on Saturday is thought to be the highest number of arrests made by the Metropolitan Police in a single protest event since the poll tax riot of 31 March 1990. Earlier this week, MPs from across the political divide warned of an excessive use of counterterrorism powers that was riding roughshod over the right to peaceful protest, after it emerged that many of those held were aged over 60. Meanwhile, civil liberties groups, including Amnesty and Libert,y said the arrests were 'disproportionate to the point of absurdity' and that the government's terrorism laws were a threat to freedom of expression. Former Labour cabinet minister Peter Hain described the mass arrests as 'madness', saying Palestine Action was not 'equivalent to real terrorist groups like al-Qaeda or Islamic State'. Lord Hain, who led the anti-apartheid movement and the Anti-Nazi League in Britain during the 1970s and 1980s, went on to warn that the ban will 'end in tears for the government'. 'We are seeing retired magistrates, retired and serving doctors and all sorts of people being arrested and now effectively being equated with terrorists such as al-Qaida, which is absolutely wrong', he said. 'It's going to get worse [for the government] because I don't see people from that 'middle Britain' background who have joined these protests in such large numbers to suddenly decide that all is OK.' But home secretary Yvette Cooper defended the police and suggested those who were arrested may not 'know the full nature of this organisation'. After the arrests, Downing Street defended the move to ban the group, saying it was 'violent', had committed 'significant injury' as well as criminal damage, and that the Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre had found the organisation had carried out three separate acts of terrorism. 'We've said that many people may not yet know the reality of this organisation, but the assessments are very clear: this is a violent organisation that has committed violence, significant injury and extensive criminal damage,' Sir Keir Starmer's spokesman said on Monday.