logo
'My son was stabbed to death in daylight - I'll never forget his final words'

'My son was stabbed to death in daylight - I'll never forget his final words'

Daily Mirror08-05-2025

After her son was killed in July 2021, Zoe Cooke began campaigning against knife crime tirelessly to help prevent other parents and families going through what she had
On a hot summer's day in 2021, Zoe Cooke's life changed forever. While at her home in Nottingham, Zoe was busy preparing Sunday day and waiting for her son Byron, 22, to arrive to join her when she heard the tragic news that he'd been stabbed. Sadly he later died in hospital.
Following her loss, Zoe began fundraising to install bleed kits in public areas to help prevent other parents and other families experiencing what she had. Since then she has worked tirelessly to campaign against knife crime and has even won a Pride Of Britain award after successfully fundraising for over 100 bleed kits to be installed.

'Byron was really outgoing,' Zoe, 51, says. 'He was always making people laugh and he played the joker. But with me he was very much a mummy's boy. He would tell me anything. His friends used to always laugh and say, 'I can't believe you've told your mum that. Why would you tell your mum that?' He'd reply, 'She's my best friend. I tell her everything.' We had a really, really close bond.'

'One of his sisters was six years older than him, but he was very protective of her. If she got a boyfriend, he was like, 'Who's that?' And his little sister, well, he absolutely adored her. He'd come to my house and my daughter and her friends would all dive on him and he'd play with them. He loved them both to pieces.'
The darkest day
Byron was stabbed in Eyre's Garden in Ilkeston, Derbyshire. 'I can remember it as if it was yesterday,' says Zoe. 'When I think of knife crime, I think of it as being a dark, dingy day, but it was nothing like that. It was the day after England had been playing in the football and it was red-hot. I was sitting in my living room and I'd just put the dinner on because it was a Sunday.
'Byron rang me and explained he and another mate were going to pick a friend up and take them home. Then he asked if he could come over for dinner afterwards. I said of course he could and he replied, 'Alright Mum, I love you.' I said, 'Love you too, darling. See you in a bit.' And he put the phone down.'
Later that day, Zoe received another phone call – this time from a partner of one of Byron's friends. As she clicked through to answer, she heard a voice screaming, 'Byron's been stabbed – he's been stabbed!'
Thinking back to how she'd not long ago spoken to her son, Zoe was in disbelief until she was told to head to the hospital as soon as possible.

'I ran out of my house, jumped in my car and went to the Queen's Medical Centre,' she says. 'When I got there, I was hysterical, saying, 'Where's my son?''
Zoe was soon informed that Byron was making his way via air ambulance. 'My heart shattered,' she says. 'I felt the colour drain from me. I couldn't understand what they meant or what was happening. A few minutes later, I was taken into the relative's room, but I was really hot and I felt like I couldn't breathe so I came back out.

'The ambulance pulled up and a doctor got out – he was saturated in blood. My son was then brought out and his eyes were rolled to the back of his head and he was cut open. They gave him open heart surgery on the scene and I could see everything. They whizzed him past me. I couldn't even touch him and I collapsed on the floor. My friend screamed, 'If he's alive, it's a miracle.' The nurses told me he was really poorly, but I kept saying, 'He's my only son, you can't let him die. That boy is my life, you cannot let my son die.''
Nothing but numbness
Byron, who had been stabbed twice – in the arm and the chest – died in hospital. 'When I think back, it was like I wasn't even there,' says Zoe. 'It was like watching a movie. All I can remember is going to my mum's and us all sitting there in silence. In the days after his death I just kept asking people, 'Do you want a cup of tea?' I couldn't focus. I couldn't hear anything. I wasn't eating. All I did was drink tea for days.
'I was numb – that's the only way to describe it. I had to identify him and when I saw him I hugged him and I cried, but I was still in a state of shock because it was only around four days later.'

In 2022, four men were found guilty of Byron's murder following a six-week trial at Derby Crown Court and were sentenced to life in prison.
Since Byron's death, Zoe has campaigned for more bleed kits to be available to allow members of the public to carry out first aid while waiting for medical assistance. In 2023, she won the Pride Of Britain regional fundraiser award for the East Midlands after fundraising for more than 100 bleed kits.

'I was searching the internet and thinking, 'What could I have done as Mum? What could I have done differently? What could have saved him?'' says Zoe. 'I came across the bleed kits and that's when I thought, 'I can't let him have died in vain,' which is when I started raising money for them in Nottingham.
'I now work with kids and tell them about what I've been through. When they've seen it from that perspective and they get to know somebody who's been through it, they look at it differently. It's why I thought Adolescence on Netflix was good because it showed it from a new perspective.'
As Zoe mentions, since its release in March, Adolescence, a four-part drama which centres on a 13-year-old boy who is charged over the killing of a female classmate, has shone a light on knife crime on a global scale.
Having built a legacy around knife crime prevention, Zoe hopes her son would be proud of all she has achieved. 'He used to hate seeing me cry,' she says. 'If he's looking down on me, I want him to think, 'That's my mum.' I want him to be proud.
'I don't want the killers to think they've won either. They've already ruined my life, but I've got to make something good come out of my son's death because if he's died for nothing and it's in vain, they've killed so much more. I can't save the world, but if I can change the way a few kids think then I've done something for him – that's all I can do.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

POPPY WATSON: How off-duty NHS heroes helped me after I collapsed while running in Dundee
POPPY WATSON: How off-duty NHS heroes helped me after I collapsed while running in Dundee

The Courier

time5 days ago

  • The Courier

POPPY WATSON: How off-duty NHS heroes helped me after I collapsed while running in Dundee

I've never felt so scared or confused in my life. I didn't know who I was, where I was, or what was happening. Sentiments I think I made clear in my frenzied stream of questions to the group of well-meaning strangers who surrounded me. Apparently, I did a lot of 'wailing' as well. At least according to my mum, who could hear me over the phone. She got a call from a passer-by at 6.36pm on Sunday. The kind woman told my mum that she'd found her daughter unconscious on Ninewells Avenue in the West End of Dundee (conveniently, right next to the hospital). An ambulance was on its way, she said. This was the moment I woke up. I remember three faces staring down at me, or maybe it was four. They looked kind, concerned, young. The sky was so blue. The strangers seemed to know my name, which they used in hushed tones, probably in an attempt to calm me down. But it wasn't working. I was growing increasingly panic-stricken. The appearance of a paramedic who wanted to strap me onto a bed did not help. Then I was rolled into an ambulance, shouting 'WHAT HAPPENED TO ME?' and 'WHERE'S MY AIRPOD CASE?' The doors slammed shut and we headed for Ninewells Hospital. My yelling continued until the paramedic was forced to raise her voice in return. 'I don't know what has happened to you, Poppy,' she said sternly. 'That's why we're taking you to the hospital. The doctors will find out there.' I quickly shut up. Gradually, I returned to my senses. I remembered who I was. I remembered going for a run, feeling lightheaded, seeing black stars, thinking I should just push through. I still didn't know what day it was, or how long I'd been out. The paramedic told me I had been found by a group of off-duty nurses and doctors. I realised they must have used the Medical ID on my iPhone to call my mum, who was now on her way to the hospital with my dad from Edinburgh. This feature, found within the Health app on iPhone, allows users to store and share critical medical information, including allergies, medications, and emergency contacts. It is accessible to first responders or others in case of an emergency, even without needing to unlock the phone. This would also explain how the soft-spoken strangers knew my name. This is my hunch, anyway. It's also possible they were able to unlock my phone using my Face ID while I was passed out. As the ambulance pulled up at the Ninewells A&E department, and I was rolled out the back, I heard someone call my name. Then my friend Zoe, who lives nearby, was hugging me tightly. She had been contacted by my panicked sister from Edinburgh. As Zoe took a photo of me for my family, her boyfriend Ally quipped: 'Poppy will be writing about this in The Courier next week.' We all laughed. The discovery that I had somehow achieved my third fastest time on the Strava running app also offered some light relief. Then I was shown into a room, and before I knew it, the ambulance crew had vanished – and I hadn't even thanked them. Nor did I have a chance to thank the lovely group of doctors and nurses who found me. So yes, I'm writing about my experience in The Courier. I want to say thank you to all the amazing medical staff who looked after me. Truly – thank you. I also want to urge anyone who hasn't filled out the Medical ID on their smartphone to do so. It's likely that because of this feature, I didn't have to spend one minute alone at the hospital. What could have been a lonely and frightening experience in the 30-minute queue at A&E wound up being neither of those things. Zoe and Ally were allowed to keep me company while I waited for a bed to become available. My parents arrived shortly afterwards, and I made them fill out the Medical IDs on their iPhones while I inhaled buttery toast and sugary tea. Most smartphones, including Android devices, have a similar feature. It takes just five minutes to set it up. I'm okay, by the way. The on-duty doctors and nurses at Ninewells Hospital were just as amazing, and all my tests came back normal. It was most likely a matter of being unintentionally under-fuelled and dehydrated (turns out that slice of banana bread was not an ideal substitute for lunch). I'm just thankful I was found by the right people.

'I feel let down over police dropping my rape case against Alexander Westwood'
'I feel let down over police dropping my rape case against Alexander Westwood'

BBC News

time26-05-2025

  • BBC News

'I feel let down over police dropping my rape case against Alexander Westwood'

A woman has said she feels let down after police dropped her rape case against Alexander Westwood, an actor who has since been convicted of 26 sexual abuse and rape 23-year-old, who the BBC is calling Zoe, says she was raped twice by the Sex Education extra in 2024, who at the time was on bail in regards to other sexual told the BBC she became pregnant and sent a text to Westwood, telling him that she was going to have an abortion. She believes this is the reason her case was dropped by West Midlands police said they had "recovered a significant amount of digital material which undermined the case". West Midlands Police said this meant officers "did not have sufficient evidence for a prosecution."Although charges were not pressed against Westwood in relation to Zoe, he was jailed in February for a litany of sexual abuse and rape charges against five victims, four of whom were children at the said: "It hurts me knowing I didn't get that sort of justice, but knowing others did makes me feel better. "I'm just happy he's put away and can't hurt anyone for the foreseeable."Warning: This story contains details some readers may find distressing Zoe had started out as friends with Westwood, who is from Albrighton in Shropshire, after the pair met online and bonded over their mutual love of Doctor Zoe entered into a new relationship and had a child, she said her relationship with him "broke down" and the pair did not speak for several a few years later, the pair reconnected via a dating app and started chatting. Zoe said she invited Westwood over to her West Midlands home, where the pair initially caught up on what they had been doing with their lives and watched a film. It was May 2024, and it was the first time they had ever met in private."Initially it was fine," Zoe said. "Then it wasn't fine. He raped me twice." 'I had to do something' At first, Zoe said she did not want to go to the police. However, that changed after she found news articles about the actor being charged with sexual offences back in August 2023."When I read that, I just felt I had to do something about this," Zoe said. "I can't let him get away with anything else."Zoe made a report to the police two days later, with Westwood arrested and bailed the same week. He had already been on bail in relation to his charges from before long, Zoe discovered she was pregnant. "I didn't want to believe it," she said. "I thought maybe my periods were all over the place and I was getting false positives." Zoe said she then sent a text to Westwood, telling him she was pregnant as a result of what he had done to her and that she would be having an abortion."At the time I thought [telling him] was the best thing to do," she said."I couldn't deal with that by myself because of how it happened. I couldn't tell my family."Police became aware of the text message, with the officer in charge of the investigation asking to see it. "I felt very stupid knowing it was because I texted him," she said. "It was an influx of emotion."West Midlands Police said it had carried out "a thorough investigation into an allegation of rape made against Alexander Westwood", which was further reviewed by a senior officer who "examined all of the evidence presented". But the force said following the review, "evidential digital material was considered to undermine the case and therefore it was felt there was no realistic prospect of conviction"."West Midlands Police recognise the impact the actions of Alexander Westwood have had on women and girls and we will continue to review any new evidence that is brought to our attention," the force added. Zoe's mental health quickly plummeted in the wake of what told the BBC she was sectioned after trying to take her own life, one week after Westwood allegedly raped spent two weeks in hospital and a further two weeks in a mental health facility."I felt so dirty, I thought I wouldn't be able to get past it," she has struggled with her mental health over the past year, and said what had happened with Westwood "makes me feel sick"."It's really affected me. It's making its way into my relationships with other people," she said."I don't really have any trust for them. He said the same - [that] he'd never hurt me."Zoe said the experience had also triggered an eating disorder in her as she "just wanted to look different"."Sometimes I can't stand to look at myself. In my flat, I've had to take away every single mirror - [so I can't see] all the parts of my body he touched without permission."It also disrupted her ability to be intimate."Sometimes with my ex-partner, when trying things, sometimes it felt like bullets, being touched," she said."It felt like I was being shot. It makes me feel dirty all the time." Zoe attended Westwood's sentencing at Wolverhampton Crown Court, where he was jailed for 15-and-a-half years after being convicted of 26 charges against five victims, including children, acting pupils and an ex-girlfriend."I was sat three seats away from the dock," Zoe said. "He was just sat there with a smirk on his face, looking proud of it."I don't think [the sentence] was enough at all - but it's better than him being out and about. The second he left the dock it felt like a weight was lifted."If you have been affected by any of the issues raised in this story, information and support can be found at the BBC's Action Line. Follow BBC Wolverhampton & Black Country on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

Over 1000 antique bottles dug up from Pontypool Garden
Over 1000 antique bottles dug up from Pontypool Garden

South Wales Argus

time14-05-2025

  • South Wales Argus

Over 1000 antique bottles dug up from Pontypool Garden

36-year-old mum of two Zoe Brown just wanted to dig a veg patch with her family when she started finding buried rubbish and bottles hidden in her garden. Zoe said: 'We moved in a year ago. The kids and I are budding gardeners and want to be able to grow our own veg for Christmas. 'Last weekend we decided to dig up the veg patch, we dug down a metre deep trying to find clear soil, but it was absolutely riddled with rubbish.' Tillie Woodhouse 4 with sibling Reg Woodhouse 3 and over 1000 vintage bottles (Image: Zoe Brown) Zoe added: 'We were pretty annoyed at the start but then we found the Morgans and Evans Abergavenny brewery bottle and thought it was really cool! From there it just became a family effort. 'My little boy and his dad were on the digger; my daughter and I were on picking and wheeling. 'We were digging the glass up by the bucket load, so it went from horror to excitement pretty quick!' Over 1000 antique bottles dug up from Pontypool Garden (Image: Zoe Brown) Most of the bottles found were old brewery bottles some of which from brewers in Merthyr, Rumney, Newport and Cardiff. However, alongside old alcohol bottles the family also discovered 'poison bottles' many dating back to the Victorian era. Zoe explained: 'We have found out that the poison bottles were most likely medical bottles, they made them green and ribbed because many people years ago were illiterate. 'The colours indicated that it was poison, it changed then under the poisons act because the colours of the glass were attractive to children.' Old beer bottles from a Newport Brewery hidden in a Pontypool garden (Image: Zoe Brown) The family's new project has been time consuming. Zoe said: 'It's taken us this weekend to wash them all. Some still have their lids on so we left them. There's over 1000 bottles. 'Apparently before WW2 people were responsible for their own rubbish so that's probably why there was so much in one place!'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store