MI5 knew teenage terror suspect was vulnerable but pushed ahead with inquiry
MI5 pushed ahead with a terrorist inquiry into a teenager later found dead in a suspected suicide, despite knowing she was vulnerable, an inquest has heard.
Officers raised concerns about the risk of Rhianan Rudd harming herself after the security services opened an investigation into her obsession with committing a far-Right terrorist attack.
But they were told that 'no exception' could be made in investigating her activities because of the threat she posed to national security.
Intelligence chiefs concluded the case had to be pursued, as deradicalisation work with Rhianan could not be carried out under the Government's Prevent scheme while she was being actively investigated for suspected terror offences.
The inquest has previously been told that Rhianan was 14 when she was charged with terror offences in April 2021 after downloading a guide to making a pipe bomb. She had told school friends of her desire to blow up a synagogue and 'slash people's throats'.
The teenager, from Chesterfield in Derbyshire, was found dead in a Nottinghamshire children's home in May 2022, five months after the charges against her were dropped.
The Home Office had ruled she was the victim of grooming and radicalisation by adults.
The inquest was told on Friday that officers raised concerns that there was a lack of national guidance for them in dealing with cases of vulnerable minors who also posed a terror threat.
In internal MI5 emails read to the inquest, one officer said: 'We're seeing more and more of these cases and it doesn't sit comfortably.'
Another email read: 'Opening an investigation is sometimes the only way of understanding the threat and the necessity to investigate them in the interests of national security. No exception can be made in Rhianan's case.'
A senior MI5 officer in charge of its counter-terrorism investigations at the time, named only as Witness A, told the inquest on Friday: 'It's entirely possible for someone to be a victim or have mental health problems or be at risk of being radicalised – that does not mean they can't also be a potential perpetrator who we need to investigate to mitigate the threat that they pose.'
Witness A said that MI5's duty to prevent harm was not removed if the suspect was a vulnerable minor who had been exploited by adults.
Emily Carter, Rhianan's mother, maintains that the authorities, including MI5, counter-terrorism police and social services, failed to treat her daughter as a victim of exploitation by extremists.
Chesterfield coroner's court, sitting in London, heard evidence from Witness A that the service's guidelines had now changed to allow officers to recommend through the counter-terror police that an individual should be referred to the Home Office's national referral mechanism as a potential victim of grooming, coercion or human trafficking.
In a rare example of an MI5 officer giving evidence in open court, Witness A, who gave evidence from behind a screen, told the inquest that officers were being faced with a growing number of cases of young people involved in extremism and posing a potential terror threat.
The inquest heard that 13 per cent of individuals investigated for involvement in UK terror plots were under 18, a significant increase over the past few years.
Witness A told Judge Alexia Durran, the chief coroner, that this presented the intelligence service with added problems in safeguarding children while at the same time protecting national security.
The officer said: 'There's a tension between safeguarding and managing the threat.'
The inquest has previously heard Rhianan began to show disturbing signs of far-Right radicalisation after being groomed by her mother's boyfriend Dax Mallaburn, a US neo-Nazi.
At the same time, the teenager was in contact online with Chris Cook, another US white supremacist, who supplied her with instructions for making homemade bombs and weapons.
Rhianan became 'obsessed' with Adolf Hitler and Nazi politics, and at one point carved a swastika on her forehead.
The inquest heard that during a meeting in April 2022, the month before Rhianan's death, police updated MI5 and said the girl had recently started speaking with a German accent, and dressed in camouflage on Hitler's birthday.
Witnesses have said that before being found dead by staff at her care home, Rhianan's mood had appeared to be improving.
But Witness A said that even at that stage it had still not been possible for MI5 to conclude that the teenager no longer presented a threat to others.
The inquest continues.
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Man charged over abortion drug in partner's drink
A man in Texas has been charged with murder after he allegedly slipped an abortion drug into his pregnant girlfriend's drink. Justin Anthony Banta was arrested on Friday after a months-long investigation into his former girlfriend's accusation that he gave her the Plan C pill (known as an abortion drug) without her knowledge, according to police in the US state. Mr Banta's ex-partner said when she disclosed her pregnancy last year, he had offered to cover the cost of an abortion, but she expressed her desire to keep the baby. Police said after meeting with Mr Banta in a coffee shop, she experienced heavy bleeding and visited the emergency room, but lost her baby a few days later. Mr Banta was also charged with tampering with physical evidence and is awaiting prosecution, according to the Parker County Sheriff's Office. Police said Mr Banta's former girlfriend was around six-weeks pregnant when she went for a check up with her doctor, who told her the baby was healthy and had "a strong heartbeat" and vital signs. "Later that same day, the victim reported she met Banta at a coffee shop... where she expressed her suspicion that Banta had secretly added abortion-inducing pills to her drink without her knowledge or permission," the sheriff's office said in a statement. Mr Banta's former girlfriend also said he suggested they buy the Plan C abortion drug online after she disclosed her pregnancy. Following an interview with Mr Banta, police collected his mobile phone, but later discovered "crucial evidence relating to the case" was deleted, they said. Investigators said they believed Mr Banta, who worked in IT at the US Department of Justice, later accessed his phone remotely and performed a "reset". An arrest warrant for him was then obtained, and Mr Banta was charged last week with capital murder and tampering with physical evidence. Police said the cases against Mr Banta remained active and ongoing. Texas has some of the most restrictive abortion laws in the US, banning all abortions except in dire medical circumstances. The state introduced a law in 2022 that carries civil and criminal penalties for those who perform abortions. A law in 2021 also bans the termination of pregnancies after a baby's heartbeat is detected, but does make exceptions for medical emergencies. Home Office miscarriage spiker remanded in custody

Wall Street Journal
2 hours ago
- Wall Street Journal
Xi Tightens Leash on Officials' Boozing and Lavish Living
Local officials gathered in China's central city of Xinyang in March for a seminar about regulations requiring them to be frugal. Over lunch, five officials consumed four bottles of baijiu, a fiery sorghum-based spirit, flouting the very rules they had studied. One of them died that afternoon, according to an official account, which didn't state the cause of death. The officials at the lunch tried to hide the illicit consumption of alcohol, the account said, by paying off the deceased official's family and omitting the drinking in their reports to superiors.
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
Ex-senator's wife, convicted in bribery scheme, seeks new trial
Sen. Bob Menendez takes a selfie with his wife, Nadine, and businessman Wael Hana. The three were co-defendants in an 18-count federal corruption indictment. (Courtesy of U.S. Attorney's Office, Southern District of New York) The wife of former Sen. Bob Menendez has asked a federal judge to overturn her bribery conviction, saying prosecutors wrongly forced her to change lawyers less than a year before her trial over a 'manufactured' conflict of interest. Nadine Arslanian Menendez had to hire new attorneys in a hurry last year after prosecutors said they might call attorney David Schertler, who had represented her for nearly two years, as a trial witness to testify about information he'd shared with the prosecution during pre-indictment negotiations. But prosecutors never called Schertler to the stand during a three-week trial in Manhattan that ended in April, when jurors found Nadine Menendez guilty of accepting bribes including gold bars, cash, and a luxury car in exchange for power and political influence and of trying to hide her actions from federal investigators. Prosecutors' 'improper government interference' with her legal representation violated her Sixth Amendment right to counsel of her choice, her new attorneys, Sarah R. Krissoff and Andrew Vazquez, wrote in a motion filed Friday. 'To be clear — the Government has broad discretion to choose which witnesses to call and which evidence to offer in proving its case. But the Government cannot create a conflict, forcing Mr. Schertler to be a witness against his own client and to withdraw from the case, and then secretly decide not to call Mr. Schertler or offer any evidence regarding the Government's allegations that created the conflict in the first place,' the attorneys wrote. Prosecutors also never bothered to alert Barry Coburn, the defense attorney who replaced Schertler, that they decided against putting Schertler on the stand, preventing her from rehiring him, Krissoff and Vazquez wrote. 'If Mrs. Menendez had known that there was no longer any conflict, Mrs. Menendez would have elected to bring Mr. Schertler and his firm back into the case at any point, up until the last day of trial. Whether the Government's conduct was careless or intentional, the result is the same: Mrs. Menendez's fundamental constitutional rights were violated,' the attorneys wrote. Such a constitutional infringement created a structural error in the case and necessitates an acquittal or new trial, they argued. The conflict dates back to August 2023, about a month before the indictment, when Schertler met with prosecutors and claimed that mortgage and car payments totaling more than $50,000 that businessmen Wael Hana and Jose Uribe paid toward Nadine Menendez's Englewood Cliffs home and Mercedes-Benz convertible were loans — not bribes, according to court documents. Prosecutors used that information to file new obstruction of justice charges against the Menendezes, and they told the couple they planned to question Schertler before a jury on the matter, creating a conflict between Nadine Menendez and her lawyer. Besides their objections about Schertler's withdrawal, Krissoff and Vazquez repeated the former senator's oft-repeated complaint that the case should have been tried in New Jersey and not Manhattan. They also contend prosecutors improperly used summary exhibits and failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that bribery and obstruction of justice occurred. Nadine Menendez, who was tried after her husband and co-defendants to accommodate her medical treatment for breast cancer, is scheduled to be sentenced on Sept. 11. In an earlier trial that started in May 2024, a jury convicted Hana, real estate developer Fred Daibes, and the former senator last July. Last August, Judge Sidney H. Stein slapped Bob Menendez with an 11-year sentence; he's now scheduled to report to prison on June 17. Hana and Daibes reported to prison last month to begin serving their sentences — just over eight years and seven years, respectively. Sentencing for Uribe has been repeatedly postponed and is now set for Oct. 9 because he testified against his co-defendants in a cooperation deal with prosecutors. SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX