logo
Police and social services failed 'peaceful and loving' musician, 24, who was stabbed to death in street by 14-year-old girl, coroner rules

Police and social services failed 'peaceful and loving' musician, 24, who was stabbed to death in street by 14-year-old girl, coroner rules

Daily Mail​18-07-2025
Police and social services failings contributed to the fatal stabbing of a 'peaceful and loving' musician by a mentally ill teenage girl, a coroner has ruled.
Nimroy Hendricks, 24, was pursued down the road and stabbed in the chest by the 14-year-old youngster.
He collapsed in the street and despite frantic efforts by paramedics he was pronounced dead at the scene.
An inquest found the musician had been put at risk due to a failure by police and social services to take appropriate action.
The girl - who was known to be vulnerable and was on a Child Protection Plan - had been flagged as posing a 'high risk' and often 'carried a knife' around with her.
Just four days before the fatal attack, the girl - referred to as Child A - had gone missing from her home in Three Bridges, Crawley in West Sussex.
Police located her but were unable to return her home, because her mother was away in London.
Officers decided not to take her into protective custody and instead allowed her to stay with a woman who claimed to be her 'cousin'.
However the woman was not a relative and was known to police as a drug user with previous criminal convictions.
Today a coroner ruled that failings by Sussex Police and social services at West Sussex County Council may have contributed to the death of the 'peaceful and loving' musician.
Penelope Schofield, senior coroner for West Sussex, said officers had failed to check whether the adult allowed to take in the teenager the night before the killing was actually her cousin.
Instead they left Child A on the side of a road at 2am with a woman purporting to be her cousin.
She said: 'The police did not physically attend the address given to them and therefore did not realise this person was not a relative.'
Ms Schofield also said social services had failed to hold an emergency strategy meeting which had been organised when the child went missing.
She said that as a result 'there was no opportunity to put in place additional safeguarding measures.'
Ms Schofield added: 'It is possible that had these matters been addressed, the perpetrator may not have been in a position to carry out the act which led to Mr Hendrick's death.'
Speaking after the inquest his parents Nimroy Hendricks Snr and Lisa Hendricks said their son had been failed but they were relieved by the coroner's findings.
Lisa said: 'Nim should never have been put in the position he was. The authorities were well aware of the risk posed by the child.'
She said the impact on the family had been shattered by his death and accused the police and social services of trying to cover up their errors.
Mr Hendricks said: 'The police and authorities failed, they failed in every sense of the word.'
The inquest in Horsham, West Sussex, heard the 14-year-old girl had a history of violence and suffered from mental health problems.
She had been diagnosed with PTSD and a split personality disorder, had a criminal record and had previously attacked police.
The hearing was told the girl had suffered a 'turbulent' childhood and had been the repeated victim of sexual assault, sex abuse and child sexual exploitation which had compounded her mental health condition.
The teenager had recently moved from Birmingham and lived with her mother in a flat in Three Bridges.
Just four days before the fatal attack the girl had gone missing from home and could not be found.
Police were informed, launched a missing person investigation and eventually located her in the early hours of October 27, 2020.
But despite being missing from home and being classed as 'vulnerable' officers decided not to take her into protective custody.
Although it was known to police there were no relatives in the area, officers left the teenager with an 18-year-old she described as a 'cousin'.
The following day the girl returned to her home on her own then locked herself in her bedroom.
Mr Hendricks, known as Nim, was in a relationship with the girl's mother and had travelled from his home in London to the flat in Three Bridges to pick up some belongings.
When he arrived he found the flat in disarray and angrily banged on the girl's bedroom door.
Nim then left the property and was making his way towards a nearby train station when the girl, who had pursued him, confronted him in the street and stabbed him once in the chest.
The girl calmly walked off and told a bystander: 'I've stabbed Nim.'
Police arrested the girl, who had a criminal record, and she was later judged to be suffering from a 'significant abnormality of mind'.
The teenager pleaded guilty to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility at Bristol Crown Court in 2022 and was sentenced to nine years - five in custody and four on extended licence.
During the two-week inquest, the girl - who is now 19 - was revealed to have had a long history of mental health problems and was repeatedly in trouble with the police.
From a young age, the girl was in contact with child services including child safeguarding, youth justice services and education agencies.
As well as having learning difficulties, she was known to have a mental age of around eight.
Just eight months before the fatal attack, the girl had stabbed her mother in the leg and tried to burn down her house.
She had been remanded to juvenile institution before being released back into the care of her mother.
Early in 2020 the girl and her mother had moved from Birmingham to London before being placed in accommodation in West Sussex.
It was there the girl's mother met Mr Hendricks, a talented musician who worked as a carer, and the pair began a relationship.
The girl continued to make threats of violence towards her mother and, although she started attending a specialist education centre, she continued to pose a threat of violence.
On October 24 the teenager disappeared from the flat and was reported to police as being missing from home.
The girl was located by police and her mother, who was staying in London, asked officers to take her daughter to a safe place.
Frederick Powell, lawyer for the family, said Nim had never been told the risk of violence from the girl.
He said: 'Nim was overlooked. He was never told of the risk this child posed. He was in a blindspot due to the failure of examining what was known.'
Paying tribute to her son, his mother Lisa Hendricks said Nim had been a hugely loving child before growing up to become a talented musician.
She said: 'He was a leader and a performer. He loved books and reading. He was confident, happy and inquisitive.
'He was a joy to us. He loved the environment, the mountains and being close to the sea.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Issuing prison officers with Tasers won't make them safer
Issuing prison officers with Tasers won't make them safer

The Independent

time21 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Issuing prison officers with Tasers won't make them safer

If you have read anything on the prison system over the past few years, you will have noticed a few common themes: overcrowding, understaffing, reoffending, crumbling infrastructure, and abject conditions. Our prisons are increasingly places of despair – full of drugs, drones, self-harm, violence and deaths. The recent annual report of the Chief Inspector of Prisons lay testament to the extent of the crisis gripping the prison system. And the government knows this. Its own research sets out that people living in overcrowded cells were 19 per cent more likely to be involved in assault incidents – and 67 out of the 121 adult male prisons in this country are overcrowded. In the context of rising violence across the prison estate, what is the government's solution? To recruit and train more prison officers? To address overcrowding by reducing capacity in particularly troubled jails and across the system? To invest in infrastructure? To increase education and training budgets to give prisoners access to the means to turn their lives around? No. While we wait for bolder action to fix the broken prison system, the government's response is to trumpet the fact that Tasers will now be used behind bars. The introduction of Tasers has been linked to horrific incidents involving attacks on staff at Frankland and Belmarsh – although it is far from clear that access to these weapons would have prevented either incident taking place. Staff in adult male prisons already have access to batons and PAVA spray, which we know undermine positive relationships between staff and those in their care. The escalating use of force brings with it a multitude of concerns. Inspection reports have consistently revealed inappropriate use of force, including against people threatening to self-harm; problems with lack of staff training; inadequate use of body-worn cameras; and disproportionate use of force against people from Black, Black/British, and Muslim backgrounds. While Tasers are being piloted in a limited manner – just the 'operational response and resilience unit' will be authorised to use them – the fear must be that this is the thin edge of the wedge. Indeed, speaking to journalists about Tasers, the secretary of state for justice, Shabana Mahmood, remarked: 'This is very much the beginning'. It seems that the rollout of further weapons in prisons has been foretold. And that would track; two months ago, the secretary of state approved of the use of PAVA spray – an otherwise illegal chemical incapacitant – in prisons holding children, despite evidence that it won't reduce violence and will be disproportionately used against Black and minority ethnic children, Muslim children and children with disabilities. Last week, the Howard League issued legal proceedings to challenge this decision. Almost every week, I visit prisons across the country and speak to people being held in and working in dreadful conditions. Many of this country's jails are filthy, overrun simultaneously with drones and rats. People eat – and go to the toilet – in cramped cells with poor ventilation. There are more than 22,000 people sharing a cell intended for a single person. Facilities have become dilapidated as the maintenance backlog has grown. Restricted regimes, often due to staff shortages, mean that people have little to do but stay locked in their cells. I speak to prison governors doing their very best to keep the people in their care safe, though they are often uncomfortable with the job they are doing, feeling powerless to attract the resources they need to run a better jail. They all want fewer people in their prison, higher staff confidence and capability, and more time to spend with prisoners to help turn their lives around. But there is no money for any of that. And so, prisoners are held in ghastly conditions, and when this leads to unrest and violence, the government is sanctioning yet more use of force against them. There is no question that the government is facing a crisis in its prisons. But this will not be solved with easy, reactionary policies. What is needed is political courage to explain the problems honestly to the public – as Keir Starmer started to do last July – and long-term investment in evidence-based policy that addresses the roots of the overcrowding and reoffending in our prison system. Violence will not be stemmed by more violence. The government must look at its own evidence and acknowledge that, rather than adding to the pressure in our overstretched jails, the best response to rising levels of violence is to reduce the prison population and offer productive and positive regimes for people in custody. We will be waiting until September for legislation to deliver changes proposed in David Gauke's sentencing review, which will hopefully ease some of this pressure. But otherwise, the government's plan seems to be to build more prisons, and weaponise them at pace. Which feels a long way from the promise of the prime minister's first press conference last July.

Southport's Muslims still plagued by Islamophobic incidents a year on from race riots, imam says
Southport's Muslims still plagued by Islamophobic incidents a year on from race riots, imam says

The Independent

time21 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Southport's Muslims still plagued by Islamophobic incidents a year on from race riots, imam says

Southport continues to be plagued by Islamophobic incidents a year after the deadly knife attack that sparked race riots last year, the chairman of its mosque has revealed. Imam Ibrahim Hussein, the chairman of Southport Mosque, said members had reported six incidents to the police since last July – a sharp increase from the three he said they had reported over the 30 years since they opened in the town. The mosque in the seaside town found itself at the centre of nationwide riots last July, sparked by misinformation spread online following an attack at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport that killed three young girls. Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, Bebe King, six, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, died, and eight more girls and two adults were left wounded when a knifeman stormed the class before being detained by police. Mr Hussein said the memory of the attack was 'in his head all the time' and he remembers how the community was hoping to support the families in any way possible. 'It doesn't leave me for any one night. Of course, when the awful attack happened, we were devastated... We were hoping we could offer the family any support in any small way we could. Just being there and offering prayers. 'But we very quickly had reports come in saying we would be targeted.' The mosque found itself at the centre of the Islamophobic rioting the evening after the attack, after false reports that the perpetrator was a Muslim asylum seeker. 'In the evening, it escalated very quickly into a big mob charging at us. We were trapped in from 8pm to just before 1am in the morning,' he recalled. But the next day, the local community came out 'in droves' to rebuild the mosque's broken wall and offer support. He said: 'The response from the local community was more than great. We always knew we were on good terms with our neighbours, there has been nothing but mutual respect between us and on that morning they all came out in droves to support us and the muslim community.' However, a year on, Mr Hussein said Southport's small Muslim community continues to feel nervous amid rising Islamophobia. He said: 'In the last 30 years, since the mosque has been here, there were about three reported incidents – one every ten years on average. 'But in the last year, there have been six or seven incidents we've had to report. Islamophobia is going through the roof really – even though people now know we had nothing to do with anything.' Incidents targeting Muslims in the area have included objects being thrown at the mosque as well as cars being scratched. In June, it was reported that the back window of a mosque was damaged by an object suspected to have been thrown by a catapult. 'People are apprehensive and are feeling kind of worried. There is an undercurrent of something going on, but we can't put our finger on it. So I've had to warn people to be vigilant and careful.' He added how this had coincided with incidents across the country in recent weeks targeting asylum seekers and other mosques. Last month, a 34-year-old man appeared in court over an attack on the Islamic Centre in Belfast. Police previously said a viable device was thrown through a window of the centre during evening prayer on Friday. Last year, Tell Mama, a charity monitoring Islamophobic incidents, said a survey had found a majority of Muslims felt hate against them had become more widespread since the summer riots. The organisation analysed the opinions of 750 Muslims across the UK eight weeks after the disorder broke out in parts of England and Northern Ireland. Tell Mama said just under three-quarters (71 per cent) felt anti-Muslim hatred and Islamophobia had become more widespread since the unrest. Almost two-thirds (62 per cent) said the potential risk of harm to Muslim communities had since increased significantly or somewhat.

Plans approved to prevent unauthorised camps in Teignbridge
Plans approved to prevent unauthorised camps in Teignbridge

BBC News

time22 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Plans approved to prevent unauthorised camps in Teignbridge

A council is to spend more than £70,000 on a range of measures to try to stop unauthorised Gypsy and traveller District Council said it had to clean up sites and repair damage following the unauthorised use of council-owned land, with eight cases requiring legal action in 2024.A report discussed on Tuesday proposed installing boulders, barriers and a new fence at six parks across the district. The council approved all the plans to make access more difficult for unauthorised council said there was no transit provision for Gypsy and traveller groups at the moment in Devon and it would work with other local authorities to identify possible sites. The report which was considered by the council's executive committee said unauthorised encampments created "significant demands" on resources through "the requirement to clean the site and surrounding areas, repair any damage caused and deal with complaints from residents and businesses that have been impacted".The plans include a new rail with steel posts at Osborne Park, boulders at access points to Sandringham Park and Bakers Park, lockable bollards at Courtenay Park and Forde Park and a barrier at Dawlish Countryside council said there were "no real alternatives" other than "to continue to reactively manage the unauthorised occupation of the parks and accept the associated costs, complaints and impacts on local residents and businesses".However, the council also acknowledged the risk that "the measures proposed will not guarantee a stop to further unauthorised encampments at these sites" and that encampments may move to other, more accessible, council-owned land.|About 20 members of the public attended the executive meeting which heard there had been an unprecedented number of encampments this year.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store