
Parents tell 'untold stories' of how their 'hero' daughters survived Southport attack
Axel Rudakubana, 18, murdered Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, Bebe King, six, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, in what the chairman of the public inquiry Sir Adrian Fulford called "one of the most egregious crimes in our country's history".
Eight children were injured along with two adults at a Taylor Swift-themed class in the Merseyside seaside town on 29 July last year, while 15 others escaped without physical injuries.
The surviving victims and their families have been granted anonymity during the inquiry, with one girl referred to as C3. Her father was the first to give evidence at Liverpool Town Hall on Wednesday.
Reading a statement on behalf of him and his wife, he told how their daughter was the first girl to escape the scene by running from the Hart Space building and hiding behind a parked car before jumping through an open car door.
"Our nine-year-old daughter was stabbed three times in the back by a coward she didn't even see," he said.
"Although she didn't know what was happening - she knew she had to run. She ran out of the studio door, down the stairs, and out of the building."
He said she can be seen "looking scared, confused and pained" in CCTV footage of the incident, adding: "It was troubling for us to see what she had to go through, before either of her parents had arrived at the scene."
"We are so thankful and proud that despite being critically injured, she was able to make the decisions she did in that terrible moment, he said.
The girl's father said his daughter "continues to astound" her parents with the way she dealt with the attack and her recovery, saying: "It has been inspiring for us to witness."
He said she has difficulty sleeping, experiences flashbacks, looks over her shoulder scanning for potential danger when she leaves the house, has a fear of loud noises and has to turn off some songs when they come on the radio.
"Our daughter knows that she is loved," he said.
"It is through this support and love that she will continue to thrive. We couldn't be prouder of her. She is our hero."
Stabbed 33 times
The parents of a girl referred to as C1 told how their "beautiful, articulate, fun-loving little girl" was stabbed 33 times.
Rudakubana was seen dragging her back into the building in CCTV footage played during his sentencing hearing, which drew gasps in court.
"That is how she became known in this nightmare. The girl that was dragged back in," her mother said.
She thanked the teachers who escaped to call police and flag down help but said: "The most painful of truths for us though, and what has been most devastating to come to terms with, is that there were no adults to help during both of her attacks.
"She was only supported by other children. The courage and strength she found leaves me crushed, but in complete awe."
She added: "It is these untold stories of remarkable strength and bravery that are missing when we have heard other accounts of this day."
The mother said the "hours and days that followed the attack were a living hell" and her daughter's memories - including a concert of her "idol" Taylor Swift - have "been forfeited to make space for the trauma that she carries".
"We tell her she was brave. How proud we are that she was able to help other girls. How her strength makes us feel strong. How important what she did that day was. She is her own hero. She may be a survivor of this attack, but she is still trying to survive this, every single day," she said.
Attack 'changed everything'
The mother of a girl referred to as C8 said she was "like any other seven-year-old little girl", "with an incredible energy" and "full of life".
But in a statement read out by a legal representative, she said the attack last year "changed everything" when she got a "panicked phone call" from a friend's mother, who couldn't find the girls.
"That moment, the sound of fear in her voice and the panic I felt will never leave me," she said.
"I rushed to the scene and what I saw is something no parent should ever see. My daughter had sustained serious physical injuries including a stab wound to her arm and a cut to her face and chin."
She said her daughter "remembers the attack vividly" and later told her "she thought it had to be fake, because she couldn't believe something that terrible could really be happening".
"Where she was once eager to go off with her friends, she now needs my support if it is somewhere public or unknown," she said.
"Simple days out now need a level of safety planning that we would never have considered before."
'Constant flashbacks'
The mother of a girl referred to as Q, who escaped without being physically injured, told how she arrived to collect her daughter to find "children running from the building, screaming and fearing for their lives".
In a statement read to the inquiry by a legal representative on her behalf, she said it was "the most horrific experience of my life".
"What I saw on that day will stick with me forever, I constantly have flashbacks and relive what happened," she said.
She said her daughter has become "very withdrawn" since the attack and has asked her parents, "How will I ever be normal again?"
Rudakubana was jailed for a minimum of 52 years in January and is being investigated over an alleged attack on a prison officer at Belmarsh prison in May.
The public inquiry, announced by Home Secretary Yvette Cooper in January, is looking into whether the attack could or should have been prevented, given what was known about the killer.
Rudakubana, who was born in Cardiff, had contact with police, the courts, the youth justice system, social services and mental health services, and was referred to the government's anti-extremism Prevent scheme three times before the murders.
A rapid review into his contact with Prevent found his case should have been kept open and that he should have been referred to Channel, another anti-terror scheme.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
6 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Man 'panicked' and dragged woman's naked body to his shed but says he 'didn't murder her', court hears
A man has admitted 'panicking' and dragging a woman's naked body into his shed but denies murdering her. Christopher Barlow told a jury he found Mariann Borocz dead in his kitchen after the pair returned to his home in Bolton when they met at a shop nearby. The 62-year-old admitted he moved her body into a shed in his back garden and decided not to report her death to the police. He told jurors he 'made a bad mistake, a silly mistake'. 'I regret it,' Mr Barlow added. Ms Borocz's body was discovered almost 10 days later, Manchester Crown Court heard. Giving evidence in his defence, Mr Barlow denied having any involvement in the death of 55-year-old Ms Borocz. He denies murder and an alternative charge of manslaughter. Jurors have been told the pair, who had never met before, were in Marko's convenience store on Chorley Old Road at about 9.30am on Saturday, December 14 last year. Ms Borocz bought a can of cider, while Mr Barlow was seen buying pint cans of Stella lager. Ms Borocz walked back with Mr Barlow to his home on nearby Pedder Street. 'No general reason, just for company,' Mr Barlow said, after his barrister Siobhan Grey KC asked why he had allowed her to enter his home. Mr Barlow had previously said he planned on spending the day drinking up to 16 pint cans of Stella. The defendant said he sat down in the living room, and Ms Borocz stood in the kitchen. He offered her a seat but she didn't respond, the jury heard. Mr Barlow said he couldn't see her from his seat, where he was drinking and listening to music. The defendant said he didn't see Ms Borocz for another 40 minutes. 'She could have gone to the toilet for all I know,' Mr Barlow added. The defendant said he next saw her on the kitchen floor, sitting in an upright position with her 'head slumped forward'. Mr Barlow said that Ms Borocz was naked and that her clothes were at the bottom of the stairs. He said that he was 'shocked' and 'panicking' and went over to her. 'She must have been dead,' Mr Barlow said. 'Did you make any attempt to call 999?,' Ms Grey asked. 'No, I just panicked,' he replied. Asked why he panicked, the defendant replied: 'One, I didn't know what had happened, and two, I thought I would get in trouble. I was scared. 'I just automatically thought I would be a suspect or something like that.' Mr Barlow said that he went for a drive later on, because his head was 'in bits'. He said: 'I was trying to focus and concentrate and I couldn't. I should have reported and I didn't, I'm sorry I didn't.' The court heard he went back to the shop and bought eight more cans of beer. Mr Barlow said that later in the evening, he moved Ms Borocz's body from the kitchen to the shed. 'I had to drag her,' he said. Asked why he put her in the shed, Mr Barlow said: 'I told you, because I panicked. 'I realised I should have reported but I didn't. 'I made a bad mistake, a silly mistake, and I regret it. 'My intention was to report it as soon as I got round to it, as soon as possible. 'I didn't intend to leave her there. My intention was to report it but I was just panicking.' Mr Barlow said he didn't know how Ms Borocz 'became separated from her clothes'. He admitted that he put her clothes in a bin in his garden. 'I just panicked,' Mr Barlow said. 'I placed them in a bag and put them in the bin.' Mr Barlow said that the next morning, he went for a drive to 'clear [his] head'. 'I tried and tried and tried, but the longer I put it off [reporting to the police] it was getting harder,' he said. The defendant said he returned to work on Monday, December 16. He said the thought of Ms Borocz's body being in his shed in the intervening days 'was on my mind constantly.' Police attended his home on December 21 and said they were investigating a woman who had gone missing. Two days later, officers returned and arrested Mr Barlow on suspicion of assault. Ms Borocz's body was discovered in the shed. Jurors have heard that a pathologist determined there were three possible causes of Ms Borocz's death. Asphyxia, due to unexplained marks on her neck, hypothermia, as she was found naked in an outside shed, or deprivation of food and water. Mr Barlow, of Pedder Street, Bolton, denies murder and an alternative charge of manslaughter.


The Independent
8 minutes ago
- The Independent
Women who stole thousands of pounds worth of Jellycat toys fail to show for sentencing
Arrest warrants have been issued for two women who did not show up at court for sentencing after stealing thousands of pounds worth of Jellycat toys. Warrants without bail were issued for Sarah Jordan, 35, of no fixed abode, and Amber Clarke, 24, of Nine Elms, south-west London, after they failed to turn up for their sentencing at Wimbledon Magistrates' Court on Tuesday. Jordan was due to be sentenced for eight counts of theft from shops in Kingston upon Thames and Wimbledon between December 2024 to May 2025 and for failing to surrender for a previous hearing at the same court. The theft charges include six counts of theft where she was said to have stolen numerous Jellycats valued at a total of £1,716.57. Food and clothing were taken in the other thefts, according to the charges. Clarke had previously pleaded guilty to 16 counts of theft in shops in south and south-west London between February 2024 to January 2025. They included thefts on two days where she stole 16 Jellycat soft toys worth £4,454.84 and another day when she 'stole a number of soft toys' to the value of £100 belonging to Waterstones in Lambeth, the charges state. Various grocery and laundry items were stolen in the other thefts. Clarke has also pleaded guilty to a charge of obstructing or resisting a constable in the execution of their duty, assault by beating, failure to surrender for a previous hearing at the same court and assaulting an emergency worker.


Telegraph
8 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Steer clear of dolphin ‘targeting women in wetsuits', swimmers warned
A dolphin that appears to be 'targeting women in wetsuits' could be dangerous to humans, experts have warned. The animal, which has been named Reggie, was first spotted joining swimmers in Lyme Bay, Dorset, for an early morning dip on August 3 and its presence has attracted crowds of people to the area. But experts say that Reggie, which appears to be living on its own, could snap and turn aggressive amid all the attention, which could also be a danger to its own safety. It has already been photographed with gashes that were seemingly caused by a boat's propeller. Kayaker Rhys Paterson, 32, said he was forced to intervene after the dolphin began jumping on a woman, pushing her head repeatedly under the water. Footage showed the swimmer saying: 'It scared me to death – oh my goodness!' before being pushed under the waves on Aug 14. Mr Paterson, a development director from Lyme Regis, said the filmed incident was not the only confrontation, and the dolphin appeared to be 'targeting women in wetsuits'. 'We saved two swimmers who were fairly deep, where the dolphin kept jumping on them,' he added. 'The dolphin was basically drowning this woman – it kind of jumped on her back four times. 'We had been following the dolphin for a little bit, because obviously, it's quite a local legend at the minute. 'But when we realised it wasn't playing, it was quite a big shock. People need to understand that it's not an amusement arcade. It's a wild animal. It can snap all of a sudden.' 'Multiple potential offences' observed The Marine Management Organisation, a government quango, said: 'We're increasingly concerned about a lone dolphin spotted in Lyme Bay following multiple potential marine wildlife disturbance offences observed online and shared on social media. 'Please remember – never swim with, touch, feed, or approach dolphins. If a dolphin approaches you, calmly leave the area. 'Human interaction can cause dolphins to lose their natural wariness, leading to injury or even death. Disturbed dolphins are also known to become aggressive toward people.' However, some holidaymakers are ignoring the warnings, and videos posted online show paddleboarders floating close to the dolphin. 'Leave the poor thing alone' One social media user commented: 'We went down last night and watched from the shore. We were shocked to see so many paddleboarders out there (around 20) and they were all following the dolphin and not leaving him alone. 'Yes it's magical for everyone to be up close but seriously have a word with yourselves. Leave the poor thing alone.' Lucy Babey, the director of programmes at Orca, a marine conservation charity, told The Telegraph: 'This is a wild animal and a large, robust animal. Interacting with the dolphin could result in serious injuries to both people and the dolphin.' Bottlenose dolphins are native to British shores, can reach up to 13ft in length and typically weigh around 500kg. It is illegal to intentionally or recklessly kill, injure or disturb dolphins, whales and porpoises under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. Approaching or recklessly disturbing a dolphin can result in a prison sentence of up to six months and an unlimited fine.