Axel Rudakubana: Live updates as Southport child killer is ordered to leave dock just minutes into sentencing hearing after complaining of illness as hospital visit is revealed
Child killer Axel Rudakubana told police ‘I’m glad they’re dead’ following the Southport attacks, his sentencing hearing was told before he was ordered to leave the dock after complaining of illness.
Rudakubana, 18, entered the dock at Liverpool Crown Court almost an hour after the hearing was due to start but spent just 10 minutes in court before shouting he felt ill and needed a paramedic.
Earlier, it was revealed the child killer was taken to hospital this morning but his condition was not deemed serious enough to postpone the sentencing. One member of the public mouthed ‘coward’ as Rudakubana was taken back to the cells just 10 minutes into the hearing.
Rudakubana unexpectedly pleaded guilty to the murders of Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and nine-year-old Alice da Silva Aguiar on Monday when a trial was due to open at Liverpool Crown Court.
Live updates below
Footage of Rudakubana arriving in taxi played in court
The court has been shown footage of Axel Rudakubana arriving at the dance studio in a taxi just moments before he carried out his murderous rampage.
The teen was heard asking the driver where 34a Hart Street was before he left the vehicle without paying when the driver pointed him in the direction of the building. The driver is heard threatening to call the police.
Rudakubana is then seen trying the door of the Hart Space, knocking on it before entering a stairwell to the side.
Minutes later screams can be heard and CCTV shows children running outside.
Families were in tears as the video was played. Deanna Heer KC paused to allow families a chance to leave court, but all remained seated.
Police arrived to large crowd in ‘complete panic’
The court has now heard how the first police officer on the scene arrived to find a ‘large crowd of people in a state of complete panic’.
Sergeant Gillespie entered Hart Space, where the dance studio was located, accompanied by his colleague Sergeant Holden who had his Taser drawn.
At the top of the stairs they found the defendant standing over the body of Bebe King who had visible and severe stab injuries. He was holding a large, bloodied, kitchen knife, which he dropped when told to do so.
Sergeant Gillespie later found the body of Elsie Dot Stancombe in the studio.
Businessman stabbed in leg after trying to help children under attack
Businessman Jonathan Hayes was stabbed in the leg as he tried to help children who had been attacked in the dance studio.
Mr Hayes was working in an office across the landing from the studio when he heard screaming and saw some children running across the car park.
As he walked onto the landing he saw the body of a child, lying motionless on the floor, now believed to be Bebe King.
Rudakabuna was crouching over the child and began to confront Mr Hayes who then retreated into his office.
The defendant swiped at him with a knife, which he tried to grab. During the confrontation, the defendant stabbed him in the leg and he fell to the ground, shouting for help. His colleague chased the defendant out of the office and shut the door.
Window cleaner performed CPR on Alice da Silva Aguiar
The court has heard window cleaner Joel Verite gave CPR to Alice da Silva Aguiar after she collapsed in the street moments after she was stabbed by Rudakabuna.
Mr Verite and fellow cleaner Marcin Tyjon were driving along Hart Street when they saw a group of children running across the road and a woman, Leanne Lucas, covered in blood.
Prosecutor Ms Heer said: “She was screaming that someone was stabbing the kids. He could see that she was injured and that there was a child lying on the ground further along the road.”
Ms Heer said Mr Verite picked up Alice and took her into the street where CPR was given on the instructions of a 999 operator.
Sobbing breaks out as attacks are described in court
Some family members have broken down in tears as the events of July 29 were described to the court.
Relatives had their heads in their hands and wiped their eyes with tissues. Sobs could be heard from the public gallery.
Continuing her opening remarks, prosecutor Deanna Heer has told the court about the moment Rudakabuna entered the dance class at around 11:45am in the morning:
Without saying a word, he grabbed the child nearest to him from behind and put his arm around her. This was (one of the children) who was at a table making a bracelet. At first, Leanne Lucas thought he was there to collect her, but he then moved on to a second child and then a third, Alice Da Silva Aguiar.
He moved quickly through the room without saying anything. It was only when he reached her and she felt a knife go into her back, that Leanne Lucas realised he was armed and stabbing the children. She cannot now recall whether she shouted for everyone to run or not, but they all ran towards the door and out into the corridor.
Rudakubana branded ‘coward’ after leaving dock
One member of the public mouthed ‘coward’ as Rudakubana was taken back to the cells just 10 minutes into the hearing.
Southport victim injuries are ‘sadistic in nature’: Prosecutor’s opening remarks in full
Opening the case, Deanna Heer KC said:
On the 29th of July last summer, the defendant carried out what the prosecution say was a pre-meditated, pre-planned knife attack on multiple victims, principally young girls, intending to kill them.
Three children were killed, two of them suffered particularly horrific injuries which the prosecution say are difficult to explain as anything other than sadistic in nature.
He also tried to kill 10 others. He inflicted a number of stab wounds upon them to their backs, suggesting they were inflicted as they tried to escape.
When his home was searched, a number of weapons were found including ricin which the defendant had produced in his bedroom.
Documents were found which stated he had a long-standing obsession with violence including an Al Qaeda manual.
When arrested at police station, Axel Rudakubana was heard to say: ‘It’s a good thing those children are dead. I’m so glad, I’m so happy.
Breaking:Rudakubana ordered to leave dock for shouting during sentencuing
Mr Justice Goose has ordered Southport killer Axel Rudakubana to leave the dock as he shouted repeatedly during his sentencing hearing at Liverpool Crown Court.
Rudakubana’s defence lawyer Stanley Reiz KC has told the court his client as not eaten ‘for a number of days’ and drunk ‘very little’ over the same period.
There was concern about his ability to be in a high pressure situation.
Mr Justice Goose said he had been reassured Rudakubana was fit to attend and the court would continue until 1pm when there would be a break.
Rudakubana shouted: ‘I can’t remain quiet. I haven’t eaten for 10 days. I feel ill. I’m not going to remain quiet.’
The teen was then ordered to leave the dock.
Rudakubana demands a paramedic after telling court ‘I feel ill’
Southport killer Axel Rudakubana turned to a dock officer as the opening note was read at his sentencing and said: ‘I’m not fine, I feel ill.’
He shouted repeatedly: ‘I need to speak to a paramedic, I feel ill.’
He added: ‘You’re not giving me any support judge, I feel ill.’
In her opening remarks, prosecutor Deanna Heer KC told Liverpool Crown Court:
Three children were killed, two of whom suffered particularly horrific injuries which are difficult to explain as anything other than sadistic in nature; and the defendant attempted to kill 10 others, inflicting a number of stab wounds upon them, including to their backs as they tried to escape.
Rudakubana told police ‘I’m glad they’re dead’ after Southport attacks
In the opening moments Liverpool Crown Court heard Axel Rudakubana said ‘I’m glad they’re dead’ as he was held in a custody suite after killing three girls in a knife attack at a Southport dance class.
Prosecutors have said the injuries suffered by the Southport murder victims are ‘difficult to explain as anything other than sadistic in nature’.
Rudakubana refuses to enter his name
Axel Rudakubana has refused to confirm his name when asked to do so by the court.
This follows on from previous hearings in which he has refused to speak.
The teenager is dressed in a grey prison tracksuit with blue surgical facemask, which he has also worn at court.
He entered the dock surrounded by five security guards and had his head bowed as the hearing started.
Breaking:Rudakubana enters court as sentencing gets under way
Axel Rudakubana has now entered the court room after his sentencing was delayed for more than 45 minutes.
Mr Justice Goose is now sat in the court as the sentencing gets under way.
No reason has been given for the delay.
It was reported earlier that Rudakubana was taken to hospital earlier this morning.
Rudakubana rushed to hospital before sentencing
Sources have confirmed Axel Rudakubana was rushed from prison to an undisclosed hospital before being brought to court.
The Times reported Rudakubana, 18, ‘required medical attention’ and was taken to hospital in the early hours, sources told the newspaper.
However, his condition was not deemed serious enough to delay his sentencing hearing.
Outside court, there were a small number of protesters gathered and a large number of police.
Family members take their seats in public gallery
The Liverpool Echo has reported around 40 family members of the Southport victims have taken their seats in the public gallery.
On Monday, many of the victims’ relatives did not see Rudakubana plead guilty to all 16 charges as they believed his trial would open fully on Tuesday.
Rudakubana has yet to appear in the court.
Watch: Axel Rudakubana arrives at court in police convoy
We can now bring you footage of the moment Southport killer Axel Rudakubana arrived at Liverpool Crown Court in a police convoy.
The Southport killer’s sentencing hearing is about to get under way following a slight delay to proceedings.
Sentencing hearing about to begin
We’re about to get under way in the sentencing hearing at Liverpool Crown Court.
We can expect to hear victim impact statements, the prosecution outline their case and mitigation arguments from the defence.
Mr Justice Goose will then deliver his remarks in which he will explain how long Rudakubana will spend in prison before passing his sentence.
We will bring you live updates throughout the day.
Rudakubana expected to be spared whole life order
A whole life order is the most severe punishment a judge can give out in England and Wales.
It means the offender will never be released from prison, except in exceptional compassionate circumstances.
The tariff is saved for the most heinous murderers, including serial killer Levi Bellfield and former Metropolitan Police officer Wayne Couzens, for the kidnap, rape and murder of Sarah Everard.
It differs from a life sentence, which means the offender must serve a minimum term in prison before they are eligible for parole.
Southport attacker Axel Rudakubana is not expected to receive a whole-life order because he was 17 at the time of the attack and the measures can normally only be imposed on criminals aged 21 or over.
They are usually only considered for those aged 18 to 20 in exceptional circumstances.
A whole life sentence is seen as too severe and not appropriate for a young offender.
‘Axel should rot in jail’: Parent of stabbing victim speaks out ahead of sentencing
A parent of one of the Southport stabbing victims says child killer Axel Rudakubana ‘should rot in jail’ after he in sentenced today.
He urged the judge to show now mercy when he sentences Rudakubana, 18, after he pleaded guilty to killing three primary schoolgirls and attempting to murder 10 other people at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class last summer.
The 18-year-old, who wore a facemask and refused to stand in the dock, changed his pleas from not guilty to guilty in a U-turn as his four-week trial at Liverpool Crown Court was about to start.
However, he cannot be given a whole life tariff as he was 13 days from his 18th birthday when he carried out the worst targeted attack on children in Britain since the Dunblane massacre in 1996.
The parent of one of the girls who needed surgery after the attack insisted that the rules need to be changed. ‘Axel should rot in jail,’ said the parent, who cannot be identified for legal reasons to protect his child.
Pictured: Axel Rudakubana arrives at court
Axel Rudakubana has arrived at Liverpool Crown Court – his prison van accompanied by a heavy police presence.
He arrived at 10.45am in a convoy headed by a police car with two motorcycle outriders and two more police vehicles at the rear.
Southport attacks prompt knife sale changes
Axel Rudakubana bought the knife he used to kill three little girls and injure 10 others from Amazon, despite being 17 years old and it being illegal to sell to under-18s.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer has since vowed to bring in stricter checks when buying knives, especially online.
The Prime Minister said it was unacceptable murder weapons can be obtained with ‘two clicks’ online.
Under new Government plans, anyone purchasing a knife from the web will have to provide a digital scan of an official identity document such as a passport or driving licence to prove they are over 18 – and also film a selfie video to show they are the ID holder.
The two-step verification scheme goes further than existing laws which require internet retailers to check the age of customers both when they order knives and when they are delivered.
Southport timeline: Stabbings, summer riots and court appearances
July 29, 2024: Shortly before midday, a knifeman enters a dance class at The Hart Space in Hart Street in Southport. Bebe, Elsie and Alice are fatally wounded. Eight other children are injured, as are instructor Leanne Lucas and businessman John Hayes. Police say they have detained a male and seized a knife. Within hours, claims spread online that the suspect is an asylum seeker who arrived in the UK by boat in 2023. Some claims include an alleged identity.
July 30, 2024: In the evening, a peaceful vigil is held outside Southport’s Atkinson arts venue, where flowers are laid in memory of those who died. Shortly after the vigil, a separate protest begins outside the town’s mosque in St Luke’s Road. People throw items towards the mosque, property is damaged and police vehicles are set on fire.
July 31, 2024: Demonstrators gather in Whitehall, London, for an ‘Enough Is Enough’ protest. Flares and cans are thrown at police and more than 100 people are arrested. Disorder also breaks out in Hartlepool, County Durham, and Aldershot, Hampshire.
August 1, 2024: Police announce that Rudakubana has been charged with the murders of Bebe, Elsie Dot and Alice, 10 counts of attempted murder and possession of a bladed article. He is not named by police because of his age. He appears in court in Liverpool and Honorary Recorder of Liverpool Andrew Menary KC rules he can be named, following a request led by the Daily Mail, as he is due to turn 18 in a week. He initially smiled on entering the courtroom – then kept his face covered by his sweatshirt for the remainder of the proceedings before the case was adjourned. Later that evening, demonstrators gather outside a hotel in Newton Heath, Manchester.
August 2, 2024: Three police officers are taken to hospital after disorder in Sunderland.
August 3, 2024: There are scenes of violence during planned protests across the UK, including in Liverpool, Hull, Nottingham and Belfast.
August 4, 2024: Disorder continues, including outside a Holiday Inn Express in Rotherham, South Yorkshire, where masked demonstrators launch lengths of wood and sprayed fire extinguishers at police officers.
August 5, 2024: The Government holds an emergency Cobra meeting in the wake of the disorder and Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer vows to ‘ramp up criminal justice’. That evening, a peaceful vigil is held in Southport, a week on from the killings. Police deal with disorder in Plymouth, Devon and Darlington, County Durham.
August 7, 2024: Prison sentences for those involved in the unrest begin to be handed out. Derek Drummond, 58, is the first person to be jailed for violent disorder at Liverpool Crown Court, where he is sentenced to three years. More than 100 protests are planned for across the country, with counter-demonstrations taking place, but the majority of police forces report very little trouble.
October 29, 2024: Merseyside Police announces Rudakubana will appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court via videolink the next day charged with production of a biological toxin, Ricin, and possession of information likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing to commit an act of terrorism.
October 30, 2024: Rudakubana appears at Westminster Magistrates’ Court via videolink from HMP Belmarsh to face the two new charges. He holds his sweater over the bottom half of his face and does not respond when asked to confirm his name.
November 13, 2024: Rudakubana appears at Liverpool Crown Court via videolink. He covers his face with his grey sweatshirt and does not speak throughout the hearing. About 20 family members of victims sit in the public gallery. The case is adjourned until December 12, when a preparatory hearing will take place.
January 20, 2025: Rudakubana appears at Liverpool Crown Court for the first day of his trial where he pleads guilty to all 16 charges, including the murders of Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, Bebe King, six, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven.
Rudakubana flagged to Prevent on three occasions
Triple child killer Axel Rudakubana was referred three times to the government’s deradicalisation scheme Prevent
One of the referrals is thought to follow concerns about Rudakubana’s potential interest in the killing of children in a school massacre, but it was deemed that there was no counter terrorism risk.
His behaviour, including his apparent interest in violence, was assessed by Prevent as potentially concerning.
But he was deemed not to be motivated by a terrorist ideology or pose a terrorist danger and was therefore not considered suitable for the counter-radicalisation scheme.
Rudakubana, who was 17 at the time of the Southport attack this summer, was first referred to Prevent in 2019 when he was 13.
Two more referrals were made in 2021, all when was a school child living in Lancashire.
Each time he was assessed as not being a counter terrorism risk and therefore not suitable for further investigation by the counter-radicalisation programme Channel, which handles Prevent referrals where there is a significant risk of that person being drawn into terrorism.
Who were Axel Rudakubana’s victims?
Let’s take a look at the child victims who were murdered by Axel Rudakubana as they attended a Taylor Swift themed dance school in Southport during the summer holidays.
Bebe was the youngest victim of the Southport murders at six years old.
In a statement issued by Merseyside Police, her parents Lauren and Ben said their daughter ‘was full of joy, light, and love, and she will always remain in our hearts as the sweet, kind, and spirited girl we adore’.
The family added: ‘On Monday the 29th of July, our world was shattered by the loss of our precious daughter Bebe. Along with two other beautiful souls, Elsie and Alice, she was taken from us in an unimaginable act of violence that has left our hearts broken beyond repair.
Elsie’s parents Jenni and Dave described her a ‘devoted Swiftie’ who loved to dance in a moving tribute at the time of the seven-year-old’s death.
In a statement, they said: ‘Elsie was an amazing little girl. She had the ability to light up any room that she entered, she was truly unforgettable.’
In October, it was reported her family had set up Elsie’s Story, a charitable trust in the spirit of their daughter’s ‘positivity, love for others and energy of life’.
The nine-year-old died from her injuries in hospital the day after the attack.
She was described by her parents Sergio and Alexandra as their ‘perfect dream child’ who loved animals and ‘moved our world’ with her ‘confidence and empathy’.
During a memorial service in which tributes were read out in English and Portuguese her parents walked into the service clutching a toy and their daughter’s ballet shoes.
What charges has Rudakubana admitted?
Rudakubana pleaded guilty to a total of 16 charges at Liverpool Crown Court on Monday.
The 18-year-old has admitted murdering Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and nine-year-old Alice da Silva Aguiar.
Rudakubana has also pleaded guilty to the attempted murders of eight other children, who cannot be named as they were given anonymity, as well as class instructor Leanne Lucas and businessman John Hayes who intervened.
He bought the weapon from Amazon for £3.40 and used it during the attack.
One of two additional charges he received when the deadly poison was found during searches of the home he shared with his parents.
Possession of information likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing to commit an act of terrorism
This charge was laid after a PDF file entitled Military Studies In The Jihad Against The Tyrants, The Al Qaeda Training Manual, was discovered.
Who is Axel Rudakubana? The shy child who grew obsessed with violence
In August 2006, Axel Rudakubana was born in Cardiff to parents who moved to the UK from Rwanda four years previously.
He lived with his parents and elder brother in the Welsh capital for 11 years before they moved to Lancashire.
Described as ‘introverted’ as a child and ‘clingy’ with his mother, Rudakubana was billed as a stage school ‘superstar’ when he appeared as Doctor Who in a BBC Children in Need advert aged only 11.
But the first warning sign emerged just two years later when he burst into his school while barred from the premises for bringing in a knife and attacked pupils with a hockey stick.
The raging future killer was only disarmed after being bravely overpowered by a teacher.
The teenager developed a dark interest in extreme violence which saw him spend hours researching genocide and examining graphic murder videos.
One official said: ‘He was absolutely obsessed with genocides.
‘He could name every genocide in history and how many people were killed – Rwanda, Genghis Khan, Hitler. It’s all he wanted to talk about.’
Public inquiry ordered hours after Southport killer changes pleas to guilty
Southport killer Axel Rudakubana unexpectedly changed his pleas to guilty on Monday as he was about to go on trial for the murders of three children and the attempted murder of eight others plus two adults.
The families of the victims were not present to see the teenager admit his guilt as they believed the trial was due to open fully on Tuesday.
Following his admission it emerged Rudakubana was referred to Prevent, the UK’s counter extremism programme, before he carried out the attack.
It was also reported he was planning Britain’s first high school massacre a week before the knife rampage – but was talked out of going to the building by his father.
Hours after the guity pleas were entered, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper announced a public inquiry would take place to give the people of Southport answers about what happened leading up to the attack.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer then addressed the nation from Downing Street on Tuesday morning to warn Britain was facing a new terrorism threat from ‘loners and misfits’ as he vowed to bring in changes to protect children.
Pictured: Police officers arrive at court ahead of sentencing
Police officers have been pictured arriving at Liverpool Crown Court ahead of Axel Rudakubana’s sentencing this morning.
Axel Rudakubana faces life in jail
Sadistic Southport murderer Axel Rudakubana is today due to receive a life sentence for the killings of three girls and attempts to murder 10 more people.
In what prosecutors described as a ‘meticulously-planned rampage’, the maniac wielded a knife as he savaged children at a Taylor Swift-themed summer holiday dance class in a crime which shocked the nation.
Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, all died and eight more children aged between seven and 13 suffered knife wounds, as did dance teacher Leanne Lucas while trying to protect the children.
Businessman John Hayes, who rushed to the scene from his office nearby and attempted to overpower Rudakubana, was also stabbed. Others nearby who heard screams also rushed to the scene and police arrived, bringing the horrific incident to an end.
In 12 minutes of mayhem, Rudakubana, wearing a green hooded top and surgical facemask, knifed as many children as he could, even pulling one girl back as she tried to flee. Ms Lucas’s fellow dance teacher Heidi Liddle hid in a toilet with one child.
Axel Rudakubana to be sentenced at Liverpool Crown Court
Good morning and welcome to MailOnline’s live coverage as Axel Rudakubana is sentenced at Liverpool Crown Court over the Southport attacks.
Rudakubana, 18, has pleaded guilty to 16 charges including the murders of Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine as they attended a dance class on July 29 last year.
The murders triggered a wave of violence across the UK with unrest in several towns and cities which resulted in the arrests of 1,280 people. Nearly 500 were jailed.
Rudakubana’s sentencing is due to start at 11am.
Stick with us for live updates from throughout the hearing with Richard Marsden reporting from Liverpool Crown Court and Jamie Bullen from London.