Southport families call for killer’s parents to be jailed and officials sacked
Axel Rudakubana’s parents have “blood on their hands” and should go to prison for what the inquiry into the murders called their “moral failure” to warn authorities about their son

View 8 Images
Three girls, including Elsie Dot Stancombe and Alice da Silva Aguiar (right) died in the attack in Southport(Image: PA)
The families of the three young girls killed in the Southport attack feel like they’ve been “in a horror movie”, their solicitor has said.He also said Axel Rudakubana’s parents have “blood on their hands” and should go to prison for what the inquiry into the murders called their “moral failure” to warn authorities about their son. Chris Walker, from law firm Bond Turner, also threatened to publicly name those whose failings led to the murders unless swift disciplinary action is takenBebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, were killed at a Taylor Swift-themed dance event on 29 July 2024 by twisted Rudakubana, then aged 17.
The official inquiry into their deaths concluded the tragedy “could and should have been avoided”. As well as blaming the killer’s parents, Alphonse Rudakubana and Laetitia Muzayire, it also highlighted systemic failure across multiple agencies.
Inquiry chairman Sir Adrian Fulford identified five key areas where failures occurred concluding the attack was “foreseeable and avoidable”.

View 8 Images
Southport killer Axel Rudakubana(Image: PA)
These were an absence of risk ownership, failures in information sharing, a misunderstanding of autism, lack of oversight of his online activity and significant parental failures. In light of the findings Mr Walker called for individuals to face disciplinary action and lose their jobs.
He said he had written to the Government’s anti-terror programme Prevent, Lancashire County Council social services, Lancashire Constabulary, Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) and Forensic Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (FCAMHS) to express “horror” at their conduct.
“We call for disciplinary proceedings to ensue against those individuals, who I know the names of. We want disciplinary proceedings against them to begin and to finish swiftly and that includes people losing their jobs.
“If we are not satisfied with the outcome of those disciplinary proceedings from a managerial level to a lower, coalface, level, to use that expression, then I will be publicly naming those individuals as people we say are not fit to serve in a public office,” he said.

View 8 Images
Elsie Dot Stancombe(Image: PA)

View 8 Images
Floral tributes laid at Sussex Road at the junction in Maple Street, Southport(Image: Adam Gerrard / Daily Mirror)
Mr Walker said the families of the three girls remained traumatised, extremely angry and felt as though they were “in a horror movie”.
He added: “We’ve had so many apologies, we’ve had so many statements that lessons will be learned. All of those statements, all those ‘lessons will be learned’, will never bring those children back, those families will have to live with that empty hole for the rest of their lives.”
Mr Walker said he did not believe Prevent, to which Rudakubana was referred three times, was fit for purpose, adding: “I have no faith in Prevent as an organisation.”
He highlighted the recent case of a 17-year-old from Merseyside who had been referred to Prevent twice, before he called police in August last year and told the operator he wanted to “re-enact Axel”.

View 8 Images
Inquiry chairman Sir Adrian Fulford(Image: PA)

View 8 Images
Alice da Silva Aguiar(Image: PA)
Mr Walker said he supported Sir Adrian’s recommendations to consider a single agency or structure to be appointed to monitor interventions for children presenting a high risk of serious harm.
And he called for the second phase of the inquiry to look at adopting a legal process of parental responsibility, after the chairman said the killer’s parents could have stopped their son if they had “done what they morally ought to have done”.
He said: “They should go to prison. They have blood on their hands. I’ve said that publicly, but I also acknowledge that the legal framework as it currently stands makes that very difficult, and so phase two of the report has to adopt a legal process of parental responsibility.
“There is a moral obligation to protect society at large from a murderer whose intent is to cause mass murder. There has to be a legal obligation.”

View 8 Images
Scene of the attack in Southport(Image: Liverpool echo)
The killer’s parents faced heavy criticism because they failed “to set boundaries, allowed knives and weapons into the home, and withheld crucial information in the days before the attack”.
Sir Adrian wrote: “AR’s family bears significant responsibility for failing to alert any appropriate agency whatsoever to the full extent of the risk of a serious or fatal attack by their son.
“Leading to July 29, they came into possession of crucial information which revealed that their son was covertly accumulating a number of deadly weapons and that he remained intent on carrying out some form of attack outside the home address.
“Their misguided and irresponsible motivation for not sharing this information was to avoid AR being taken into care or custody.”Phase two of the Southport inquiry will consider arrangements for identifying and managing risk posed by individuals fixated with extreme violence and is expected to report in spring next year.
News
ITV’s gripping true-crime drama Believe Me has exploded into one of the platform’s biggest binge-watch obsessions, with viewers racing through all four episodes in a single sitting.
Told over four binge-worthy episodes, the new series recounts the real-life story of a group of women who fell victim to John Warboys, one of Britain’s most prolific sex offenders, and how they were failed by the system that was…
“THE MORE FANS REWATCH The Testaments… THE MORE THEY REALIZE NOTHING WAS ACCIDENTAL”: Viewers are now dissecting every frame of The Testaments after discovering the series is quietly filled with hidden callbacks, visual clues, and subtle connections to The Handmaid’s Tale that completely change how certain scenes are understood.
The Testaments has references to The Handmaid’s Tale baked into every scene, given that it’s a spinoff of the Emmy-winning Hulu drama. But there are deliberate Easter eggs included in the new series as early as the opening scene. Did you catch them all?…
“NETFLIX JUST TURNED THE ENTIRE STORY UPSIDE DOWN WITH ONE MASSIVE CHARACTER REWRITE…”
Netflix’s Remarkably Bright Creatures makes one of its most significant adaptation choices by completely reworking Cameron Cassmore’s backstory — a change that directly responds to two of the most common criticisms of Shelby Van Pelt’s bestselling novel. While the book became a…
“‘THE TRUTH CHANGES EVERYTHING…’ — THE ENDING OF Remarkably Bright Creatures HAS VIEWERS COMPLETELY EMOTIONAL
The ending of Remarkably Bright Creatures leaves viewers quietly stunned — not because of a dramatic twist, but because of how gently it redefines every relationship at the heart of the story. As the mystery around Cameron Cassmore’s identity and family…
“‘THERE’S SOMETHING ABOUT THAT OCTOPUS…’ — Remarkably Bright Creatures FANS ARE NOW OBSESSED WITH THE FILM’S HIDDEN DETAILS
The new film stars Sally Field as a woman who befriends an octopus. Netflix’s must-watch film for May is an inspiring story of a woman who forms an unlikely friendship, based on the acclaimed novel by Shelby Van Pelt. Remarkably…
“THE ENTIRE CASE JUST TOOK A SHOCKING TURN…” — JUSTIN BALDONI HAS REPORTEDLY SCORED A MAJOR LEGAL WIN AGAINST BLAKE LIVELY
The bitter feud between the “It Ends With Us” costars has been unfolding in public for nearly two years. Justin Baldoni’s lawyer says the actor-director is “feeling pretty good” in the wake of the resolution of his highly publicized legal…
End of content
No more pages to load