Despite three Prevent referrals for Axel Rudakubana, counterterrorism police did not believe he was a radicalisation risk, a report reveals
Six months after a teenage attacker stabbed three girls to death at a children’s dance class in England, new details about his background have sparked questions about how authorities repeatedly failed to spot the threat he posed.
Susan Hall, who also chairs the London Assembly Police and Crime Committee, said the public needed ‘transparency’ on the issue.
The Home Secretary has ordered a “thorough review” of the Southport killer’s referrals to the Prevent anti-terror programme “to identify what changes are needed to make sure serious cases are not missed”.
The case will now be considered by the British home secretary who has the final say on some high-profile extradition cases.
On Friday, just over a year after the children's deaths, a U.K. judge in London rejected her challenge against extradition. The case will now pass on to the U.K.'s home secretary, Yvette Cooper ...
The Metropolitan Police has dramatically been taken out of special measures - two-and-a-half years after a slew of scandals and “persistent concerns” about its performance were exposed, a watchdog announced.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper confirmed the public probe will ... including the Islamist atrocities in 2017 in London. While officials believed his behaviour was concerning, it did not meet ...
Yvette Cooper told the tech giants the Government ... because he was 'expressing interest in school shootings, the London Bridge attack, the IRA, MI5 and the Middle East'. The review, conducted ...
Multiple agencies failed to identify the ‘terrible danger’ posed by the 18-year-old, the home secretary said, announcing a new public inquiry into the murder of three girls in Southport
Kimberlee Singler, a Colorado Springs mother who is accused of murdering her kids, has had a challenge against her extradition to the US
Brian Walden and Margaret Thatcher were soulmates. He was a Labour MP who became a TV interviewer, she was the Tory leader whose radical restoration of economic choice and class aspiration rescued Britain in the 1980s. Though from different parties, they were both working-class challengers to the old order and they bonded.