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Southport killings inquiry verdict.

(122 Posts)
Sarnia Mon 13-Apr-26 12:19:52

A very damning report on the years of missed chances by the parents, schools, police and several agencies that could have prevented 3 little girls losing their lives and for the many others with life-changing injuries and memories from this attack.
I am getting heartily sick of hearing about the incompetency of those people and organisations who should have done their jobs. Over and over again innocent people are killed by those who should not be at large in their communities.
How devastating for the girls parents to know that their deaths were preventable. Will anyone be held accountable for any of it? This the UK. Of course not!

Cossy Mon 13-Apr-26 19:37:10

Decades of safeguarding failures! Utterly horrific!

Iam64 Mon 13-Apr-26 19:50:43

I’ share your feelings Cossy. I recall a cp conference where an inexperienced sw listed visits made where entry was refused for different reasons. In those days over twenty years ago an inspector from GMP attended. He arranged for police to go round next time entry refused. Child found in need of hospital.
Working together now looks like a golden age

I’m being controversial in my next comment but my experience is the youth offending teams took a much more tolerant view of what constitutes a safeguarding issue.

FriedGreenTomatoes2 Mon 13-Apr-26 20:35:10

I had a genuine question upthread but someone reported me thanks a bundle whoever you are.

Galaxy Mon 13-Apr-26 20:36:26

In a case where lack of questions has been part of the failure.

Iam64 Mon 13-Apr-26 20:48:01

FGT I didn’t see your post. I simply can’t imagine what you could have said to be deleted. Blinking report button, as Galaxy says, you deleted for asking a question in a situation where not enough serious, probing, investigative questions were asked.

Don’t be put off FGT. it’s good to see you posting

FriedGreenTomatoes2 Mon 13-Apr-26 20:49:46

Thank you both.
It’s becoming ridiculous these days to try to take part in N&P
Sometimes it even seems personal.
🤷‍♀️

FriedGreenTomatoes2 Mon 13-Apr-26 20:51:06

Don’t suppose anyone would like to say “it was me” and explain why?

Thought not.

Cardamom Mon 13-Apr-26 20:55:11

What were the parents thinking, really?

Of themselves. Of their high position in their church community. Of not drawing any more attention to themselves than their had already been in respect of Alphonse Rudakubana's urgent need to leave Rwanda.

Not only did their son amass an arsenal of lethal weapons in his bedroom, he allegedly had the necessary equipment to make ricin. How did he obtain that? What did he intend to do with it? Who ordered it, paid for it, signed for its delivery?

Wyllow3 Mon 13-Apr-26 21:03:49

Not me.

Petra, I have now read the report as I said I would to Marg so there was no need to demand I "read the report" upthread, completely unnecessary.

I share all the concerns above: I would add, we need to resource MH services properly for adolescents: they are absolutely lamentable.

Iam64 Mon 13-Apr-26 21:09:04

Cardamon, my reading is his parents funded and signed for the weapons that arrived. He terrorised them, they lied,,, deceived people who came to the house about their son.
Most experienced people working with children and families should have been aware of the emotional temperature in their home. It’s shameful
It’s also sadly not unusual for permanently excluded children not to be ‘seen’. I could name one, excluded from age eight and never again in education,

Iam64 Mon 13-Apr-26 21:11:25

Wyllow yes psychiatric and psychological services for adolescents are rare and stretched. In this case from my reading of it, the difficulty getting placements and therapy isn’t the issue here

sodapop Mon 13-Apr-26 21:14:26

Cardamom I read an article which said the parents of Rudakubana had asked for help with their son's increasing problems but no help was given. Maybe the truth lies somewhere in the middle.
Social Care and allied services have a long history of not working together for the good of the client, seems nothing has changed.

Cardamom Mon 13-Apr-26 21:27:56

read an article which said the parents of Rudakubana had asked for help with their son's increasing problems but no help was given

This article would seem to differ:

BBC News 28th October 2025

The father of the Southport killer asked for information not to be shared with the youth offending team, the public inquiry into the stabbings has heard.
His father Alphonse Rudakubana had sent a WhatsApp message to the worker asking them not to share information that could "turn our family upside down", the hearing was told.
The message was sent in November 2020 to a member of the Child and Family Wellbeing Service in Lancashire, which ran an early help team which families could voluntarily seek support from.

In the WhatsApp message, Alphonse Rudakubana had raised concerns about the sharing of his family's personal information.

He said: "Not to say that there is something sinister, but because it is not necessary."

He said the family expected a "high degree of confidentiality and sensitivity" from the early help service.

He added: "Axel can trust you and say stuff as a child but we don't expect you to record or share some information with others that can turn our family upside down."

So, I'll repeat my earlier post as to why they didn't seek help: they were more concerned with themselves and their social standing within their church community. And that's all.

Wyllow3 Mon 13-Apr-26 21:35:33

I think it's entirely possible that alongside that, at other times they had asked for help and not enough was outstanding at that point. An appalling, complex, terrible, mess.
BTW, if the staff were convinced the level of danger was imminent and definite, they would not have followed a parental WhatsApp.

Allira Mon 13-Apr-26 22:16:41

sodapop

Cardamom I read an article which said the parents of Rudakubana had asked for help with their son's increasing problems but no help was given. Maybe the truth lies somewhere in the middle.
Social Care and allied services have a long history of not working together for the good of the client, seems nothing has changed.

He had been discharged by a psychiatrist on July 23, 2024, days before the attack, with a note stating his risk to others was "minimal".

Posts on page one give more details.

MartavTaurus Tue 14-Apr-26 06:58:45

AR's Headteacher - probably the person who had the most contact with him - says,
His parents thought he was a "good boy" who never did anything wrong and that "any issues were someone else's fault", according to Ms Hodson.
There you have it, but her words at the time were ignored. 😡 If a Head feels a child is sinister and a real danger to other children, then I'd expect the authorities to take him away, or I'd refuse him entry to the school premises.

Chocolatelovinggran Tue 14-Apr-26 07:29:59

MartavTaurus, that's interesting. I suspect that many of us who have worked in education recognise this problem, where families are in denial about their son or daughter.
I feel for them under the terrible pressure of a seriously disturbed family member, but the delivery of a machete (!) .. Is possession of such an object not a police matter?

ViceVersa Tue 14-Apr-26 07:50:05

FriedGreenTomatoes2

I had a genuine question upthread but someone reported me thanks a bundle whoever you are.

If someone had an issue with your post, why couldn't they just say so, rather than rushing off to report it? I've only ever reported the very obvious spam posts, but I do get the feeling there are some posters who are very 'trigger happy' when it comes to reporting.

MartavTaurus Tue 14-Apr-26 07:56:59

ViceVersa

FriedGreenTomatoes2

I had a genuine question upthread but someone reported me thanks a bundle whoever you are.

If someone had an issue with your post, why couldn't they just say so, rather than rushing off to report it? I've only ever reported the very obvious spam posts, but I do get the feeling there are some posters who are very 'trigger happy' when it comes to reporting.

We can't have an in depth discussion here on GN, exploring all avenues, if people seek to remove any questions or comments they regard as a blemish on their own precious ideas.
The question asked by FriedGreenTomatoes was pertinent, and broke no rules.

Sago Tue 14-Apr-26 08:11:16

The headteacher of his school/referral unit expressed deep concern, she said he was high risk.
She was accused by a children’s mental health worker (Samantha Steed) of racial stereotyping.

Do you remember in the Manchester attack a security guard was reluctant to alert anyone to one of the perpetrators because of his colour?

What have we done?

Iam64 Tue 14-Apr-26 08:13:55

I regret not having seen the question posed by FGT. open, honest discussion on something as significant as this issue shouldn’t be shut down.

Interesting that the report button presser hasn’t posted adding her dislike of the post, so allowing others to comment

MaizieD Tue 14-Apr-26 08:24:58

Iam64

I regret not having seen the question posed by FGT. open, honest discussion on something as significant as this issue shouldn’t be shut down.

Interesting that the report button presser hasn’t posted adding her dislike of the post, so allowing others to comment

Perhaps, if it is still pertinent, FGT could just repost her question? Perhaps it needed rephrasing? I don’t know as I have only just caught up with this thread and didn’t see it.

MartavTaurus Tue 14-Apr-26 08:49:55

Sago

The headteacher of his school/referral unit expressed deep concern, she said he was high risk.
She was accused by a children’s mental health worker (Samantha Steed) of racial stereotyping.

Do you remember in the Manchester attack a security guard was reluctant to alert anyone to one of the perpetrators because of his colour?

What have we done?

Yes. And the Grace/Barnaby/Ian murders in Nottingham where the killer was left free to slaughter them, just because mental health workers feared detaining him would be racist.

Indeed, What have we done?

GrannyGravy13 Tue 14-Apr-26 08:55:03

The ethnicity of criminals (whatever their crime) is becoming the Elephant in the Room

In the UK we are seeing more incidents where authorities/agencies are not responding to queries and/or suspicions for the fear of being labelled racist.

GrannyGravy13 Tue 14-Apr-26 08:57:54

I read FGT2’s post.

It was a valid question.

Rather cowardly to report and run