Southport killerâs sentence called into question amid calls for law changes
Axel Rudakubana was handed one of the highest minimum custody terms on record.
Get our award-winning daily news email featuring exclusive stories, opinion and expert analysis
I would like to be emailed about offers, event and updates from Evening Standard. Read our privacy notice.
The Southport killerâs record-high 52-year sentence will be reviewed amid criticism it was not long enough after mounting calls for law changes to see child criminals like him die in jail.
Axel Rudakubana was handed one of the highest minimum custody terms on record after carrying out the sadistic attack at a Taylor Swift-themed class in July aged 17.
The punishment is also thought to be the longest imposed on a killer of his age.
Now 18, he admitted the murders when he appeared in court earlier this week as well as the attempted murders of eight other children who cannot be named for legal reasons, class instructor Leanne Lucas and businessman John Hayes.
Rudakubana also pleaded guilty to having a knife, which he had bought on Amazon, on the date of the killings, production of the deadly poison ricin, and for possessing information likely to be useful to a person committing or preparing to commit an act of terrorism.
Southportâs Labour MP Patrick Hurley said the sentence was ânot severe enoughâ and he had asked the Attorney General to review the sentence as âunduly lenientâ, adding: âWe need a sentence that represents the severity of this crime that has terrorised the victims and their families.â
Axel Rudakubana will serve at least 52 years (Merseyside Police/PA)
PA Media
Because Rudakubana carried out the crimes just nine days short of his 18th birthday, it means by law he cannot be sentenced to a whole life order which means he would never be released from jail.
Describing the minimum term as âsubstantialâ Mr Justice Goose, sentencing at Liverpool Crown Court on Thursday, said he will serve âalmost the whole of his life in custodyâ, adding: âI consider at this time that it is likely that he will never be released and that he will be in custody for all his life.â
His words were echoed by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer who said afterwards that the âvile offender will likely never be releasedâ.
Tory leader Kemi Badenoch, who was backed by shadow home secretary Chris Philp in her calls, said there was a âstrong caseâ for amending the law to allow for whole life orders to be imposed on people aged under 18 in some cases, which the Conservatives âwill start to exploreâ.
A parent of one of the children who survived the attack, who cannot be named because the victim has been granted anonymity by the court, told The Sun the crimes were so horrific the killer should ârot in jailâ and the âlaw needs changingâ.
âLife should mean life.
âHeâs an adult and should be tried like one,â the man said.
Meanwhile Reform UK MPs Rupert Lowe and Lee Anderson called for the return of the death penalty â the minimum age for which was raised to 18 in 1933.
Mr Lowe said it was âtime for a national debateâ on the use of capital punishment âin exceptional circumstancesâ while Mr Anderson posted a picture of a noose on his X account, adding: âNo apologies here. This is what is required!â