Merseyside murderer gets 52 years in prison, but may not even serve his whole sentence
Axel Rudakubana, who killed three in his attempt to murder 26 young girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance party last year will “serve almost the whole of his life in custody”, but not his whole life, because he was days shy of his 18th birthday when he attacked.It's a disgrace he may never serve a full sentence, if what's told is any indication, because as I'd noticed in the past, there have tragically been cases of violent maniacs in Britain who were let go without serving a full sentence. There's more about the monster's background here, how he grew up in Cardiff, Wales, and even appeared in a Dr. Who related advertisement:
Judge Mr Justice Goose handed Rwandan-heritage killer Axel Rudakubana a minimum term of 52 years in prison, saying had he not been 17-year-old when he launched his attack, he would certainly have been handed a rare full life term. This means excepting a successful appeal, Rudakubana will not be liable for parole for 52 years, and even so, in the words of the judge: “he will serve almost the whole of his life in custody. I consider at this time it is likely he will never be released and he will be in custody for all of his life.”
Rudakubana was also sentenced to 18 years for attempting to kill eight further children, and 16 years for attempting to murder two adults who tried to protect the children. On the other counts, he was sentenced to 18 months for possession of a knife, 12 years for producing the biotoxin ricin, and 18 months for possessing a digital copy of an Al-Qaeda training manual.
But these sentences in British law are served “concurrently”, meaning they do not accumulate. The actual sentence is still just 52 years.
Rudakubana was not in court when his sentence was read out as he had repeatedly interrupted proceedings through the day, claiming he hadn’t eaten in ten days and felt unwell. He was removed from the room.
He was the Cardiff-born schoolboy who, it appeared at one point, may have had designs on returning to the Welsh capital to film Doctor Who. Having played the Time Lord in a Children in Need advert this wispy young boy from a God-fearing family was considered a potential future actor.Unfortunately, this article reflects the refusal of UK authorities to clearly acknowledge he was a Muslim radical:
Instead Axel Rudakubana went on to have his name known throughout Britain not as a success story, and someone to be respected and emulated, but as the perpetrator of one of the most repulsive crimes in recent history. He even had the temerity to act up in the dock on the day he was sentenced for the murder of three young girls and the attempted murder of a host of others at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class last summer.
But merely under the surface, though, the troubling signs of what the 18-year-old would go on to do that fateful day in Southport were in evidence for years. There was his expulsion from school for possession of a knife; the numerous referrals to counter-terrorist authorities; the repulsive fascination with murder, war, and genocide.
When Rudakubana’s dad pleaded with a taxi driver not to take his son to the teenager’s former school only a week before the attack at The Hart Space last July disaster and tragedy was not averted but postponed. But despite months of investigations, an exhaustive trawl of the family home on Old School Close in Banks, and a thorough examination of his digital devices and online activities detectives have still been unable to answer the question of why he did what he did.That any discussion of the Religion of Peace's role in the tragedy was omitted does a horrible disfavor to the victims. This is a disgrace, and worst of all, nothing new.
Merseyside Police ultimately found no evidence to prove that the child killer had been indoctrinated by any particular political or religious ideology. Instead all they have been able to conclude is that his murderous assault was premeditated and that his sole purpose was to kill. When he did so he targeted the youngest and most vulnerable.
It should be noted that the BBC had to withdraw the advertisement of Rudakubana playing Dr. Who from circulation, yet now it's all business as usual in Britain, with nothing likely to be improved under current premier Kier Starmer, who, as noted earlier, may have some responsibility to shoulder for failure to prevent the Rotherham rape gangs from operating.
Labels: Africa, dhimmitude, islam, jihad, londonistan, misogyny, Moonbattery, political corruption, racism, sexual violence, terrorism, war on terror