Axel Rudakubana declares himself “guilty” of the Southport massacre in a bombshell change to his original plea — his four week trial has been cancelled
Monday 20 January 2025 was supposed to be the first day of the trial of Axel Rudakubana — the teenager accused of murdering three young girls and maiming ten other people at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport on 29 July 2024.
The day was expected to be uneventful with the schedule being dominated by the jury selection process but within minutes of his arrival at court, Axel Rudakubana left the Press in shock as his defence announced they would be changing Rudakubana’s original “not guilty” plea to “guilty of all charges.”
In this hour-long episode, Dan walks me through what happened in this shocking first day of proceedings, including:
Rudakubana declares himself a triple-murderer
Rudakubana’s face is seen by the public for the first time
The first gut-churning details of this massacre emerge in the press
Reporters are reveal for the first time that Rudakubana had been reffered to Prevent — the UK’s counter-extremism service no less than THREE times before the events in Southport.
I reject the claim that “mistakes were made” and “opportunities were missed” to apprehend Rudakubana before he killed. Leaving your house unlocked and getting robbed is a mistake. The word “mistakes” do not begin to touch the failures in judgement that lead to the deaths of three girls and the maiming of eight other children.
I assert that Axel Rudakubana had not been “missed” by security and support services but that he had been routinely dismissed and underestimated by those charged with monitoring him and containing his violent imagination.
This dismissal forms a substantial part of what had been ‘covered-up’ by the Establishment.
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I embarked upon this investigation last year because I am of the sincere belief that this case, whilst being handled in a manner which serves the best interests of the accused, is failing to be handled in a manner which serves the best interests of the public and the victims.
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