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On 29 July 2024, a mass stabbing targeting young girls occurred at the Hart Space, a dance studio in the Meols Cop area of Southport, Merseyside, United Kingdom. Seventeen-year-old Axel Rudakubana killed three children and injured ten others at a Taylor Swift–themed yoga and dance workshop attended by 26 children. Two girls died at the scene ...
Trevor Joseph Hardy (11 June 1945 – 25 September 2012), also known as the Beast of Manchester, [1] [2] [3] was a convicted English serial killer who murdered three teenage girls in the Manchester area between December 1974 and March 1976.
Raped and murdered prepubescent girls and left their corpses on Cannock Chase. [45] Mulcahy, David: 1985–1986 3 3 Sentenced to life imprisonment Together with accomplice John Duffy, known as "The Railway Rapists"; killed three women near railway stations in Southern England [46] Napper, Robert: 1992–1993 3 3 Sentenced to involuntary commitment
The families of the girls received an apology from Scotland Yard, who did not tell them about Sharmeena Begum (unrelated), the other girl from their school who went to Syria in 2014. [15] British Prime Minister David Cameron said that individual institutions should not be made into "scapegoats" for the disappearance of the three girls. [16]
Joseph William Kappen (30 October 1941 – 17 June 1990), also known as the Saturday Night Strangler, was a Welsh serial killer who committed the rape and murder of three teenage girls in Llandarcy and Tonmawr, near his home town of Port Talbot, in 1973. Kappen is also suspected of committing a fourth murder in February 1976.
The girls travelled to Walton-on-Thames railway station, one stop before Dowler's usual stop of Hersham, and went to eat at the station café. [5] After Dowler telephoned her father at 3:47 p.m. to say she would be home in half an hour, the girls left the café at 4:05 p.m., with Dowler walking home alone. [5]
[62] [5] [3] [74] [75] [76] In the foreword of the UK government's strategy for tackling violence against women and girls [77] the Home Secretary Priti Patel said "these crimes are still far too prevalent and there are too many instances of victims and survivors being let down. The tragic cases of Sarah Everard, Julia James, Bibaa Henry and ...
The Cannock Chase murders (also known as the A34 murders, the Babes in the Ditch murders and the Half-Day murders [2] [3]) were the murders of three girls aged between five and seven in Staffordshire, England, between 1965 and 1967. [4]