We will name police and social workers unless action taken, lawyer for Southport families says

Georgie Dockerand
Ian Shoesmith,North West
"All of those agencies failed to a totally unacceptable level", said lawyer Chris Walker

Those who failed to take action to try to prevent the Southport attacks will be named unless suitable disciplinary measures are taken, the legal representative for the three murdered girls' families has said.

Bebe King, six, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, were killed by 17-year-old Axel Rudakubana at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in June 2024.

On Monday, the public inquiry identified "catastrophic" parental and local authority failings, with a "merry-go-round" of referrals, assessments and "hand-offs" between agencies failing to stop the "predictable and preventable" attack.

Chris Walker said he was prepared to identify key individuals from five agencies.

Walker told BBC Breakfast: "There are five particular state entities which are causing us most concern and we, frankly, find their behaviour unacceptable.

"Prevent, Lancashire Police, Lancashire Social Services, CAMHS, and FCAMHS."

CAMHS is the Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service while FCAMHs is the Forensic Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service.

Prevent is a Home Office initiative aimed at stopping individuals from becoming extremists and eventually carrying out attacks.

"I know the names of those individuals," said Walker of the five public bodies.

"If necessary, if we're not satisfied, I will be naming them publicly and I will be bringing out in the public domain once more their individual failings which is totally unacceptable.

"The families, quite frankly, are aghast."

News imageFamily photos A composite image showing school photos of Bebe King, six; Elsie Dot Stancombe; Seven and nine-year-old Alice da Silva Aguiar. All three are smiling and are wearing their school uniforms.Family photos
Bebe King, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Alice da Silva Aguiar were killed in the 29 July 2024 attack

The public inquiry found that "no agency or multi-agency structure accepted responsibility" for assessing and managing the "grave risk" posed by the attacker.

His autism was used as an "excuse" for his past conduct and meant no agency understood the true danger he posed.

Inquiry chairman Sir Adrian Fulford called for the end of what he described as a "culture" of agencies passing responsibility between each other or downgrading their own involvement in such cases.

"Failings were from [the attacker's] parental failures and also the individual state failures," Walker said.

"All of those agencies, the performance of those agencies, failed to a totally unacceptable level.

"The murders were predictable and preventable.

"And we find the systemic failures, the failures of the individuals at those particular five agencies I mentioned, to be wholly unacceptable."

Walker said he had been in contact with them and would be prepared to name the responsible individuals from each should suitable disciplinary action not be taken.

"Several months ago, I wrote to all five of those saying that we find their performance wholly unacceptable, demanding disciplinary proceedings against the individuals.

"Now that that inquiry report is concluded, I will be following that up with them to make sure that the disciplinary proceedings have concluded to our satisfaction."

'Horror movie'

Specifically in relation to Prevent, Walker said: "Prevent have a real issue with understanding the word 'ideology'.

"They've failed to implement the ideological consequences or the ideological understanding in terms of their various gateways.

"The cause of somebody's intention to cause mass murder is immaterial, it is the desire to cause mass murder that has to be prevented."

Following the publication of the 760-page Phase One report, Phase Two of the Southport Inquiry will begin immediately and report back in Spring 2027.

It will focus on the "adequacy of arrangements for identifying and managing the risk posed by individuals who are fixated with extreme violence".

Looking ahead to this, Walker said: "It's pointless having a glossy book sat at the end of somebody's desk gathering dust with recommendations.

"We can't have a situation where we lurch from disaster to disaster, from inquiry to inquiry - there has to be the change."

Walker added: "The families are living in a horror movie - and yesterday brought it all back.

"Every time there's a new report, every time there's a new incident, they are reliving the horror movie once again - and that's exactly where they are now."

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