Date | 13 November 2023 |
---|---|
Location | Wolverhampton, England |
Coordinates | 52°34′33″N2°05′28″W / 52.57583°N 2.09111°W |
Convicted | 2 |
Trial | 2 May – 10 June 2024 |
Convictions |
|
Sentence | Life imprisonment with a minimum of 8.5 years which was then increased to a minimum of 10 years in December of 2024. |
On 13 November 2023, 19-year-old Shawn Seesahai was attacked and killed by two 12-year-old boys during a confrontation in a park in Wolverhampton, England. The perpetrators were the youngest people to be convicted of murder in the United Kingdom since the murder of James Bulger in 1993, and the youngest to have been convicted of murder using a knife. The two boys, whose names the media were not permitted to publish due to their young age, were both sentenced, on 27 September 2024, to detention in a young offender institution at His Majesty's pleasure for a minimum term of eight years and six months.
Seesahai was 19 years old when he was murdered on 13 November 2023. He had come to the United Kingdom from his home in the British Overseas Territory of Anguilla to receive medical treatment six months before his death. [1] [2] He was living in Birmingham, West Midlands, England. [1]
His family spent their whole life savings to repatriate his body back to Anguilla and had to take out a loan to attend the trial, earlier in 2024. [2] His parents could not afford to attend the sentencing in September 2024. [3]
One of the boys was described as having been groomed and exploited by "older youths and young men in the wider community who encouraged him towards the possession of knives". [4] He had purchased the machete used in the killing for £40 two months before the incident. [5]
The two boys were aged 12 at the time of the murder and 13 when sentenced. Under section 45 of the Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999, media covering the case were prohibited from publishing the boys' names; [6] [3] the trial judge, Mrs Justice Tipples, refused to waive this, ruling that their welfare outweighed the public interest. [7] [8]
On 13 November 2023, Seesahai travelled to Wolverhampton from Birmingham with two friends. [1] [9] Seesahai and a friend were waiting in Stowlawn Playing Fields [10] in Stow Heath—just northwest of Bilston—when a confrontation took place between them and the boys over a bench, [4] or because one of the boys had shoulder-barged Seesahai unprovoked. [11]
One of the boys claimed during the trial that Seesahai and another man had approached the two boys and a female friend while they were sitting on a park bench, and that Seesahai had attacked them, put one of the boys in a headlock, and attempted to run away but tripped; one of the boys then proceeded to stab Seesahai to death with the other's machete. [5] The second boy claimed he was nowhere near Seesahai when the other boy attacked him with the machete. [5]
Seesahai's friend stated that they were in the park drinking Red Bull and discussing their Christmas plans when they were attacked, unprovoked, by the two boys. [9] Seesahai was shoulder-barged by one boy. [11] They both then attempted to run away when one of the boys unsheathed a machete, but Seesahai tripped and was stabbed repeatedly; his friend stated during the trial "I was running for my life – I couldn't stay there and watch". [12]
The trial took place at Nottingham Crown Court and began on 2 May 2024. [13] Jurors heard that Seesahai had been stabbed in the back, legs, and skull, and was also beaten; he was attacked with such ferocity that one wound almost passed through his body, and his skull was struck so hard that a "piece of bone had actually come away". During the trial, the defendants sought to blame each other, but the jury convicted them both of murder on 10 June 2024. [14]
Despite not determining which of the boys delivered the fatal stab wound, the judge decided that both boys were responsible for Seesahai's death. [15] On 27 September 2024, the two boys were both sentenced to detention at His Majesty's pleasure (i.e. equivalent a life sentence [16] ) and will serve a minimum term of eight years and six months in a young offender institution. [6] [11] [8] The starting point for the minimum term set by sentencing guidelines was 13 years' detention, [17] but the sentence was adjusted downwards for both boys due to mitigating factors, including their young age and troubled upbringings. [4] [18] If the Parole Board is satisfied that they can be released from detention, they will remain on licence for life. [15]
The perpetrators are the youngest people to be convicted of murder in the United Kingdom since the killing of James Bulger in 1993. [7] Given that Sharon Carr, who was the same age as Seesahai's killers when she stabbed Katie Rackliff to death in 1992, was not convicted until age 17, [19] Seesahai's killers are the youngest in the UK to have been convicted of a murder where the weapon used was a knife. [7]
On 27 November 2000, ten-year-old Nigerian schoolchild Damilola Taylor was killed in London, in what became one of the United Kingdom's most high-profile killings. Two brothers – who were 12 and 13 at the time of the killing – were convicted of manslaughter in 2006.
A thrill killing is premeditated or random murder that is motivated by the sheer excitement of the act. While there have been attempts to categorize multiple murders, such as identifying "thrill killing" as a type of "hedonistic mass killing", actual details of events frequently overlap category definitions making attempts at such distinctions problematic.
Kriss Donald was a 15-year-old white Scottish teenager who was kidnapped and murdered in Glasgow in 2004 by a gang of five men of Pakistani origin, some of whom fled to Pakistan after the crime. Daanish Zahid, Imran Shahid, Zeeshan Shahid and Mohammed Faisal Mustaq were later found guilty of racially motivated murder and sentenced to life imprisonment. A fifth man, Zahid Mohammed, pleaded guilty to kidnapping, assault and lying to police and was sentenced to five years in prison. He later went on to testify against the other four at their trials.
Craig Martin Sorger was a 13-year-old American boy who was murdered by his then 12-year-old friends and classmates Evan Drake Savoie and Jake Lee Eakin in Ephrata, Washington. Sorger had been invited by Savoie and Eakin to play in a park near his home. There, Savoie dropped a rock on Sorger's neck, knocking him to the ground. He then repeatedly stabbed him in his chest and torso with a knife. Eakin joined in the attack, by beating Sorger's head and legs with a tree branch.
Steven John Grieveson is a British serial killer known as the Sunderland Strangler, who murdered four teenage boys in a series of killings committed between 1990 and 1994 in Sunderland, England. Convicted of three counts of murder at Leeds Crown Court, Grieveson was handed three life sentences on 28 February 1996, with a recommendation that he serve a minimum of 35 years before the Home Secretary considers his eligibility for release.
The Peckham Boys, also referred to as Black Gang, is a multi-generational gang based in Peckham, South London. The gang is particularly prominent for its members prolific activity in music. Giggs, once a member of the SN1 set, is generally credited with popularising the British gangsta rap style known as road rap. Giggs would proceed to have a successful musical career, and re-form SN1 as a record label. In 2011, Peckham Boys rapper Stigs was given the first ever gang injunction, banning him from making any music that may encourage violence. Stigs was at the time allegedly a member of Anti GMG. In 2011, Southwark Council identified three sets of the Peckham Boys, PYG, Anti GMG and SN1, as the most active gangs in the Peckham area.
Ben Michael Kinsella was a 16-year-old student at Holloway School who was stabbed to death in an attack by three men in June 2008 in Islington. The significant media attention around his murder led to a series of anti-knife crime demonstrations, a raised profile for the government's anti-knife crime maxim "Operation Blunt 2" and a review of UK knife crime sentencing laws.
Events from 1996 in England
Stow Heath is an area and ancient manor in the city of Wolverhampton, West Midlands, located in the east half of the city.
On 29 March 2014, 33-year-old James Attfield, who had a brain injury, was stabbed to death in Colchester, Essex. Three months later, on 17 June, Nahid Almanea, a 31-year-old Saudi student of the University of Essex, was also stabbed and killed. Teenager James Fairweather was apprehended while planning a third murder in May 2015, and in January 2016 he pleaded responsible for both deaths. In April 2016, he was found guilty of both murders and sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 27 years.
Claire Tiltman was a 16-year-old girl who was murdered on 18 January 1993 in Greenhithe, Kent, England. Her murder was not solved until 21 years later.
Richard Norman Everitt was a white 15-year-old boy who was stabbed to death in London, England. Everitt's neighbourhood, Somers Town, had been the site of ethnic tensions. He was murdered by a gang of British Bangladeshis who were seeking revenge against another white boy. Everitt did not provoke the attack and had no history of anti-social behaviour.
On 13 June 2016, a police officer and his partner, a police secretary, were stabbed to death in their home in Magnanville, France, located about 55 km (34 mi) west of Paris, by a man convicted in 2013 of associating with a group planning terrorist acts. Amaq News Agency, an online outlet said to be sponsored by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), said that a source had claimed that ISIL was behind the attack, an assertion that was later validated.
OFB, short for Original Farm Boys, is a British hip hop collective based in Broadwater Farm, North London. OFB is one of the most prominent UK drill groups.
Sharon Louise Carr, also known as "The Devil's Daughter", is a British woman who, in June 1992, aged 12, murdered 18-year-old Katie Rackliff at random as the latter walked home from a nightclub in Camberley, Surrey, England.
Lorraine Thorpe is a British woman who is Britain's youngest female double murderer. Over the space of nine days in August 2009, Thorpe tortured and murdered two people in Ipswich, one of which was her own father. She came to national attention upon her conviction in 2010, when it was noted that she had only been 15 years old at the time of the killings. She was sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum tariff of 14 years' imprisonment, while her accomplice in the murders was issued with a 27-year minimum tariff. She remains imprisoned at HM Prison Foston Hall, having been refused parole in October 2023.
Oliver Stephens was a 13-year-old schoolboy who was fatally stabbed near his home in Reading in Berkshire, England on 3 January 2021. He had been lured to a field by a 14-year-old girl, where he was attacked by two boys aged 13 and 14, the younger of whom was armed with a knife.
Detention during His Majesty's Pleasure is a mandatory life sentence and will be imposed when a child or young person is convicted or pleads guilty to murder.