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A teenager has been sentenced to 52 years in prison for fatally stabbing three girls at a children's Taylor Swift-themed event in the United Kingdom last year. Axel Rudakubana, 18, pleaded guilty ...
The two men appeared at Liverpool Crown Court on 3 October. [24] On 21 December 2022, Thomas Cashman appeared at Liverpool Crown Court via videolink from HM Prison Manchester and pleaded not guilty to all five charges. [25] Cashman had been apprehended after a tip-off from a former partner, who lived nearby and he had visited shortly after the ...
They included two men aged 42 and 54 along with two women both aged 33. They appeared before Wirral Magistrates' Court on 15 January 2024 and were bailed ahead of another hearing at Liverpool Crown Court on 12 February 2024. [24] On 12 February 2024, all four of the defendants pleaded not guilty to the charge against them at Liverpool Crown Court.
In televised proceedings, Rudakubana was sentenced to life imprisonment at Liverpool Crown Court on 23 January 2025 with a minimum term of 52 years' imprisonment. [a] [81] [82] The start of the sentencing was twice loudly interrupted by Rudakubana pleading for medical assistance. After a warning from the judge he was removed from the courtroom.
The court started operating from May 2006, although was not official opened until November 2006. The building brought together all civil and family cases under one roof, which had previously been heard at various venues around the region. Upon opening, the court included 29 courtrooms and 31 rooms for consultation. [2]
[28] [29] On 17 April 2018 Tom Evans and Kate James asked the Supreme Court to consider their case again. [7] Their application to appeal was refused on 20 April 2018. The justices wrote, "Alfie looks like a normal baby, but the unanimous opinion of the doctors who have examined him and the scans of his brain is that almost all of his brain has ...
Until the mid-1980s, all Crown Court cases were heard in St George's Hall. [4] However, as the number of court cases in Liverpool grew, it became necessary to commission a more modern courthouse for both criminal and civil matters: the site selected by the Lord Chancellor's Department had been occupied by Liverpool Castle between the 13th and 18th century.
The Liverpool Court of Passage had jurisdiction in personal actions to any amount where the defendant or one of the defendants resided or carried on business within the jurisdiction of the court, or by leave of the judge or registrar, when the whole or part of the cause of action arose within such jurisdiction, provided that, except where the whole cause of action arose within the jurisdiction ...