An official inquiry has concluded that a knife attack that killed three young girls at a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in Southport could have been prevented. Sir Adrian Fulford, head of the inquiry, said agencies failed to act on clear warning signs despite repeated referrals. The findings highlight systemic failures in information sharing and risk assessment.
Six-year-old Bebe King, seven-year-old Elsie Dot Stancombe, and nine-year-old Alice da Silva Aguiar died on July 29, 2024, when 17-year-old Axel Rudakubana stabbed attendees at the event in northwest England. Ten others were wounded, and 16 people, mostly children, suffer ongoing psychological trauma. Rudakubana, now serving a minimum 52-year sentence for murder, attempted murder, and terrorism offenses, had been known to police, social services, education, and health agencies for years. Devices seized from him contained an al Qaeda training manual, antisemitic and anti-Muslim material, and documents on conflicts including Rwanda's genocide, where his parents originated from Cardiff, Wales-born family hailed from Rwanda. Born in Cardiff, Wales, to Rwandan parents, Rudakubana was referred multiple times to the Prevent counterextremism program due to his fixation on violence, including school shootings. Yet, just six days before the attack, Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services deemed him to pose 'no risk to others.' The inquiry, spanning nine weeks of evidence, found agencies lacked cohesion and urgency, passing risks between them while downgrading involvement. Sir Adrian Fulford stated the attacker's 'trajectory towards grave violence was signposted repeatedly and unambiguously,' and that failures in information sharing diluted risks over time. He also criticized the family for obstructing engagement, noting that full disclosure of concerns could have prevented the tragedy. The attack sparked riots fueled by false online rumors about Rudakubana's background, leading to 1,840 arrests by July 2025. Prime Minister Keir Starmer described the report as 'harrowing' and pledged fundamental changes. David Anderson, the U.K.'s Prevent commissioner, noted a shift toward youth fascinated by online violence without fixed ideologies.