The man accused of murdering three people in Nottingham tried to break into a residential care home during the rampage, it was claimed today.
Chilling CCTV footage shows a black-clad man believed to be the suspect looking for a way into Seely Hirst House, which houses vulnerable and homeless people.
Witnesses said the man arrived at the property in Mapperley Road just after 4am – shortly after 19-year-old students Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley Kumar were stabbed to death on Ilkeston Road while returning from a night out.
The man, who can be seen wearing a backpack in the footage – obtained by The Sun – tries to climb to an open window before being punched by a resident, sending him tumbling back down to the ground.
The resident, who did not want to be identified, said today: ‘He tried to get into my window. Thank god I woke up as I might have been dead.’
He tried another way in but gave up and walked several yards away to Magdala Road, where school caretaker Ian Coates, 65, was found stabbed to death shortly after being flagged down and dragged out of his van.
The attacker is believed used the vehicle to run down a group of pedestrians in the city centre, leaving one of them critically injured. The suspect – aged 31 – was finally stopped by officers armed with Tasers at around 5.30am. A knife was recovered.
Chilling CCTV footage obtained by Sky News shows a black-clad man believed to be the suspect looking for a way into Seely Hirst House residential home
The man can be seen trying to climb an open window before being punched by a resident
The suspect – aged 31 – was finally stopped by officers armed with Tasers at around 5.30am. A knife was recovered
Alex Pridmore, a trustee of the care home, confirmed the suspect tried to gain entry to the property.
‘I’ve no idea why he chose here – he’s never stayed here so he has no links with the residential care home,’ he told Sky News.
‘As you can imagine everyone is a bit shaken by what happened. We look after vulnerable people so we’re just relieved that he didn’t gain entry.’
Nottinghamshire Police said today: ‘A man matching the description of the suspect attempted to gain entry to a supported living complex in Mapperley Road.’
The triple murder suspect, who is believed to be a migrant from West Africa living in the UK legally for a decade, was today refusing to answer questions from police, according to sources.
The 31-year-old is said to have arrived in the country as a teenager and have a history of petty drug dealing but no criminal record. He was described by neighbours as a ‘very quiet guy’, the Telegraph reported.
There are also unconfirmed reports that the suspect recently converted to Islam and started attending an Islamic centre close to the scene. He is also understood to have a history of mental health issues.
It has been suggested that the investigation is turning away from terror and instead focusing on the suspect’s mental state – although Nottinghamshire Police has insisted they are keeping an open mind.
University of Nottingham students Barnaby Webber and Grace O’Malley Kumar were ambushed at 4am while they were returning from a night out. It is believed the suspect lived for some time on Ilkeston Road, where they were killed.
Yesterday, witnesses described seeing an attacker fatally ambushing the pair – apparently at random – before fleeing on foot and stabbing to death Ian Coates, 65, who was on his way to work as a school caretaker.
He stole the vehicle and used it to run down a group of pedestrians in the city centre, leaving one of them critically injured.
The suspect – aged 31 – was finally stopped by officers armed with Tasers at around 5.30am. A knife was recovered.
Witnesses described suspect as black, with dreadlocks and a beard, and dressed in a hooded top.
An onlooker who saw the two University of Nottingham students being attacked told the BBC: ‘Being a hot night, I had the window open and I just heard some awful, blood-curdling screams.
‘I looked out of the window and saw a black guy dressed all in black with a hood and rucksack grappling with some people. It was a girl, and a man or boy she was with – they looked quite young.
‘She was screaming: ”Help!” I just wish I’d shouted something out of the window to unnerve the assailant. I saw him stab the lad first and then the woman. It was repeated stabbing – four or five times.
‘The lad collapsed in the middle of the road. The girl stumbled towards a house and didn’t move. The next minute she had disappeared down the side of a house, and that’s where they found her.
‘I’d say it all happened within five or six minutes. The attacker then just walked off up Ilkeston Road towards town, as calm as anything.’
It is believed the suspect lived for some time on Ilkeston Road, where the two students died. Police are seen there yesterday
Lynn Haggitt was on her way to work at a branch of B&Q when she saw a man driving a white van that was being followed by a police car.
She told Channel 4 News: ‘It was half past five and I saw a white van pull up by the side of me.
‘It was white. There was a police car behind it which came up slowly, no flashing lights.
‘The man in the driver’s seat looked in his mirror and saw the police car behind it. The white van then backed up on the corner of the street and went into two people.’
She said the man had dreadlocks and a beard and was wearing a hat.
About a mile north, on the corner of Maples Street and Bentinck Road, the van – bearing dents and a cracked windscreen from the pedestrians – was brought to a stop and armed police fired Tasers at the driver.
Dramatic video showed two officers pinning him to the pavement.
Witness Grace Mambi said officers were screaming ‘get down, get down!’
Demi Ojolow, a student who lives in the road, said: ‘They dragged him out of the car and he just fell on the floor.
‘He was still… wrestling at that point.’
Neighbour Dimitrious Lawani added: ‘He was being quite resistive – very resistive from what I could tell – and he was also making a lot of noise but I couldn’t really distinguish what he was saying.’
Grace O’Malley Kumar, 19, was one of two University of Nottingham students who was stabbed to death while walking home after a night out at 4am yesterday morning
Barnaby Webber, a university student, was killed in the attacks early on Tuesday morning
Kane Brady, a University of Nottingham student, told GB News: ‘We woke up to shouts of ‘armed police’ and what sounded like some very loud noises, what sounded like gunshots – it was that loud.
‘I looked out the bedroom window and saw Tasers. I saw a man being dragged out and pinned to the floor. I saw him getting arrested, him trying to resist.
‘I then later saw when they opened the van – I saw a large knife being pulled out and then straight away that’s when police closed off both roads.’
It comes as the family of murdered student Mr Webber paid tribute to him today and told of their pain at the ‘senseless murder’ of their ‘beautiful, brilliant son’.
The keen sportsman’s family today described him as a ‘beautiful, brilliant, bright young man, with everything in life to look forward to’ in a heartbreaking tribute.
Miss Kumar’s family are yet to release a public statement, after declining to speak yesterday. England Hockey and local cricket clubs paid tribute to Grace today.
Many of those who attended the vigil were students at the universities of Nottingham and Nottingham Trent
Many of the young people at a vigil for those caught up and killed in the attacks were emotional at St Peter’s church in Nottingham