Cops ‘tried to portray Henry Nowak as aggressor in official statement’ three days after his murder
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/39332497/c...or-murder/
EXCERPT:
The Sunday Times now reveal the force wanted to describe the 18-year-old in a way that suggested he had started the confrontation, but changed the wording after outrage from his grieving family. [...] Henry’s relatives, devastated by his death, became concerned that a false narrative was being pushed about their son.
It is understood Hampshire Police later told the family about a further update they planned to publish, which would have included the Nowaks’ tribute but again implied Henry had been the initial aggressor. Officers eventually dropped that section and when the statement was published, it referred only to an “altercation”.
Failure to remove Sikh dagger from Digwa's neck
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/other/pol...r-AA250wOD
EXCERPT: It also came to light last night that the force, already under fire for its diversity schemes, failed to take a knife from Digwa after he was arrested and did not handcuff him when he was arrested. Even after the murderer was taken to a police station, his Sikh dagger was hanging around his neck.
The blade was only removed after a police search before he was moved into a cell, The Sun revealed. A source said: "Either the arresting officers knew he had the kirpan on and let him keep it on after his arrest, or they missed it and it was only picked up when he was searched at the police station.
"Either way, it is a massive blunder and could have been dangerous."
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The second account above is actually referring to the smaller knife. Digwa's mother grabbed the murder weapon and hid it.
Police treated stab victim as a racist while he lay dying (excerpt): Digwa’s mother, Kiran Kaur, and father, Moga Singh Digwa, also made their way to the scene before police arrived.
Ms Kaur picked up the ceremonial knife – called a shastar – used by her son in the attack and ran back to the family home where she stashed it, the court heard. She was found guilty of assisting an offender.
Digwa was also found to have a small kirpan around his neck. In the UK, Sikhs are legally permitted to carry a kirpan in public, as it is protected by religious exemption laws. During the trial, the court heard that Digwa was “skilled” with blades and had been “training with weapons since he was 12”.