logo
Second teenager charged over fatal stabbing at beach

Second teenager charged over fatal stabbing at beach

Sky News23-05-2025
Why you can trust Sky News
A second suspect has been charged in connection with the death of a 16-year-old boy who was fatally stabbed on a North Ayrshire beach.
Kayden Moy, 16, was found seriously injured following a report of a disturbance at Irvine Beach on Saturday evening.
The victim, from East Kilbride in South Lanarkshire, received medical care at the scene before being taken to hospital, where he died on Sunday.
On Thursday, Police Scotland announced a second 17-year-old male had been arrested and charged in connection with the death.
He is due to appear at Kilmarnock Sheriff Court on Friday.
The force said enquiries remain ongoing.
Earlier this week, another 17-year-old boy was .
The suspect, of East Kilbride, appeared at Kilmarnock Sheriff Court charged with murder, carrying an offensive weapon in a public place, and attempting to pervert the course of justice.
The youth made no plea to the three charges and was remanded in custody ahead of his next court appearance.
Both suspects cannot be identified due to their age.
Specially trained officers are continuing to support Kayden's family.
In a statement previously released through the force, his family thanked all those who have shown support.
Busby AFC, where Kayden played in the youth set-up for several years, launched a fundraiser for his family and has raised more than £15,000.
Meantime, an online portal has been set up to allow members of the public to submit information directly to officers investigating the incident.
Detective Chief Inspector Campbell Jackson said: "Our specially trained officers continue to support Kayden's family and keep them updated with the progress of our investigation.
"I'd like to thank members of the public who have come forward and continue to ask anyone with information, who has not already spoken to police, to contact us.
"Extensive enquiries are ongoing and officers remain in the Irvine and East Kilbride areas. Anyone with concerns can speak to them or call 101."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Unseen photo shows killer nurse Lucy Letby partying at friend's wedding while on bail for murdering seven babies
Unseen photo shows killer nurse Lucy Letby partying at friend's wedding while on bail for murdering seven babies

Daily Mail​

time3 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Unseen photo shows killer nurse Lucy Letby partying at friend's wedding while on bail for murdering seven babies

New photos show Lucy Letby partying at her friend's wedding while she was on bail for the murder of seven babies. The photo was revealed by her friend Dawn, who did not want to use her surname, as part of a new TV documentary about Letby. Letby was convicted in 2023 of murdering seven babies and attempting to murder seven others. Her friend Dawn said she was 'so glad she was there' at her wedding. She was so sure of her friend's innocence that she sought permission from the authorities to invite Letby to her wedding while she was on bail. In a clip for the documentary, Dawn was seen looking through pictures of herself and Letby. The pair met as teenagers and have been friends ever since. She said: 'There is definitely lots of holiday snaps, birthdays, holidays I forgot we even had. 'The wedding photos are definitely my favourite. There is Lucy at my wedding. I am just so glad she could be there because it was while she was on bail, she had to get special permission to be allowed to come from police. 'I watched it all unfold and at every step of the way I just couldn't believe it, it was just beyond belief that it could be happening.' She added: 'My assumption when all of this happened was that perhaps she had inadvertently forgotten bits of procedure or she has made some mistakes. 'There were those dark moments where I thought perhaps has she inadvertently caused harm because she was so newly qualified in such a high pressure environment and perhaps that's why she was being targeted for these accusations. 'Shortly after this she as held in custody, so I don't think she has seen these [photographs].' Dawn has stood by Letby despite her conviction and remains convinced of her innocence. She undermined claims that scribbled notes found in Letby's house were any sort of confession. She reveals that, at sixth form college together, both trained in peer-support counselling and learned of a common method to deal with anxieties – to write down your worst fears and feelings. 'If you're feeling overwhelmed, you write down everything that's going through your mind,' she said. And this is what Letby did when undergoing counselling arranged for her by the hospital. Dawn was at work when she heard the guilty verdicts and said she could not take them in. She said: 'I sat there dumbfounded for a while, not really knowing how to process what I was hearing. I didn't think it was real. I immediately switched to thinking what happens next? This can't be it, she can't just spend the rest of her life in prison. I'm living a life that Lucy should be living beside me. 'We should both be having families. We'd both bought our houses, and we were looking forward to the next chapter of our lives – and then all this happens. There's so much guilt that I'm living a life that Lucy should also be living.' The documentary also hears from Karen Rees, former head of urgent care nursing at the Countess of Chester Hospital where Letby worked. Sat in a car outside the hospital, Ms Rees said 'I loved working here'. 'We were all shocked, really shocked,' she added, 'when I look back to when it all started, I don't think any of us thought that this storyline would ride out the way it has.' Betweeen 2015 and 2016 nearly three times as many newborn babies had died than the normal numbers. Ms Rees said: I was made aware that the mortality rates appeared to be higher than they had been in the previous years. 'It was tough because everyone was trying, thinking please let us find a reason for this.' Letby was often accused of being cold and unfeeling during her trial for murder. But according to Ms Rees, she was in fact devastated by the accusations against her. The bitter, tearful scenes followed suggestions made by consultants at the hospital that Letby was doing harm. 'She was broken, cried regularly in my arms and in my office, and her mantra to me was, 'Why are they doing this to me? I've done nothing wrong',' said Ms Rees. Ms Rees, in her first TV interview, revealed she was given the task of breaking the bad news to Letby that she was being removed from the job she was trained for – the care of newborns – and confined to a humiliating desk job in a back office. Letby had to pretend to colleagues that this was her choice. Ms Rees said: 'I was told just to say that concerns had been raised, and that this was seen as a neutral act. 'She was not being accused of anything at this point. But it seemed safer to take her off clinical practice to protect herself as well as babies on that neonatal unit.' As she was led away from the unit where she had worked, Letby did not even question the decision. 'She was just looking at me,' added Ms Rees. 'I then had to walk her across the hospital grounds. I was the only one making conversation. She wasn't asking me why. She wasn't crying. She was just shocked.' But, said Ms Rees, she cried a lot later. Eventually, after police became involved, Letby was prescribed antidepressants which often suppress moods and emotions. She told her trial in May 2023 she was still taking them and that she had considered suicide at the time she was removed from her job. Ms Rees recalled how Letby once told her: 'You're the only person that hasn't asked me, 'Have I purposely harmed anybody?'.' She said: 'The reason why I never asked her is that I never thought she had. No. I didn't, I don't believe it.' Her revelations are one of several dramatic moments in the documentary Lucy Letby: Beyond Reasonable Doubt? to be shown on ITV this evening. Letby's new barrister Mark McDonald is shown in the documentary being questioned outside the CCRC offices in Birmingham by the Daily Mail's Liz Hull, who has covered the case from the beginning. Mr McDonald admits to camera that, despite the involvement of some of the most distinguished doctors in the world, who say no crime was committed, an appeal may yet be refused on a technicality – that the objections to the guilty verdict could have been raised at the original trial, so it was not the court's fault that things went wrong. He asks: 'If they dismiss this evidence, to say 'Well, it could have been called at trial... she's innocent but we are not going to take any notice of it because they could have done that, so we will let an innocent person stay in prison' – well, what is the logic of that?'

Crimestoppers reward for King's Lynn 'no body' murder information
Crimestoppers reward for King's Lynn 'no body' murder information

BBC News

time3 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Crimestoppers reward for King's Lynn 'no body' murder information

Crimestoppers has offered a reward of up to £20,00 for information that could lead to those responsible in a "no body" murder investigation. Maris Ile, 54, was a seasonal worker from Latvia who had been living in the Highgate area of King's Lynn, Norfolk. He did not arrive at work in Ely, Cambridgeshire, after setting off from home on 20 November, and was reported missing three days Police said it believed the 54-year-old had come to harm and launched a murder investigation in March, despite not having found a body. On 11 March, four men and a woman were arrested at addresses in King's Lynn, Norwich and Peterborough on suspicion of murder in connection with the remain on bail until 11 September, police said. Last month Mr Ile's mother, Galina, described her son as "caring" and said he loved motorbikes as she appealed for information over his disappearance. In a translated appeal, she said: "This is very important to me."If he is no longer alive, then I want the police to find his body, so he would be cremated and brought back home to Latvia so he could rest on Latvian soil, so that he can be buried with his father in the cemetery." Crimestoppers has offered a reward of up to £20,000 for information that leads to an arrest or conviction, which will be available until 4 November. Follow Norfolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Woman charged with murder over death of child in Leeds
Woman charged with murder over death of child in Leeds

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

Woman charged with murder over death of child in Leeds

A woman has been charged with the murder of a three-year-old girl who was found dead at a house in Yorkshire Police said they received a report of a concern for safety of a young child on 30 July at about 11:05 went to a property on Austhorpe Court in Colton and the girl's body was found force said Pippa McGrath, 47, of Austhorpe Court, Leeds, had been charged with murder and was due to appear at Leeds Magistrates' Court later. Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store