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British home secretary calls for stronger measures after chilling homicide case

IANS March 20, 2025 150 views

British Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has called for immediate reforms in firearm sale regulations following the chilling case of Nicholas Prosper. Prosper, sentenced to life imprisonment, murdered his family and planned an attack on his former school. The case has highlighted weaknesses in firearm sales and the influence of violent online content on youth. Shadow Justice Minister Kieran Mullan pushes for tougher sentencing under the Unduly Lenient Sentence Scheme.

"This terrible case has exposed deep and long-standing weaknesses in private firearms sales." - Yvette Cooper
London, March 20: British Home Secretary Yvette Cooper called for stronger measures to prevent violence after a 19-year-old man was sentenced to life in prison for murdering his family and plotting a mass shooting at a local primary school.

Key Points

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Nicholas Prosper sentenced for murdering family and plotting school attack

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Cooper demands stricter firearm sale regulations

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Concerns over youth exposure to violent online content

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Shadow Justice Minister seeks harsher sentences under Lenient Scheme

In a statement on Wednesday, Cooper said, "This terrible case has exposed deep and long-standing weaknesses in private firearms sales, and we are urgently looking at how we can tighten these controls." She also stressed the "urgent need to examine the very disturbing way some young people are becoming fixated with extreme violent material online and the real dangers to our communities as a result."

Nicholas Prosper killed his mother and two siblings in Luton on September 13, 2024, using a shotgun purchased online with a counterfeit firearm certificate.

He had also planned to kill children at his former primary school, but the plot was foiled by authorities two hours after he murdered his family, Xinhua news agency reported.

Prosper was sentenced to life in prison, with a minimum term of 49 years. Detective Chief Inspector Sam Khanna of Bedfordshire Police described the case as unprecedented, saying: "In my entire policing career, I have never encountered anyone capable of such horrific acts whilst showing no remorse." Khanna added: "I am pleased that this truly evil individual will now be serving a significant proportion of his life behind bars."

Shadow Justice Minister Kieran Mullan announced on social media platform X that he had referred the case to the Unduly Lenient Sentence Scheme, arguing that "killing three people, including two children, is the gravest of crimes. If we don't give criminals like this Whole Life Orders, what are they for?"

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