London — The British police officer who killed Sarah Everard handcuffed her "by fraud," prosecutor Tom Little argued before a U.K. court on Wednesday. Wayne Couzens has pleaded guilty to kidnapping, ...
Kate Middleton made an unannounced visit to a memorial for Sarah Everard, whose death has prompted many women to share their stories about fearing for themselves when walking at night Maria Pasquini ...
London — British lawmakers Tuesday evening allowed a controversial new policing bill, which critics say would curtail the public's right to protest, to proceed to the next stage of Parliamentary ...
While London mayor Sadiq Khan insisted in a statement Wednesday that “all women and girls should be able to feel safe on the street of London at all times,” Metropolitan Police making door-to-door ...
On the evening of March 3, Metropolitan Police officer Wayne Couzens approached a young woman walking home alone on a south London street. We can’t know exactly what Couzens said to 33-year-old Sarah ...
CCTV footage from a passing London bus provided a breakthrough that led to arrests in the suspected abduction and murder of Sarah Everard, it is claimed. Another report claims a car linked to the ...
Wayne Couzens, the former police officer who has admitted to the kidnap, rape and murder of Sarah Everard, used his police identification and handcuffs to deceive her into getting into his car under ...
Sarah Everard, 33, a marketing executive living in Clapham, south-west London, disappeared on the evening of March 3, 2021, and her body was not found until a week later. Metropolitan Police officer ...
Sarah Everard was a "wholly blameless victim of a grotesque series of circumstances", a judge has said. Wayne Couzens, a Met Police officer, strangled Ms Everard with his police belt after kidnapping ...
On the evening of March 3, Sarah Everard did everything right: She went home at a reasonable hour and traveled the long way, along well-lit London streets. As she walked, she checked in with her ...
It’s the kind of town where people like Everard Hall still believe in doing things the old-fashioned way … especially, in his line of work. “I’m just a country boy and a gravedigger,” Hall said.