Men jailed for life for shooting and stabbing teen
- Published
Four men have been jailed for life for the murder of a teenager who was shot in the head at point-blank range outside a party and then slashed with a machete.
Tyler McDermott, 17, was attacked without warning in the early hours of 13 April last year in Tottenham, north London. An Old Bailey jury was shown CCTV footage of the moment he was shot and then slashed as he lay defenceless on the ground.
The four men were convicted in June following a three-month trial. They received minimum prison terms of between 13 and 30 years.
In a victim impact statement read to the court, Tyler's mother Tamika Nembhard said her son's life had been cut short in “a vicious and brutal and senseless murder".
'Tension and hostility'
Tyler's sister Zion McDermott said: "I will never understand why these boys did what they did; however hard I try, I cannot forgive them."
Tyrese Barnett, 20, of no fixed address, was sentenced by Judge Sarah Whitehouse KC to a minimum term of 30 years and given a 14-year concurrent sentence for the attempted murder of Kamali Lindo, who was fired at during the attack.
Leo Reid, 21, from Tulse Hill, south-west London, who wielded the machete, was sentenced to at least 22 years in prison.
Rhys Antwi, 20, from Streatham Hill, south-west London, must serve at least 14 years, while Kalam Bagge, 19, from Tooting, south-west London, received a minimum term of 13 years.
- Published19 June
- Published20 March
The trial heard there had been signs of "tension and hostility" brewing between two groups of young people at the party, which was held in a music studio in Norman Road.
One group, from north London, consisted of Tyler, Kamali and their friends, while the defendants were in group who had travelled from south London and were armed with two bladed weapons and a gun.
In mitigation for Barnett, Anne Whyte KC said that given his lack of previous convictions “everything suggests this was bizarrely out of character”.
Acting for Reid, Liam Walker KC said the killing was a “grotesque” act, but his client suffered from anxiety and his behaviour had been “spontaneous“ and that of a “startled young man”.
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