Summary

  • Marcus Monzo is sentenced to life with a minimum term of 38 years over a sword attack in which he murdered schoolboy Daniel Anjorin in Hainault

  • The 37-year-old, of Satanita Close, Canning Town, also injured five more people, including two police officers, during a 20-minute rampage in April 2024

  • Monzo had also been found guilty of three counts of attempted murder, wounding with intent and possession of an offensive weapon

  • Daniel was a "gifted" child with "so much potential", the 14-year-old's father told the court earlier

  • Emotions ran high, reports Lucy Manning from the Old Bailey, as we heard from Daniel's family and other victims of Monzo's 20-minute rampage

  • Warning: This page contains details that some readers may find distressing

Media caption,

'No verdict or sentence can bring back our son,' says Daniel's father

  1. 'I'm no hero,' says officer slashed in Hainault sword attackpublished at 10:14 British Summer Time

    Lucy Manning
    Reporting from the Old Bailey

    Media caption,

    'He was slashing at me' - police officer who confronted Hainault sword attacker

    We have previously interviewed Insp Moloy Campbell, who engaged in face-to-face fighting with Marco Monzo, receiving a slash wound to his hand as he tried to disarm him.

    He told us that he does not see himself as a hero, but he said his team of officers are "undoubtedly heroic" for their actions in stopping the attack.

    Recalling the confrontation in April 2024, Insp Campbell told the BBC: "It's a natural instinct: fight or flight, and in that moment it was fight. There was emotion after the event and after it all died down, but there was no fear."

    He added: "And I don't think there was much fear from anyone actually, because they're police officers and are expected to take action and that's hard drilled into them and they did it well."

  2. Reporters and camera crews set up outside Old Baileypublished at 10:11 British Summer Time

    Cachella Smith
    Reporting from the Old Bailey

    Reporters and camera crews set up outside the Old BaileyImage source, BBC/Cachella Smith

    I'm here at the Old Bailey in central London where we are expecting the sentencing hearing of Marcus Monzo to begin within the next hour.

    The court will first hear submissions from the prosecution and defence teams before the judge actually passes down the sentence - which you'll be able to watch this afternoon from 14:00 BST.

    On Wednesday, Monzo was found guilty of a number of offences - including the murder of 14-year-old Daniel Anjorin and the attempted murder of three others - all of which took place in a series of attacks that lasted just over 20 minutes.

    Since the attacks last year, the case has attracted a large amount of media attention.

    I spotted two camera crews outside as I came in this morning, but there are already a number of journalists waiting outside the courtroom itself.

  3. How a deadly attack unfolded in just 20 minutespublished at 10:04 British Summer Time

    • At 06:45 BST on 30 April 2024, Marcus Monzo drove a van into a 33-year-old pedestrian in the north-east London suburb of Hainault - he then chased down and slashed him on the neck with a sword
    • Monzo then attacked 14-year-old Daniel Anjorin, who was unaware of the man’s presence as he was on his way to school, wearing his PE uniform and his headphones
    • Police officers were on the scene within minutes and chased him into an alley – one officer, leading the approach, was attacked by Monzo, who slashed her three times
    • Monzo then made his way into a couple’s home, where he demanded to know if they believed in God before slashing the arm of the husband
    • The attacker only left after hearing the couple’s four-year-old child crying, when he told them he’d spare their lives
    • Monzo was then cornered by police officers in a set of garages – one officer engaged in hand-to-hand combat with the 37-year-old, using his baton against Monzo’s samurai sword
    • Officers eventually fired a number of Tasers at Monzo and managed to arrest him, removing the sword that had caused so much bloodshed
  4. From conspiracy theorist to violent assailant – who is Marcus Monzo?published at 09:58 British Summer Time

    Mugshot of Marcus Monzo. He is staring directly towards the camera wearing a grey jumperImage source, Met Police

    After his arrest on 24 April 2024, Marcus Monzo sat for a series of police interviews. Throughout, police learned that the 37-year-old believed his personality had switched before the attack and he compared the events to the movie The Hunger Games.

    He also told police that he had "many personalities" and that one of them was a "professional assassin". Before coming to the UK in 2013, Monzo grew up in Brazil.

    While giving evidence in court, he admitted to being possession of two samurai swords, but insisted he could not remember attacking multiple people in a rampage across the streets of Hainault.

    The court heard that the former Amazon driver was a martial arts enthusiast who believed in conspiracy theories - including ones about the Earth being flat and that the 9/11 attacks were fake.

    His brother said he had changed after attending retreats in India and the Amazon where he drank ayahuasca, a hallucinogenic tea.

    Both the prosecution and defence agreed Monzo had a psychotic disorder. But prosecutors said his behaviour was triggered "by self-induced intoxication in the form of drugs" through his use of cannabis, which led to the psychosis.

    Monzo's defence claimed he was "most likely suffering from a pre-existing condition".

    On the day of the attack, he strangled his cat and tried to eat it. That morning, Monzo said he had felt the onset of "something like Armageddon" and he believed "the world was collapsing".

  5. ‘We have lost the most loved and amazing son’published at 09:51 British Summer Time

    Danio Anjorin is sat on a Tube carriage looking towards a camera while wearing his school uniform and a black addidas backpackImage source, Family handout

    Daniel Anjorin's father, who sat in court throughout the trial, spent several days listening to disturbing evidence about how his son was killed and watching the police videos of Monzo with his sword attacking others that day.

    When Monzo received his guilty verdict this week, the father of Daniel Anjorin sat just feet away – occasionally wiping away tears.

    The family of the 14-year-old boy released a statement after his death, saying that it was hard for them to fathom that Daniel had left the house for school on that spring morning “and then he was gone”.

    "Our children have lost their loving and precious brother and we have lost the most loved and amazing son," they said.

  6. 'He's just killed that boy': How the Hainault attack unfoldedpublished at 09:44 British Summer Time

    Flowers and candles are seen at the place where the deadly attack unfolded in HainaultImage source, PA Media
    Image caption,

    Kirsty O'Connor, from CPS, said this week that their "hearts go out" to Daniel's family and friends who have suffered "his unimaginable loss in horrific circumstances"

    As we've been reporting, Marcus Monzo is set to be sentenced today over the deadly attack he carried out in Hainault last year, during which he murdered 14-year-old Daniel Anjorin and injured several others.

    The 37-year-old's rampage began on the morning of 30 April 2024 in the north-east London suburb. He first drove a van into a pedestrian and then slashed him in the neck, before turning his attention to Daniel, who he fatally wounded with a 60cm (24in) samurai sword.

    Monzo then entered a nearby home where a couple and their four-year-old daughter were asleep, slashing a man on the arm before leaving the property.

    He was cleared of one count of attempted murder in relation to this attack, but was found guilty of the lesser offence of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.

    The court was told Monzo had gone into a cannabis-induced psychosis before the attack.

    Giving evidence at his trial, he said he had no memory of what happened and claimed his mental state had diminished his responsibility for the crimes.

    The prosecution argued that psychosis brought on by self-induced intoxication was no defence for murder.

    Monzo was found guilty this week of murdering the schoolboy, along with several other offences - which we'll detail in full in our next few posts.

  7. Man who murdered Hainault schoolboy with sword to be sentencedpublished at 09:34 British Summer Time

    Lucy Manning
    Reporting from the Old Bailey

    I'm here outside the Old Bailey, where we'll soon hear the sentencing of Marcus Monzo.

    The judge, Mr Justice Bennathan, has already told the Spanish-Brazilian national when he was found guilty of the murder of 14-year-old Daniel Anjorin that he will face a life sentence today.

    He now needs to set the minimum number of years that Monzo will serve.

    Before that happens this afternoon, there will be emotional victim impact statements read to the court. The Anjorin family have lost their son Daniel, described as loving, hard working with a gentle character.

    Others that day in Hainault nearly lost their lives. Both police officers and local residents have struggled to recover from physical injuries and mental trauma and we will hear more about that this morning.

    During the three weeks of this trial, Daniel Anjorin’s father sat and listened to the traumatic details of what unfolded in Hainault that morning.

    The Anjorin family will see justice being done today, but Monzo took their son and brother from them just moments after he waved goodbye as he went to school.

    I'll be inside the court from 10:30 BST alongside my colleagues to file updates, and then at 14:00 BST I'll be poised to bring you the first lines on Monzo's sentencing. Stick with us.