Daniel Khalife: No trace of prison escape terror suspect
- Published
There have been no confirmed sightings of Daniel Khalife in the near 48 hours since he escaped from prison, police say.
The Met Police commander leading the search said the former soldier and terror suspect was "very resourceful".
The 21-year-old is accused of trying to spy for an enemy state, understood to be Iran, and plotting a fake bomb hoax.
Police detailed the route of the lorry Mr Khalife clung to the underside of to make his escape from HMP Wandsworth.
Cdr Dominic Murphy, head of the Met's Counter Terrorism Command, confirmed that the vehicle Mr Khalife used to escape was stopped in nearby North Sheen in south-west London less than an hour after he was declared missing.
Detectives believe he was still wearing his prison-issue cook's uniform when he slipped out of the category B prison.
Catering firm Bidfood confirmed one of their delivery vehicles was involved and said their driver had "fully co-operated with the police".
Cdr Murphy said it was a "little unusual and perhaps a testament to [Mr Khalife's] ingenuity" that he had not been spotted, despite 50 calls from the public offering "valuable lines of inquiry".
As a trained soldier "he has skills that perhaps some sections of the public don't have", he added.
Cdr Murphy said it could not be ruled out that Mr Khalife had had help escaping and had access to money.
Some 150 Met Counter Terrorism Command officers have been deployed in the search since he was declared missing at 08:15 BST on Wednesday.
The lorry carrying Mr Khalife left HMP Wandsworth at 07:32 BST and headed west - but the alarm was not raised by prison staff for a further 20 minutes.
Another 25 minutes passed before the police were called in.
The lorry was seen in CCTV footage obtained by the BBC around three quarters of a mile from where it was eventually stopped, apparently with Mr Khalife no longer attached.
A member of the public filmed the vehicle being searched after officers located it at 08.37, around three miles from HMP Wandsworth.
By then, Mr Khalife was gone - but officers found the strapping he used to secure himself hanging from the underside of the vehicle.
Mr Khalife is thought to have links with Kingston upon Thames, south-west London, and the north-west of England. The search is focused on London.
But Cdr Murphy said it was "absolutely possible" he might have already left the country, and security at ports and airports has been tightened.
Disruption continued at the Port of Dover on Thursday. Junctions eight and nine of the M20 were temporarily shut due to the enhanced checks.
Meanwhile, a man took to X, formerly known as Twitter, to recount how a member of the public mistook him for Mr Khalife and alerted the police.
Pictures on social media show the man being spoken to by police reportedly at Banbury train station in Oxfordshire.
The man said he proved he was not the escapee after being questioned by police for 20 minutes and a fingerprint scan.
"Honestly crazy how much this has blown up," he tweeted. "Mistakes happen."
How did this happen?
Within hours of the escape, questions were being asked about why Mr Khalife was not being held in a high-security prison and how he was able to slip through the net.
Justice secretary Alex Chalk has ordered two urgent reviews into the categorisation and placement of all prisoners at Wandsworth, and all those in custody charged with terrorism offences.
He told the House of Commons that Mr Khalife would "be found and he will be made to face justice".
Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper told the BBC that Wandsworth prison - which for the last few years has held 60-80% more prisoners than it was designed for - had long been known for its overcrowding and staffing issues.
She said the escape shows "there has been a failure", adding: "Any government has to make sure national security is taken immensely seriously and ministers need to respond to warnings that are given to them."
Mark Fairhurst, chairman of the Prison Officers' Association (POA), said the union had been saying since 2010 that "cuts have consequences".
Nick Hardwick, former chief inspector of prisons, told BBC Newsnight the incident was "very serious", because "whatever went wrong at Wandsworth prison, it's clearly a symptom of a much wider crisis… in the prison system as a whole, that ministers had been warned about repeatedly. But frankly the action they've taken has been too little too late".
He added: "What we've recklessly done is push up the prison population without putting in place the resources to manage that. So far from making us safer, it's made us less safe."
John Podmore, who ran Belmarsh and Brixton prisons, told the BBC Radio 4 World at One programme Mr Khalife "should have been in Belmarsh" - a high-security prison in south-east London.
Sue Sim, former chief constable of Northumbria Police who led the manhunt for Raoul Moat, told BBC Radio 4's PM programme the escape appeared to have an "element of organisation".
"Particularly so now the commander has said they have had very few sightings," Ms Sim said. "That means somebody was waiting for him probably, and they've been able to move him on to somewhere which is a safe place."
What is Daniel Khalife accused of?
Mr Khalife joined the Army in 2019 and was based at MoD Stafford - also known as Beacon Barracks - when he disappeared on 2 January after an alleged bomb hoax.
A later court hearing at Westminster Magistrates' Court heard he allegedly planted fake devices "with the intention of inducing in another the belief the item was likely to explode or ignite".
He was arrested "in or near his car" on 26 January after "active efforts to look for him", a court heard. He was placed in Wandsworth two days later.
Mr Khalife was due to appear in court on 13 November to face charges including preparing an act of terrorism and collecting information useful to an enemy.
He denied the charges against him at the Old Bailey in July.
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- Published7 September 2023
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