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Tim Sigsworth News Reporter |
Henry Nowak checked his hair and adjusted the collar of his quarter-zip jumper.
It was 8.30pm and the student was looking in the mirror of a lift as he was leaving his accommodation at the University of Southampton for a night out with his football teammates.
Henry Nowak in the lift, leaving his student accommodation |
Just three hours later, he lay dying on the ground in handcuffs, accused of racism by a man who had stabbed him five times after they met in the street. We have reconstructed the 18-year-old’s final hours.
8.30pm
Nowak’s night out began when he left his halls of residence. Dressed smartly in shirt and tie, he and his teammates visited an off-licence, a pub and a nightclub as they marked the end of their first term at university.
11.17pm
Shortly after 11pm, both Vickrum Digwa and Nowak were making their way home. They met by chance on Belmont Road, where Digwa had parked his car before launching the attack.
When Digwa’s brother, Gurpreet, called 999, the siblings claimed Nowak had racially abused Digwa and had carried out an unprovoked assault. This was a lie. Their parents, who lived nearby, arrived at the scene before the police and Digwa gave the murder weapon to his mother for disposal.
11.37pm
It was more than 15 minutes before police arrived. Once there, they handcuffed Nowak, who, in an eerie echo of George Floyd’s death, cried out: “I can’t breathe.”
The police placed Henry Nowak in handcuffs after he told them he had been stabbed |
By the time the officers realised he was telling the truth, Nowak had stopped responding. He was pronounced dead at 12.37am. Digwa was finally arrested, but unlike his victim, he was never handcuffed.
Nowak’s treatment at the hands of those who were meant to help him reads like fiction. Astonishingly, it is fact.
This report is available only to subscribers. Continue reading ➤
See more of our coverage below:
Police face calls to drop race bias policies ➤
The ‘cult of diversity and inclusion’ at heart of police force ➤
Protesters in Southampton throw bricks and bottles at police ➤
Three officers who arrested Nowak remain on front-line duty ➤ |
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Allison Pearson A beloved, blameless teenager died in custody because there’s nothing officers in 2026 fear more than allegations of ‘racism’ Continue reading ➤
Nigel Farage Henry Nowak’s murder should be a wake-up call for Britain Continue reading ➤
Patrick Kidd Murrell’s in for a long stretch... it’d be perfect for a motorhome Continue reading ➤ |
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Tomorrow, England will take on New Zealand in the first Lord’s Test of the summer, writes Michael Vaughan. In that match, Lord’s will become the first cricket ground to host 150 Tests. Scyld Berry has written a brilliant piece in which he picks the ground’s finest moments.
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Lisa Armstrong’s makeovers |
Today marks the last instalment of Lisa’s makeovers for the time being. If you have a fashion dilemma, send us your problems here and we’ll do our best to answer them in a future edition of this newsletter.
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The great scone debateEvery weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories. Orlando writes... Summer in England. A time for meandering walks through the teeming countryside, serenaded by the cuckoo call. A time for whiling away your Saturday afternoon in a bright pub garden, and, of course, a time for arguing about which should go on a scone first: jam or cream.
Actually, it wasn’t the changing of the seasons that unleashed this debate among Telegraph readers. Rather, it was the revelation, courtesy of the Prince of Wales, that Elizabeth II favoured the latter. This is known as the Devon method and, having grown up in Cornwall, I must respectfully state that it is wrong.
Many of the responses, however, have come from avowed Devonians. Andrew Forbes argued: “Definitely cream first – a properly craggy crown of clotted glory, then a generous blob of jam.”
Christine Boon added: “I agree that it should be cream first. I think of the cream as a substitute for butter; you can then make an indentation in the centre and add the jam. To me this is just logical, but then I don’t come from Cornwall or Devon.”
It fell to Christine Freeman to make the Cornish case: “If the scones are warm, it makes sense to put jam on first.” What self-respecting country would serve scones cold?
Helen Townshend described a different – some might say maverick – approach: “Butter, jam, then cream. You can’t spread jam on cream. Well, some people can, but I can’t.”
Another reader, meanwhile, proposed a canny compromise: “Cut the scone in half. Put cream on one bit and jam on the other. Reassemble as a sandwich, and guests can turn it over depending whether they’re Cornish or Devonian. The wisdom of Solomon (probably).” Well then: which side are you on? Send your responses here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of this newsletter.
Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name. |
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1940 | Some of the last British and French soldiers are evacuated from Dunkirk (and our front page the following morning)
1969 | Children’s book The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle is published
2019 | Donald Trump begins three-day state visit to Britain
2020 | Three police officers charged in connection with death of George Floyd in Minneapolis
Birthdays: Rafael Nadal (40), Jill Biden (75), Dame Penelope Wilton (80)
Plus, in today’s news, the Bank of England has published a shortlist of 18 native animals that could replace Winston Churchill on the £5 note.
Below is a sample of four mock-ups. Click on the animal you’d prefer, and we will reveal the winner in a future edition of this newsletter.
1. Hare
2. Hedgehog
3. Pine Marten
4. Fox |
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Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.
Yesterday’s Panagram was EARMARKED. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle. |
Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow. Chris Evans, Editor
P.S. I’d love to hear what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here. |
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