Teenager locked up for life over stabbing death of 14-year-old
Jermaine Cools was fatally stabbed after coming across a street fight outside a chicken shop in Croydon, south London, in November 2021.
A mother has issued an emotional plea to tackle knife crime as her 14-year-old son’s killer was locked up for life, saying: “It can be anyone’s child.”
Jermaine Cools was fatally stabbed with a machete in Croydon, south London, on November 18 2021.
The unarmed child was the youngest fatality involving knife crime in the capital that year.
His 16-year-old killer, Marques Walker, had a history of carrying deadly weapons and had been on bail for carrying a Zombie knife six weeks before.
Showing a lack of remorse, he wrote about the murder in rap lyrics saying: “Even if that youth was a civilian I would still rewind and chef up (stab) his back.”
Walker, now aged 17, pleaded guilty to murder, possessing a knife and causing grievous bodily harm to a fellow inmate while in youth detention after the killing.
On Tuesday, Walker became the first youth to be sentenced on television as he was detained for life at the Old Bailey with a minimum term of 19 years.
Judge Sarah Munro KC, who was briefly interrupted by angry shouting from the public gallery, said: “This is yet another case of the senseless murder of a young teenager committed for reasons no mature adult could fathom.”
She said Walker stabbed Jermaine “mercilessly” and the victim “must have been terrified and in agony”.
Jermaine’s mother Lorraine Dudek described the failure to deal with Walker’s knife-carrying habit as a “missed opportunity”.
She said: “Had it been addressed earlier he would not have had the opportunity to go out to kill.
“Young males get caught with a knife, the knife gets confiscated. Within an hour they get another one from Snapchat or social media.
“Stop and search has its place and it’s very, very good for removing weapons but the follow-up has to be there.
“When Jermaine got stopped and searched I was happy about it. Some parents complain about their children being stopped and searched – that could be the deterrent that stops them.”
Ms Dudek told how the family had witnessed “victim blaming” as people struggled to accept that boys with no gang connection could be “stabbed for no reason”.
But she said: “People don’t realise it can just be anyone’s child.”
The court heard how Walker, from Bromley, Kent, was caught on CCTV footage calmly walking towards Jermaine and drawing a machete from his coat.
Jermaine either fell or was pushed to the ground before the youth ran towards him and repeatedly lunged at him with the blade.
Prosecutor Caroline Carberry KC said: “It is clear that Jermaine Cools did not stand a chance. He could offer no resistance. He was unarmed, he was on the floor, and he was totally vulnerable.
“He was stabbed a total of seven times by Marques Walker in a senseless attack of extreme ferocity.”
Jermaine, who had previously confided in his parents that he was worried about knife crime, was driven by a passer-by to the Mayday Hospital where he died from a wound to the chest.
Police identified the defendant from CCTV footage but he went to ground, sleeping on the sofas of friends for nearly six weeks.
On December 27 2021, he was found at an address hiding behind a bed and initially gave a false name to officers.
The court was told the defendant had previously been caught carrying three large knives.
A Rambo-style blade was seized at his school and at the time of the murder he was on bail for possessing a Zombie knife six weeks earlier.
Jermaine’s parents described their son as a “beautiful” child and a “bright light in the world” who was just interested in music and cars.
Ms Dudek said: “He had become aware that knife crime is massive. A lot of teenagers live with the threat of knife crime.
“It was at the forefront of his mind. He became aware of the fact Croydon has the highest amount of knife crime in London – that’s where his mind was in.”
Ms Dudek suggested that tackling knife crime started at home and said she had always told Jermaine never to carry a blade.
She said: “For me, Jermaine was the closest person to me, he was the best child ever.
“We do not live any more. We just exist. When they took his life, they took ours. We just exist now. We exist in pain.”
Ms Dudek thanked the people who came to her son’s aid, saying: “I’m very grateful to them because without them my son would have died in the street.”
She added: “All these gang members. All his friends and family that protected him have my son’s blood on their hands. I will never forgive the defendant.”
Jermaine’s father Julius Cools said: “I just feel I have not got justice yet. Everyone that was involved should get justice.
Referring to Walker, he said: “Your devilish actions that night took Jermaine from us. You stabbed him so many times, if it was one or two wounds maybe Jermaine would have survived but you kept stabbing him.”
“I want justice for my son. The one that pushed my son, pushed him down for someone to stab him, should get the same justice.”
Superintendent Richard Vandenbergh, of Scotland Yard, said: “It was a horrific event that should never have happened. He was the very youngest that year to have lost their life to knife crime.
“Jermaine’s family have spoken out about knife crime and I hope that their courage in speaking out may stop some other family losing a child to this evil crime.
“This youth was able to obtain knife after knife. Anyone seeing the pictures of those weapons police seized from him in the months leading up to the killing of Jermaine should be concerned that weapons like this seem so readily available to young men.”