Six gang members given life sentences for Shaquille Smith murder
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Six members of a bicycle gang who murdered innocent schoolboy
Shaquille Smith in a park were jailed for life today.
They were given minimum terms of between 15 and 18 years at the Old
Bailey after the judge labelled them "arrogant cowards".
The gang, members of the London Fields Boys, from Hackney, east
London, stabbed the 14-year-old to death as he talked on a park
bench about going on holiday to Jamaica.
The gang members, who included two brothers, were sentenced one by
one to avoid violence in the dock.
George Amponsah, 19, Godiowe Dufeal, 20, Amisi Khama, 18, Freddie
Amponsah, 17, Kadean Dias, 18, and Leon Atwell, 17, all from
Hackney, were found guilty of murder last month.
George Amponsah and Dufeal were given 18 years' custody. The others
were given 15-year minimum terms.
Dufeal had only been released on licence a week before Shaquille
was attacked in August last year, after serving part of a four-
year sentence for having a gun.
Khama had been a semi-professional footballer for Bishop Stortford
club, and Dias was described as an "excellent pupil".
But they were likened to a "wild pack of dogs" as they abandoned
their bikes and climbed over a fence into the park in St Thomas's
Place.
Judge David Paget said they had attacked Shaquille who had done
nothing to provoke them.
"He was truly innocent and what is more, he was yards from his own
front door," said the judge.
They had ridden arrogantly through red lights and on pavements in a
10-strong relay.
After the boy was stabbed, they rode off "like cowards" to London
Fields, he said.
Judge Paget added: "The most shocking aspect is that it was
completely unprovoked and completely unnecessary.
"It was truly mindless violence resulting in the death of a totally
innocent 14-year-old boy sitting yards from his front door."
The court was told that Shaquille had been sitting with a
16-year-old girl and a boy on the warm evening instead of doing the
dishes at home.
His mother had let him off his daily chores because she thought he
would be safe with the older girl, said Aftab Jafferjee QC,
prosecuting.
Mr Jafferjee said: "On the night, they were operating as a roving
gang of youths with violence on their minds."
In less than two minutes, the friend had to run away with his dog,
the girl was cut across the neck and face and Shaquille was
killed.
"He was an utterly blameless boy who said nothing and did nothing
to anyone in the park to cause offence, let alone justify being
murdered," Mr Jafferjee said.
"Ordinarily, at that time in the evening, that boy would have been
doing the dishes but, as he was with the girl, his mother did not
call him back into the house, confident that he would complete that
chore before going to bed."
Mr Jafferjee said Shaquille's mother looked out of her kitchen
window and saw the three smile at her.
Mr Jafferjee said a witness heard Shaquille scream for his mother
and he went up to him to see what the problem was.
The target of the gang was the 17-year-old friend, who had been
challenged about his brother.
Mr Jafferjee said that, when he confirmed his identity, one of the
gang told him: "Well, you are getting it."
When the friend ran off with his dog, the attackers turned on
Shaquille and the girl, the court heard.
Shaquille's social worker mother, Sandra Maitland, told the judge:
"Why would someone as innocent as Shaquille become a target?
"Why, when he was innocently standing outside his house, his life
was taken away in an instant?"
Outside court, Detective Chief Inspector Carl Mehta said:
"Shaquille was a totally innocent young boy with no connection to
any gang.
"Those who knew him describe him as a kind, caring and considerate
boy and an excellent sportsman who had a great future ahead of
him.
"The defendants are gang members who can never understand the huge
amount of harm and grief they cause to families and communities by
the mindless violence they inflict on others.
"Their motives were indiscriminate as they rode around on their
bicycles that night, looking for someone to beat up."
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