Gang leader guilty of teenager's 'weapon dog murder'
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A 22-year-old man who repeatedly stabbed a teenage boy was
facing life in jail today after the first case in which new dog DNA
technology was used in a murder prosecution.
Seyi Ogunyemi (pictured), 16, was stabbed to death in a "vicious"
attack by a gang of youths said to have acted like a "pack of wild
animals" as they set upon him and his friends.
The murder by Chrisdian Johnson, 22, was described in court as
unique because dangerous dogs were used as weapons to savage their
victims before they were knifed.
One of the animals, called Tyson, brought down and mauled
slightly-built Seyi as he tried to escape from his pursuers over a
fence.
The boy stood no chance once he was in the dog's ferocious grip and
was then stabbed six times by its owner Johnson.
Johnson was arrested as he fled from the scene of the murder last
April, bare-chested and covered in blood.
New technology, used for the first time, proved by a billion-to-one
probability that some of the blood came from his dog Tyson, which
had been knifed during the melee. The rest was shown to come from
the teenage murder victim.
Police hailed the dog DNA technique, which had just been developed
at the time of the murder, as a "hugely powerful investigative
tool".
Johnson, of Wyvil Road, south Lambeth, south London, who had been
allowed to keep the dangerous dog only when a court imposed strict
conditions on his ownership in late 2007, was today found guilty of
murder.
He was also convicted of the attempted murder of the victim's
17-year-old friend Hurui Hiyabu, said to have been lucky to survive
after he was knifed nine times.
Johnson's brother Shane Johnson, 20, of the same address, was
cleared of both charges.
A third defendant, 18-year-old Darcy Menezes, of Studley Road,
Clapham, south London, was cleared earlier during the trial.
The court heard that his dog, a female adult brindle Staffordshire
terrier called Mia, also took part in the attack, but a judge ruled
there was insufficient evidence to show Menezes was involved.
A decision on whether to destroy the dogs has not yet been
made.
The convictions come shortly after Home Secretary Alan Johnson
announced new measures designed to tackle the problem of dogs being
used as weapons.
Johnson was remanded in custody and will be sentenced
tomorrow.
Seyi was killed when he and his friend were set upon by a large
group of youths aged 15 to 20 and two dogs in Larkhall Park, south
London, the court heard.
Tyson, an adult male Staffordshire bull terrier-bull mastiff cross
was used to bring him to the ground before he was knifed.
Doctors performed emergency surgery at the scene to try to save
Seyi's life but he died from a wound to his aorta.
Brian Altman QC, prosecuting, told jurors: "What was so unusual if
not unique about this case is that in the initial stages of the
attack both these dogs were deployed as weapons.
"At the time of the attack both dogs were unleashed, and chased and
then brought down and savaged their victims, giving their human
masters an advantage, enabling them then to access their victims in
order to stab them with knives."
One witness said the behaviour of the youths in the attack was
"vicious" and "mirroring the behaviour of a pack of wild animals",
Mr Altman told jurors.
Another described how he had heard screaming and someone shouting
"get 'em, get 'em" before seeing a group of ten to 15 youths
wearing bandanas round their faces and hoods up.
New DNA analysis was used to link Tyson's blood to the murder and
saliva found on a piece of trouser leg torn from one of Seyi's
friends matched Mia's profile.
The same technique also proved that trails of blood at the scene
and blood found on Hurui Hiyabu, came from Tyson.
Detective Inspector Mick Norman said: "It's been a hugely powerful
investigative tool for us."
Police said Chrisdian Johnson had previously been given a specific
exemption by a court to keep Tyson despite being a dangerous dog by
breed.
He agreed to have him chipped, tattooed and insured but further
conditions meant the animal should have been kept on a lead and
muzzled at all times in public.
After he was stabbed in the attack on Seyi, Tyson was taken by taxi
to a Blue Cross animal hospital where he was found by police.
Chrisdian Johnson's other dog, Chrome, of the same breed, was at
home on the night.
Mr Altman told the court that others clearly took part in the
apparently gang-related attack on a rival group but have not been
identified or caught "despite a thorough police
investigation".
The knife used to kill Seyi has not been recovered.
Mr Norman said the case was "unique" because of the way dogs had
been used as weapons in a murder.
He added: "When you mix a dog and then knives you have got a really
lethal combination as in this case."
Police said Mia, the other dog alleged to have been at the scene of
the murder, had been involved in an attack on an 11-year-old boy in
June 2008, when his owner accidentally lost control of him.
The victim was taken to hospital suffering from dog bites and the
incident was reported to police but no further action was
taken.
Officers at the Met's dangerous dogs unit have seized more than
1,000 in the past year and say the numbers in London are soaring,
with the problem fuelled by gang culture and insecurity.
Following the verdicts, Mr Norman said that Seyi "didn't stand a
chance" during the attack.
He said police would be applying for a destruction order for
Johnson's dog Tyson but was unable to comment on the future of the
other dog, Mia.
Speaking outside court, the detective said: "I would like to say on
behalf of the family that even though this verdict won't bring
their son Seyi back, I feel that it will give them some sense that
a justice verdict was returned.
"This was an investigation which was difficult and also complicated
to some degree by the fact that dogs were used as weapons.
"Seyi Ogunyemi was a young man of slight stature, suffering from
Crohn's disease.
"He was attacked by a dog released by Chrisdian Johnson and taken
to the ground. While on the ground, he was stabbed where he lay. He
didn't stand a chance.
"However, taking advantage of new scientific techniques, we were
able to link the dog used in the attack to the scene, to the
victim, and to Chrisdian Johnson.
"The message I'd like to reinforce is that if a dog is used as a
weapon, you will be caught, you will be prosecuted, and you will be
convicted."
He added: "At the present time, the dogs remain with the police. We
will be applying for a destruction order in relation to the dog
belonging to Chrisdian Johnson."
Mr Norman added: "This horrific attack was committed on a very
slight teenage boy who stood no chance of defending himself.
"The fact that Chrisdian Johnson also ordered dogs to take part in
the attack illustrates his sickening attitude to violence.
"The advances in dog DNA and forensic work now means that anyone
who owns a dog and uses it to attack people can be identified and
prosecuted."
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