Wednesday 4 April 2018

Girl, 17, who was killed in drive-by 'gang revenge' shooting had been visiting her boyfriend near house where police have pulled bullet from window frame with a magnet

Murder of 17-year-old youth worker Tanesha Melbourne in Tottenham 'was revenge for a fight over Easter'  
  • Footage shared on Snapchat of three men attacking a youth in a London diner sparked the killing of Tanesha
  • Tanesha became the 48th person to be murdered in London this year, caught up in a terrifying postcode war
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  • Forensic officers have retrieved a bullet which was fired at a 17-year-old girl who was killed in a drive-by shooting as she visited her boyfriend.
    Tanesha Melbourne was outside the home of her boyfriend’s mother when she was shot on Monday evening.
    The area of Tottenham where the killing took place has a history of violence between local youths and rivals from nearby Wood Green.
    Unconfirmed reports suggested Tanesha May have been caught in the crossfire between two gangs.
    It emerged today that the teenager was studying child care at college and hoped to one day become a social worker.
    A family friend told MailOnline: ‘Tanesha lived with her mum, nan and sisters in South Tottenham, the reason she was by Northumberland Park was because she was seeing her boyfriend.
    ‘She was outside his mother’s house when she was shot.
    ‘A friend of hers cradled her while another rang Tanesha’s mother who drove round immediately.
    ‘By the time she arrived, I think Tanesha had already gone.
    ‘There has been a video circulating on social media showing a fight but whether or not her boyfriend was involved, I cannot say.
    ‘Tanesha was a lovely girl, really caring with a big heart.
    ‘She was studying child care at The College of Haringey, Enfield and North East London (CHENEL) and wanted to become a social worker.
    ‘She would go round friends homes but wasn’t usually one of these kids who hangs around on street corners. She was a sensible girl who had a good head on her shoulders. She wouldn’t have been involved in anything stupid.’
    It has also been revealed that a fight between youths in a milkshake bar was the catalyst for the gunman opening fire 24 hours later, and shooting Tanesha in a botched revenge hit. 
    Police probing Tanesha's murder swooped on the Tinseltown diner in Farringdon, London, and seized CCTV of the fight which shows three men punching and kicking a young black male in a stairwell as a woman lies on top of the victim trying to protect him. 
    While Tanesha is not thought to be in the clip, youngsters claim it was linked to simmering gang violence in the Wood Green area of north London.  
    Tanesha became the 48th person to be murdered in London this year, after getting caught up in a terrifying postcode war ravaging the streets of the capital.
    Tanesha's mother Sharon Melbourne arrived at the scene before paramedics and cradled her daughter in her arms. 
    Also on Monday night, a 16-year-old named locally as Amaan Shakoor, became the 49th victim of the continuing bloodshed after he was shot in the face in Walthamstow by 'rival drug dealers', according to a friend. 

    Tanesha Melbourne, 17, was shot in Tottenham on Monday
    Tanesha Melbourne, 17, was shot in Tottenham on Monday
    Forensics use a magnet to recover a bullet from the window frame of a property on Chalgrove Road in Tottenham
    Tanesha Melbourne was outside the home of her boyfriend’s mother when she was shot on Monday evening.

The area of Tottenham where the killing took place has a history of violence between local youths and rivals from nearby Wood GreenTanesha Melbourne, 17, was shot in Tottenham on Monday
    Tanesha Melbourne was outside the home of her boyfriend’s mother when she was shot on Monday evening. The area of Tottenham where the killing took place has a history of violence between local youths and rivals from nearby Wood Green 
    The 17-year-old (pictured in the grey) was seen on camera walking with her friends before she was shot dead 
    The 17-year-old (pictured in the grey) was seen on camera walking with her friends before she was shot dead 
    A woman (pictured in grey trousers) lay on top of the victim in the Tinseltown fight to protect himThe victim was able to get to his feet and flee
    A woman (pictured left in grey trousers) lay on top of the victim in the Tinseltown fight to protect him, before he was able to get to his feet and flee (pictured right)
    A police forensic officer retrieves the bullet from the window frame of the house outside which Tanesha was shot
    A police forensic officer retrieves the bullet from the window frame of the house outside which Tanesha was shot
    MP David Lammy has claimed the surge in violent crime in the capital is being fuelled by 'vast' quantities of cocaine being fought over by drug barons
    MP David Lammy has claimed the surge in violent crime in the capital is being fuelled by 'vast' quantities of cocaine being fought over by drug barons
    The developments came hours after CCTV footage emerged showing Tanesha walking with friends shortly before she was shot in the chest in a drive-by attack at 9.35pm on Monday.
    The teenager, who had just become a mentor at her local youth club, died in the street as she was cradled by her mother who arrived before paramedics.
    Footage from a local shop shows her walking with her friends around 60 minutes before she was shot dead. 
    According to terrified residents, the innocent teenager was caught in the crossfire of a deadly postcode war.
    One friend said: 'Tanesha was just an innocent child caught up in this stupid postcode war.'
    Another friend who desperately tried to save her added: 'She did not deserve that and her mum did not deserve to watch her daughter die.' 
    The teenager's aunt said how she told police about escalating gang problems three months ago and warned them: 'If anything happens to a member of my family, I'll become a problem.'
    Rita How, 56, made the prophetic warning at a neighbourhood watch meeting at Tottenham College earlier this year.
    She told police officers present of the worsening drugs and gangs problem in the area which had led to a rise in stabbings and shootings.
    On the same night Tanesha  was shot, a 16-year-old, named locally as Amaan Shakoor, was shot in the face in Walthamstow by 'rival drug dealers'. He died later in hospitalTanesha Melbourne died after she was shot in the street on Monday evening

    On the same night Tanesha (right) was shot, a 16-year-old, named locally as Amaan Shakoor (left), was shot in the face in Walthamstow by 'rival drug dealers'. He died later in hospital


    The bullet which killed the 17-year-old youth worker will now be analysed by expert forensic teams

    The bullet which killed the 17-year-old youth worker will now be analysed by expert forensic teams
    Tanesha's godmother cried as she lay flowers at the crime scene before calling on Theresa May to put more funds in policing and reintroduce the use of stop and search
    Tanesha's godmother cried as she lay flowers at the crime scene before calling on Theresa May to put more funds in policing and reintroduce the use of stop and search

    Floral tributes at the scene where Amaan Shakoor was murdered in Walthamstow

    Floral tributes at the scene where Amaan Shakoor was murdered in Walthamstow
    Floral tributes have been left for Tanesha Melbourne-Blake on Chalgrove Road in Tottenham
    Floral tributes have been left for Tanesha Melbourne-Blake on Chalgrove Road in Tottenham

    Police continue to investigate the scene in Tottenham, amid reports at least three shots were fired in the attack 
    Police continue to investigate the scene in Tottenham, amid reports at least three shots were fired in the attack 
    In a separate incident, a 16-year-old boy was shot in the face less than two miles away in Walthamstow, east London. 
    He died at 5.45pm last night and became the 49th person to be killed in the capital. A 15-year-old boy was also stabbed in that incident.
    Ms How, a school cook, also revealed the fears she had for her family living in the area.
    She said: 'I met with the police three months ago at the last neighbourhood watch meeting and told them what was going on with the gangs and the violence.
    'I said to them 'if anything happens to a member of my family then I'll become a problem'.
    'Well my niece is gone now and they are not going to hear the end of me. Someone's got to sort out the mess here, it's getting out of hand.
    'Tanesha was a lovely girl, she wasn't involved in gangs. She was innocent in all this.'
    Ms How, who also works in security at nearby Tottenham Hotspur football club, said her niece had worked at the old White Hart Lane ground.
    She added: 'She worked in the catering department on a few occasions. She had a bright future, she was a good girl who didn't deserve this.'
    Tanesha's godmother cried as she lay flowers at the crime scene before calling on Theresa May to put more funds in policing and reintroduce the use of stop and search.
    Lisa Robinson, from Stratford, east London, said: 'I've known her all her life. Tanesha could put a smile on your face and she had a big heard, she was caring, active and full of life and what's happened here is a tragedy to say the least.
    'She is a good girl, bubbly, just a happy, beautiful young lady. Tanesha's has gone too soon and to be honest they need to put the police back on the street to stop things like happening.' 
    The controversial police policy to use a high amount stop and searches to tackle gun and knife crime in the capital has been criticised for alienating black young men.
    But Ms Robinson said: 'Everyone might not be keen about Stop and Search but if it's a measure that can help reduce crime or save a life then until they can put other measures in then it's what they should do.' 
    The streets of London are now more deadly than New York, with the capital recording a higher murder rate for the first time in modern history in February. 
    So far this year, the Metropolitan Police has launched 50 murder investigations - 12 in January, 15 in February, 19 in March and now four in April.
    MP David Lammy has claimed the surge in violent crime in the capital is being fuelled by 'vast' quantities of cocaine being fought over by drug barons. 
    Floral tributes were left on Chalgrove Road, Tottenham, north London, today 
    Floral tributes were left on Chalgrove Road, Tottenham, north London, today 
    Friends and family arrived to pay respects at the scene of the killing, London's 48th this year

    Friends and family arrived to pay respects at the scene of the killing, London's 48th this year
    Friends and family arrived at the scene in Tottenham todayMourners hugged each other at the scene where Tanesha was gunned down in north London
    Mourners hugged each other at the scene where Tanesha was gunned down in north London
    Tottenham MP Mr Lammy told the Evening Standard: 'Most of these killings are being fuelled by a huge spike in the movement of drugs, particularly cocaine.
    'As we see in parts of downtown America, young men - particularly in communities like mine - become foot soldiers for gangsters and McMafia bosses much further up the tree.'
    Tanesha was a regular at the Bruce Grove Youth Centre in Tottenham where she taught youngsters how to be good role models. 
    A friend told MailOnline: 'Tanesha was very popular at the club, she'd been going for the last four years. 
    'One of her roles was to teach the younger kids how to be good role models and how to lead positive lives. 
    'She got on with everyone and in turn everybody liked her, that's why she became a volunteer.  
    'We are devastated that Tanesha has been taken from us like this.'
    Grandmother Kathleen Kingdom said: 'She was a family-orientated girl who would never get caught up in trouble. 
    'She was in the wrong place at the wrong time. She was a good girl and didn't deserve this.'
    Associate headteacher Goldwater Ojokor from Gladesmore Community school, which Tanesha left last year, also paid tribute.

    Deadly crime epidemic grips the Capital 

    So far already this year, the Metropolitan Police has launched 50 murder investigations - 12 in January, 15 in February, 19 in March and now four in April.
    This is the equivalent of three a week - up from two a week last year. 
    But Official figures show that 2017 was the worst year for knife deaths among young people since at least 2002. 
    Forty-six people aged 25 or under were stabbed to death in London, up by 21 compared with the previous year, according to police figures.  
    Figures published in January showed police recorded 37,443 offences involving a knife or sharp instrument in the year ending September 2017 - the highest tally since comparable records started in the 12 months to March 2011.
    Gun-related crime also went up by a fifth year-on-year, to 6,694 recorded offences. 

    Goldwater Ojokor said: 'She was a lovely, joyful, girl. She was bright and bubbly, she was only a baby really.
    'She always had a smile on her face. You could not be annoyed with her, she just had this wonderful smile and was never in any bad trouble. 
    'She was always so positive to be around, you couldn't not warm to her. She had a soft warm nature and she was funny.'
    A young mother, who asked not to be named, said: 'There's a lot of shootings and stabbings that go on. It's a dangerous area.
    'There is a postcode war, apparently, between Tottenham and Wood Green and some of these incidents are tit-for-tat.'  
    School friend Candice Hassan, 17, said she found out about the murder on Snapchat just half an hour after the shooting.
    'It was shocking. Everyone's upset obviously - one minute I see her and the next minute I don't,' she said.
    'One hour before her death, I saw her on Snapchat - one hour before she got shot. Everyone knows Tanesha, she's just a humble girl.
    'It was just the wrong place at the wrong time. She didn't deserve any of that. I have heard it was a drive-by shooting - obviously gang-related - Wood Green and Tottenham.'  
    The murder scene is less than 100 metres away from another shooting four months ago, believed to have involved a teenage boy shooting at members of another gang who had earlier beaten him up.
    Another friend said: 'Tanesha was a very known, very lovable little girl in the community, she was not involved in any sort of problems with anyone.' 
    The past two months of bloodshed in London have overtaken New York's murder rate, official police figures show, as Scotland Yard battles a 38 per cent surge in killings since 2014, with 50 murders recorded already this year.
    Fifteen people were killed in London in February, compared to 14 in New York. 
    London also has almost three times the number of reported rapes, but until February this year the murder rate in New York remained higher.     
    North London rapper Wretch 32 - real name Jermaine Scott Sinclair - who was raised in Tottenham, said he was 'lost for words' following the shooting.
    He tweeted: 'Wish I knew what to say about what's happening in my ends. North London were better than this man smh R.I.P to the young angel who lost her life last night.
    'Love & prayers to the family. I'm honestly lost for words.'
    TV and radio presenter Snoochie Shy said that communities need to 'actually start mentoring young people'.   
    A friend of Tanesha's brother added: 'This is the third shooting in the last few months. One happened right outside my house.
    'Tanesha was a nice girl, they were a good family.'
    Sharon Lindsay, 54, added: 'The violence around here is getting worse and the shootings and stabbings need to stop.
    'It's got to the point where people are too scared to go out, particularly at night, because they don't know what's going to happen.
    'When you do go out you're always looking over your shoulder, making sure you're aware of what's going on.
    'Most of the people around here are lovely, it's not nice for them to live like this.'  

    MET POLICE CHIEF SLAMS ONLINE ABUSE

    In recent days, Scotland Yard commissioner Cressida Dick has said gangs were using online platforms to glorify street violence and show off 'with weapons'.
    Miss Dick also raised concerns about the violent undercurrent in some music, especially grime.
    She warned that it could lead vulnerable youngsters to think it was 'an admirable thing to be talking about violence and people perpetrating it'. 
    Miss Dick, who has been in the role for 12 months, said she was 'no luddite' and that the internet was 'wonderfully positive in almost every way'.
    But she added that 'incredibly abusive' language online can 'rev people up'. 
    She told The Times: 'There's definitely something about the impact of social media … people being able to go from slightly angry with each other to 'fight' very quickly … gangs can posture on social media and talk about who they are and what they've achieved.
    'It may not be unlawful but it is glamorising it for people, showing off with weapons.'
    She said that insults or threats online 'makes [violence] faster, it makes it harder for people to cool down. I'm sure it does rev people up'.'
    Police are also combing the scene in Walthamstow for clues after two teenagers were taken to hospital 
    Police are also combing the scene in Walthamstow for clues after two teenagers were taken to hospital 
    The scene where a 16-year-old boy was shot on Monday evening in Walthamstow, east London

    The scene where a 16-year-old boy was shot on Monday evening in Walthamstow, east London
    The scene where a 16-year-old boy was shot on Monday evening in Walthamstow, east London
    Detective Chief Superintendent Richard Wood, head of Scotland Yard's murder squad, said: 'It was a terrible attack in which this young lady has lost her life.
    'I'd like to appeal to anybody who was in the vicinity to contact the incident room or Crimestoppers who can assist the investigation.
    'At this stage we're keeping a completely open mind, it's too early to say what the motive is or indeed if it's just a case of wrong place, wrong time.
    'We do know that a vehicle drove past a group of young people, shots were fired from the vehicle and sadly the young lady lost her life.' 
    As paramedics tried to resuscitate Tanesha in Tottenham, officers were called to the second incident. 
    Damian Slay, 17, from east London, said rival drug dealers shot the youngster, named locally as Amaan Shakoor, after warning him not to sell cocaine in St James area of the borough earlier in the day.
    Speaking at the crime scene, Damian said he was standing round a corner from where the victims were attacked.
    He said: 'They must have run up to them, stabbed one in the arm and faced the other one and just shot him in the face and run off.
    'I wasn't startled because I've seen all of this before, I was just helping the other guy, the one who got stabbed because there was nothing I could do for the one who got shot.
    'The stabbing victim suffered minor injuries, he got stabbed in the arm a couple of times, twice, but he was alright, it was more shock because he saw his friend get shot in the face.
    'It's like turf wars. 
    'The youngsters that are here decide to sell cocaine and crack but there's a lot of people that do the same thing and certain areas are controlled by certain groups and if you sell in an area that you shouldn't have been the people get upset.
    'I don't think any of it should have happened but it was drug related that's all I can say and it was definitely a set up.  
    'They are just little hoodrats, it's harsh but it is what it is.'
    How violent crime rose after Theresa May watered down stop and search powers
    Violent crime has spiked after Theresa May ushered in reforms watering down on the use of stop and search.
    There were 634,625 violent crimes recorded in England and Wales in the year before April 2014, when the changes were brought in.
    But this has doubled in three years surging to 1.3million in the year ending in June 2017.
    As Home Secretary Mrs May introduced changes in 2014 which meant police are only allowed to stop people when there is 'reasonable grounds for suspicion'.
    And it warned that where officers misuse the powers they would face disciplinary action.
    She introduced the measures amid widespread anger to the power, particularly among the black and ethnic minority population, who said it was used disproportionately against them.
    In the years following the reforms stop and search fell to their lowest level since the power was introduced 17 years ago.
    But violent crime has risen - sparking calls for the power to be taken up again.
    Crime in England and Wales soared by 13 per cent in 2017 with an even bigger rise in violent offences including knife crime and sexual offences. 
    The number of violent crimes rose from 1,033,719 cases the previous year to 1,229,260 cases this year. 
    And in 2018 the murder rate in London was higher than New York's for the first time since records began.

    As paramedics tried to resuscitate the teenager in Tottenham, officers were called to the second incident in east London
    A Met statement said: 'The 15-year-old was treated for stab injuries which are no longer life changing. He has now been released from hospital.
    'The 16-year-old boy died in hospital at 5.45pm on Tuesday, 3 April. His next of kin were present at hospital when he passed away.
    'The Homicide and Major Crime Command are now investigating alongside colleagues from the Trident and Area Crime Command. No arrests have been made.'
    Acting detective chief inspector Glenn Butler, from the Trident and Area Crime Command, said: 'I fully appreciate the alarm, shock and revulsion caused by this murder and other fatal shootings we have seen across London over the last few months.
    'We are doing everything we can to identify the culprits and bring them to justice. We can't do this alone.
    'We need those within the community who have information about those involved to search their own conscience and call us with information.'
    Sadly, the violence does not appear to be showing any signs of slowing down in April. 
    On April 1, a photograph exclusively obtained by the Mail showed the chilling moment a hooded youth clutching an 8in knife fled after a boy of 16 was stabbed in a takeaway. 
    A 16-year-old, named locally as Oman Shakore, is fighting for his life after he was shot in the face in Walthamstow by 'rival drug dealers', a friend claims 

    A 16-year-old, named locally as Oman Shakore, is fighting for his life after he was shot in the face in Walthamstow by 'rival drug dealers', a friend claims 
    The brutal attack lasted just 30 seconds when seven masked thugs went into the fast-food shop to stab the teenager at the counter before sprinting away.
    The boy was left with blood pouring from his chest as Easter Sunday shoppers ran to help.
    As the alleged attacker ran alongside the busy A12 road in Bow, East London, the large knife was clearly visible in CCTV from a nearby shop.
    This is the chilling moment a hooded youth clutching an 8in knife fled after a boy of 16 was stabbed in a takeaway in Bow, London
    This is the chilling moment a hooded youth clutching an 8in knife fled after a boy of 16 was stabbed in a takeaway in Bow, London
    Detectives have arrested four men in connection with the stabbing but three others, including the suspected knifeman, remained at large last night. Police believe the attack was gang-related.
    Shortly before the daylight attack a mother with two young children and a baby in a pram had been buying food in the shop.
    A witness said: 'I saw seven teenagers wearing hoods running away very fast. I went to the shop and I saw the boy being helped by someone on a chair. He was holding his chest near his heart.
    'The police came first and the ambulance came just after.'
    The boy, who was in a critical but stable condition in an East London hospital last night, was chatting with friends outside the chicken shop just after 6pm. 
    Seconds later, the masked group of youths could be seen on the CCTV walking purposefully towards their target.
    Terrified residents are now putting pressure on the Mayor of London Sadiq Khan to take action.
    On Sunday the Mayor blamed Tory cuts on affecting front line policing. He tweeted: ''It's time for the Government to stop misleading the public and properly fund our police.' 
    But social media users, including Pier Morgan, have called on him to do more. 
    The Good Morning Britain host tweeted: 'This is happening on YOUR watch, Mr Mayor @SadiqKhan - what are you going to do about it?'
    A spokesman for the Mayor said today: 'The Mayor is deeply concerned by violent crime in the capital - every life lost to violent crime is a tragedy.
    'Our city remains one of the safest in the world ... but Sadiq wants it to be even safer and is working hard to bring an end to this violent scourge.'
    Prime Minister Theresa May's spokesman said: 'There can be no place in our society for violent crime. The government is determined to do everything it can to break the cycle.'
    Croydon Central MP Sarah Jones, who chairs the all-party parliamentary group on knife crime, told the BBC's Today programme that London could learn from New York in how to reduce violent crime. 


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