Criminals who are “disgusted” will turn themselves in, a police officer says

Criminals who are “disgusted” will turn themselves in, a police officer says

One of Britain’s top detectives believes that more criminals who were “disgusted” by Olivia Pratt-murder Korbel’s will come forward.

The nine-year-old lost her life on August 22 when a shooter shot and killed her inside her family’s Liverpool house while pursuing another man. A gunshot wound to the chest was determined to be the cause of death during the post-mortem examination.

A balaclava-wearing shooter was seen leaving the area following the deadly shot on CCTV video from the home.

Police have begun a search to find the shooter, who they suspect is being shielded by the omerta, a gang member oath of silence.

The little girl’s murderer will eventually be apprehended, according to Scotland Yard acting commissioner Neil Basu, since gangs will be less likely to shield the perpetrator.

According to Mr. Basu, when it is “in their best interest to give up their rival” or they have been “disgusted” by the crime the sought person did, gangs will decide to cease shielding a criminal.

One of Britain's top cops predicts fellow criminals 'disgusted' by her murder will give up Olivia Pratt-Korbel's killer

One of Britain's top cops predicts fellow criminals 'disgusted' by her murder will give up Olivia Pratt-Korbel's killer

One of Britain’s top cops predicts fellow criminals ‘disgusted’ by her murder will give up Olivia Pratt-Korbel’s killer

The nine-year-old died on August 22 after a gunman chased another man into her family's Liverpool home and fatally injured her. CCTV footage from the residence showed a balaclava-clad gunman fleeing the scene after the fatal shooting

The nine-year-old died on August 22 after a gunman chased another man into her family's Liverpool home and fatally injured her. CCTV footage from the residence showed a balaclava-clad gunman fleeing the scene after the fatal shooting

The nine-year-old died on August 22 after a gunman chased another man into her family’s Liverpool home and fatally injured her. CCTV footage from the residence showed a balaclava-clad gunman fleeing the scene after the fatal shooting

Mr Basu, who previously solved one of Britain’s most notorious child murder cases, believes the omerta code will not protect Olivia’s killer for long.

‘Experience teaches you that loyalties change,’ Mr Basu told The Sunday Times. ‘People might want to protect somebody today, but they don’t necessarily want to protect them tomorrow.

‘Sometimes it’s in their best interest to give up their competition. But sometimes it’s just because they are disgusted by the crime that this person has committed.

‘Omerta is one thing, but omerta is affected by changing loyalties and by disgust. And I think this case has both in spades.’

The investigator also predicts that Olivia’s killer will likely discuss the crime while struggling ‘to live with the consequences’ of taking an innocent child’s life.

‘You might be a hardened criminal who is used to shooting other hardened criminals,’ he said. ‘But you’ve just shot dead a nine-year-old.’

The cop argued killing a child is ‘incredibly hard’ for any person to cop with, unless the killer is a sociopath. He believes at some point the killer is ‘going to have to confess it to somebody else.’

Scotland Yard assistant commissioner Neil Basu (pictured) believes the young girl's killer will soon be caught as gangs become less inclined to protect the killer

Scotland Yard assistant commissioner Neil Basu (pictured) believes the young girl's killer will soon be caught as gangs become less inclined to protect the killer

Scotland Yard assistant commissioner Neil Basu (pictured) believes the young girl’s killer will soon be caught as gangs become less inclined to protect the killer

Olivia was shot in the chest after a balaclava-clad gunman chased his intended target, Joseph Nee, 35, into the innocent girl’s home in the Dovecot area of Liverpool last Monday evening.

Nee was taken to hospital for treatment and later detained for breaching his license conditions. He has prior drugs and burglary convictions.

Mr Basu said that while Olivia was not connected to the killer, detectives will thoroughly investigate Nee to try and identify the shooter.

Mr Basu said his team looked at the connections of other victims when they were tracking down the armed robber who murdered seven-year-old Toni-Ann Byfield (pictured) in 2003

Mr Basu said his team looked at the connections of other victims when they were tracking down the armed robber who murdered seven-year-old Toni-Ann Byfield (pictured) in 2003

Mr Basu said his team looked at the connections of other victims when they were tracking down the armed robber who murdered seven-year-old Toni-Ann Byfield (pictured) in 2003

‘In murder investigations, the one thing that really counts is getting to know your victim as intimately as possible because the killer and the victim will be connected,’ he told the newspaper.

‘In this case, the victim who has died [Olivia] is not connected at all to the killer. But there is another victim [Nee] — and that victim is the one who you need to understand intimately if you are going to catch the killer.

‘Somewhere in that person’s past is the killer — or a connection to the killer. So that’s where you concentrate your efforts and resources.’

Mr Basu said his team took the same approach in 2003 when they were tracking down the armed robber who murdered seven-year-old Toni-Ann Byfield.

Gunman Joel Smith, who had 16 previous convictions, shot the girl in the back in after killing Bertram Byfield, the man believed to be her father, before her eyes.

Mr Basu explained how authorities initially thought Mr Byfield, the girl’s guardian, had been victim of a gang shooter. They believed Toni-Ann was shot after having witnessed his murder.

However, he claims that exploring other theories is actually what led to identifying Smith as Toni-Ann’s killer.

‘The senior investigating officer must always maintain an open mind,’ Mr Basu stated. ‘If we had thought that the only theory was that Bertram Byfield had been murdered by an international Yardie gang, we would never have solved the case.’

Olivia Pratt-Korbel

Olivia Pratt-Korbel

Olivia Pratt-Korbel (pictured) was fatally shot last Monday, August 22, at her home in Kingsheath Avenue, Liverpool

Merseyside Police have released footage of a man who was in the area at the time of the shooting who they wanted to trace (pictured above)

Merseyside Police have released footage of a man who was in the area at the time of the shooting who they wanted to trace (pictured above)

Merseyside Police have released footage of a man who was in the area at the time of the shooting who they wanted to trace (pictured above)

CCTV footage captured the day Olivia died shows the gunman running along Finch Lane away from Kingsheath Avenue and then turning right into Berryford Road where he goes out of sight.

Detective Chief Superintendent Mark Kameen said that the CCTV was being released in the hope that it might jog people’s memories about seeing the gunman in the area at the time of the incident.

He said: ‘This is the man we are hunting for – We need to know where he went that night or did you see him in the area? Remember this was shortly after 10pm on Monday August 22.

‘I know that there will be people shielding and helping this man. If you are found to be doing this then we will do everything legitimately possible to bring you to justice.’

He continued: ‘This man is toxic. He is toxic to our communities and if you are protecting him then he is toxic to you and your families.

‘I want you to place the loyalty that you have to you families before any loyalty you have for this man. I want information as to where he is now.’

The cop warned those who are ‘shielding’ the culprit that officers ‘will do everything legitimately possible to bring you to justice’.

‘It is beyond comprehension how anyone can protect a person who is responsible for killing a nine-year-old little girl,’ he added.

Detective Kameen also told reporters that police could ‘now confirm that there were two guns used during this attack’.

He added: ‘I believe at this time that the gunman brought both of these weapons with him and that they were still with him when he callously ran away from Olivia’s house. I want to know where those guns are now.’

‘You may have been told to hide them or dispose of them – I understand you may be frightened of contacting us, but I want you to do the right thing for Olivia and tell us where they are right now.

‘If you are hiding the guns and you have no intention of telling us, then I place you in the same category as the vile man responsible for the murder. And we will hunt you too.

‘I would repeat the fact that the actions of the person who carried out this cold blooded attack do not command loyalty in any way, shape or form and Olivia’s family need to know that everyone responsible for her murder have been caught and convicted.

‘So I ask you again – where are those guns now?’

The silence that speaks volumes: It’s 12 days since the shooting of Olivia Pratt-Korbel that horrified Britain, and on the streets of Liverpool one man’s name is on everyone’s lips… Yet his fearsome reputation means few dare help police

By Paul Bracchi for The Daily Mail

Birkdale Court is a smart, gated complex on the outskirts of Liverpool. Many of the flats have balconies and French windows overlooking a private courtyard. Audis, Peugeots and Volvos are parked in the bays. Across the road, where detached houses sell for £500,000, a Mercedes soft-top sits on a drive.

This gentrified corner of Huyton has little in common with the rest of Knowsley, one of the most deprived areas of the country, where traditional communities have been eroded by a cancerous criminal underclass. Standing here on a bright, late summer morning, you could hear a pin drop. It’s hard to imagine the pandemonium of a few days ago. On Thursday at about 10.20pm, the peace and quiet was shattered as a police helicopter began hovering overheard.

‘Get back inside!’ residents who ventured out to discover what was happening were told.

Moments later, officers in balaclavas and body armour, carrying Heckler & Koch semi-automatic weapons, jumped out of a small convoy of vans and disappeared through the metal gates of Birkdale Court.

Despite the co-operation of many members of the public who have come forward with information, it is becoming increasingly clear that misguided loyalty or the fear of possible repercussions ¿ that 'snitches get stitches', a saying well-known in Liverpool ¿ is preventing others who could provide a vital breakthrough in the case from contacting police. Picture: Nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel who was fatally shot on August 22

Despite the co-operation of many members of the public who have come forward with information, it is becoming increasingly clear that misguided loyalty or the fear of possible repercussions ¿ that 'snitches get stitches', a saying well-known in Liverpool ¿ is preventing others who could provide a vital breakthrough in the case from contacting police. Picture: Nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel who was fatally shot on August 22

Despite the co-operation of many members of the public who have come forward with information, it is becoming increasingly clear that misguided loyalty or the fear of possible repercussions — that ‘snitches get stitches’, a saying well-known in Liverpool — is preventing others who could provide a vital breakthrough in the case from contacting police. Picture: Nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel who was fatally shot on August 22

Their ‘target’ was a 36-year-old man staying in a rented apartment, who was arrested on suspicion of murder. Could he be the black-clad figure, carrying two guns, who was caught on CCTV running away from the house where nine-year-old Olivia Pratt-Korbel was shot and killed just a few miles away on August 22?

He was released on bail before the chilling CCTV footage was made public, then was immediately recalled to prison for breaching the terms of his licence.

The individual is from a feared local crime family and the breaches in the ‘terms of his licence’ are understood to relate to a lengthy jail sentence he received for his part in a security van hold-up several years ago.

His name is common knowledge in certain parts of the city and was passed to police, along with the names of various others, after Olivia died. He ‘remains under investigation,’ the Merseyside force stressed in a statement.

The detective leading the inquiry admitted his officers face the same culture of omerta (silence when questioned) that hampered the Rhys Jones murder hunt 15 years ago. His comments, which accompanied the recent release of the CCTV clip of the gunman, left no room for doubt

The detective leading the inquiry admitted his officers face the same culture of omerta (silence when questioned) that hampered the Rhys Jones murder hunt 15 years ago. His comments, which accompanied the recent release of the CCTV clip of the gunman, left no room for doubt

The detective leading the inquiry admitted his officers face the same culture of omerta (silence when questioned) that hampered the Rhys Jones murder hunt 15 years ago. His comments, which accompanied the recent release of the CCTV clip of the gunman, left no room for doubt

But despite the co-operation of many members of the public who have come forward with information, it is becoming increasingly clear that misguided loyalty or the fear of possible repercussions — that ‘snitches get stitches’, a saying well-known in Liverpool — is preventing others who could provide a vital breakthrough in the case from contacting police.

The detective leading the inquiry admitted his officers face the same culture of omerta (silence when questioned) that hampered the Rhys Jones murder hunt 15 years ago.

His comments, which accompanied the recent release of the CCTV clip of the gunman, left no room for doubt. ‘Know that there will be people shielding and helping this man,’ said Detective Chief Superintendent Mark Kameen. ‘It is beyond comprehension how anyone can protect a person who is responsible for killing a nine-year-old little girl.’

Both misguided loyalty and the ‘no-grass culture’ were evident when I went to Liverpool this week.

A bullet intended for Joseph Nee killed Olivia when he ran inside her home in an attempt to escape from the pursuing shooter

A bullet intended for Joseph Nee killed Olivia when he ran inside her home in an attempt to escape from the pursuing shooter

A bullet intended for Joseph Nee killed Olivia when he ran inside her home in an attempt to escape from the pursuing shooter

Among bouquets left near the house in Kingsheath Avenue, Dovecot, where Olivia was gunned down was one from the ‘Nee family’ that read: ‘So sorry for your loss of beautiful Olivia. Rest in peace. Thinking of all [the] family.’

It was a bullet intended for Joseph Nee that killed Olivia when he ran inside her home in an attempt to escape from the pursuing shooter.

Not everyone outside this community will be aware that Nee’s brother also lives in Kingsheath Avenue, a stone’s throw from Knowsley, and drove his wounded sibling — a burglar and drug dealer — to hospital after rushing to help him when he was told he had been shot by a rival.

What must it be like for Olivia’s parents, knowing that this man lives a few doors away? When Nee’s mother placed flowers at the scene, a witness described how some women in the street appeared to portray her almost as a victim, by claiming her son would have ‘taken a bullet himself’ and would never have burst into the property if he had realised a little girl was inside.

If Nee has a scintilla of remorse, he could start by telling police who the gunman was, as it is almost impossible to believe he doesn’t know. Then maybe, just maybe, the words on the card might mean something. But he has remained silent.

One of his relatives, on the other hand, made their feelings known in a post on their Facebook account that showed a gun with the caption ‘snitches get stitches’.

As Det Chief Supt Kameen said, the death of a little girl in the place where she should have been safest breaks all boundaries, even for members of the criminal subculture. Understandably, given the febrile atmosphere, not everyone was prepared to speak to us. Of those who did, none wanted to be identified.

‘People are frightened to talk,’ said one woman pushing a pram along the street, with her elderly mother-in-law nodding in agreement.

Hundreds of people attended a vigil for Olivia on Wednesday at St Margaret Mary's RC Church, next to Olivia's primary school, just over a mile away from her home. Pictured: Floral tributes for Olivia on Kingsheath Avenue in Liverpool

Hundreds of people attended a vigil for Olivia on Wednesday at St Margaret Mary's RC Church, next to Olivia's primary school, just over a mile away from her home. Pictured: Floral tributes for Olivia on Kingsheath Avenue in Liverpool

Hundreds of people attended a vigil for Olivia on Wednesday at St Margaret Mary’s RC Church, next to Olivia’s primary school, just over a mile away from her home. Pictured: Floral tributes for Olivia on Kingsheath Avenue in Liverpool

‘They are scared of the repercussions,’ added the pensioner, who has lived in the street all her life. ‘If people are bad enough to shoot a little girl, they are bad enough to shoot anyone.’

Another resident said the name of the man said to be responsible was being discussed almost immediately after the shooting. I asked her how she knew.

‘Everyone knows,’ she replied. ‘Everyone was talking about him. It was out before anyone was even arrested. People are wary about coming forward because we all know the family.’

Answering the door in neighbouring Huyton is a woman who worked in the school where the person at the centre of this speculation and several of his brothers were pupils.

She said they were always trouble and particularly remembers the eldest boy. ‘He used to clip the wings off birds in the playground,’ she recalled. He grew up to be the boss of an organised crime gang, as did a second brother. A third family member carried out a vicious attack on a taxi driver and has a history of domestic violence.

All of them, who live within a few miles of the murder scene, have served long stretches inside.

‘Is there some reticence from some people to come forward? Of course there is,’ Councillor Peter Mitchell, who represents Croxteth ward, told the Liverpool Echo. ‘They are all scared and are recovering from the news of a child being murdered in her own home. We would all be scared. But everybody around here wants these people found.’

Those quick to criticise Merseyside police, who are dealing with at least four ongoing murder investigations, including that of graduate Ashley Dale, 28, shot in her back garden just hours before Olivia was killed, should keep this in mind.

The extent of Liverpool’s dark underbelly was made clear by the crackdown on organised crime in the city following the tragedy.

Merseyside police are dealing with at least four ongoing murder investigations, including that of graduate Ashley Dale (pictured), 28, shot in her back garden just hours before Olivia was killed

Merseyside police are dealing with at least four ongoing murder investigations, including that of graduate Ashley Dale (pictured), 28, shot in her back garden just hours before Olivia was killed

Merseyside police are dealing with at least four ongoing murder investigations, including that of graduate Ashley Dale (pictured), 28, shot in her back garden just hours before Olivia was killed

Police have carried out dozens of raids and made 349 arrests in a city with a population of around 500,000. This figure rises to 906,000 if you count the wider metropolitan area but is still more than nine times smaller than London.

Knowsley, which has the largest number of children aged 16 and 17 not in education, employment or training of all the Merseyside boroughs, is a breeding ground for gangs. On some estates, youth unemployment had reached 80 per cent in 2019 and an estimated 49 per cent of male inhabitants are still out of work.

Dr Robert Hesketh, of Liverpool John Moores University, has spent years researching Merseyside’s criminal landscape.

‘These communities are very insular,’ said Dr Hesketh, who has lived in Knowsley all his life.

‘If someone speaks out, it would not be very hard to find out who that person is. I’ve seen the repercussions of that for families on estates — houses smashed up and ‘grass’ painted all over them.’

The parallels with the shooting of Rhys Jones, caught in the conflict between rival gangs on his way home from football practice on August 22, 2007, are impossible to ignore.

Within days of his death, the name of his killer (Sean Mercer), aged 16 at the time, was sprayed on shop shutters and the sides of buildings around Croxteth.

But it wasn’t until eight months later that Mercer was finally charged after the youth who had hidden the gun, known as Boy X during the trial, agreed to testify.

The antique Smith & Wesson revolver, initially concealed in his dog kennel, was eventually found in the attic of his house.

The man who murdered Olivia is unlikely to have made the same mistake as a teenage delinquent. ‘They are not kids like Sean Mercer,’ said Dr Hesketh. ‘The gun is probably already at the bottom of the Mersey.

So far two arrests have been made into Olivia's death, although the investigation is at an early stage. Picture: Undated family handout

So far two arrests have been made into Olivia's death, although the investigation is at an early stage. Picture: Undated family handout

So far two arrests have been made into Olivia’s death, although the investigation is at an early stage. Picture: Undated family handout

‘Police need someone to provide direct evidence of what they know. They would have to be taken out of the area and given a new identity by the police.’

The chain of events that ended in Olivia’s death, I have been told, began in a pub where fans were watching the game between Manchester United and Liverpool.

Among them was Joseph Nee, according to the source. Word that he was there reached the gunman from someone who was also in the bar. By the time Nee left, according to this account, the gunman was already on his way to ‘meet’ him. He caught up with him in Kingsheath Avenue.

I have been unable to confirm the narrative but it sounds plausible, even if the pub denied Nee was present.

Photos on Facebook show ‘little munchkin’ Olivia in school uniform, or playing with a rabbit, or wearing full Liverpool strip.

Hundreds of people attended a vigil for her on Wednesday at St Margaret Mary’s RC Church, next to Olivia’s primary school, just over a mile away from her home.

So far two arrests have been made, although the investigation is at an early stage.

‘Just because we have seen two arrests doesn’t mean we need information any less,’ said Det Chief Supt Kameen.

‘Tell us what you know, directly or anonymously, and let us judge how important that information is. Something you might think inconsequential could prove absolutely pivotal in our work.’

The reputation of Liverpool, as well as the memory of a little girl’s time in this world, depends on what happens now.


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