Plea from mum of murdered Leeds teenager 12 years on
Twelve years on from the murder of a Leeds teenager, his mum is making a fresh appeal for information.
Twelve years on from the murder of a Leeds teenager, his mum is making a fresh appeal for information.
Tyrone Clarke was 16 years old when he was stabbed to death in Brett Gardens, Beeston, on Thursday, April 22, 2004. He had been chased by a group of more than 20 youths who surrounded him and attacked him with makeshift weapons, including metal poles, planks of wood and CS spray.
Three men and a youth were convicted of his murder in 2005 and received life sentences with minimum terms ranging from nine to 12 years. A fifth suspect, Qasim Majid, left the UK for Pakistan within days of the murder and remains wanted by police.
Tyrone’s mum Lorraine Fraser says she feels as numb today as she did on the day when it happened:
“My personal life everything changed, my whole family we all changed. It’s been very hard on my daughter. She was 4 years old and witnessed her brother out in the street dying. She’s now 16 and that is planted in her, that is her last memory. She’s had nightmares, anger issues, it has affected the whole of my family.”
Detective Superintendent Nick Wallen, of West Yorkshire Police Homicide and Major Enquiry Team, said:
“Although it is now 12 years since Tyrone was brutally attacked and murdered, the pain his mother Lorraine Fraser continues to feel remains as raw as it did on the day she saw him lying fatally wounded in the street.
“Tyrone would be 28 years old now and Lorraine and her daughter have had to go through the last 12 years without their son and brother, only able to imagine how their lives together would have been if he were still here.
“Although four people were brought to justice for killing Tyrone and another man remains a wanted suspect, we know there was a large group of people involved in the attack.
“This remains very much an active investigation and, despite the passage of time, we are still keen to hear from anyone who witnessed the events of Tyrone’s murder or who has any information that could assist us.
“The people involved were young men in their teens and early twenties at the time and it may be that loyalties have changed over the years and people may now feel freer to come forward with information.
“Tyrone’s family understandably feel that they have been given a life sentence from which there is no release. Clearly they are entitled to as full a sense of justice as is possible and we remain determined to do all we can to give them that.
“I would like to take the opportunity of this anniversary of Tyrone’s murder to ask anyone who witnessed the events of that day to search their conscience and tell us what they know.”