Manslaughter convictions - over death of 16 year old Mikey Roynon -quashed at Court of Appeal

The teenager was fatally stabbed in the neck during a house party in Bath in June 2023.

Mikey Roynon
Author: Press AssociationPublished 30th Oct 2025
Last updated 30th Oct 2025

Two people jailed for the killing of a young rapper at a 16th birthday party have had their manslaughter convictions quashed at the Court of Appeal, it can now be reported.

Cartel Bushnell and Leo Knight were sentenced to nine years and nine and a half years respectively in youth detention in May 2024 after being convicted of the manslaughter of 16-year-old Mikey Roynon.

Mikey was fatally stabbed in the neck with a large knife during a house party in Bath, Somerset, in June 2023.

Fellow teenager Shane Cunningham was convicted of murder and detained for life with a minimum term of 16 years.

Cunningham, Bushnell and Knight, who were all 16 at the time of their convictions, sought to challenge their convictions at the Court of Appeal in May this year.

In a ruling that month, the Lady Chief Justice Baroness Carr, Mr Justice Bryan and Mr Justice Cavanagh quashed Bushnell and Knight's convictions, while dismissing Cunningham's appeal bid.

The ruling could not be reported because of a retrial scheduled to begin in November, but on Thursday, the three judges said the prosecution had "offered no evidence" in either case, meaning reporting restrictions could be lifted.

In their judgment, Baroness Carr said there had been an "accidental, but critical, error" in directions given to the jury around how to reach their verdict, making the convictions "unsafe".

Mikey was among dozens who attended the house party in Eastfield Avenue, Weston in 2023.

A Bristol Crown Court trial heard he was stabbed in the garden and collapsed on the driveway, with two weapons later recovered by police.

The first knife, which was found in a drain, was nearly 10in (25cm) long, and scientists found Mikey's blood on the blade.

The second knife, which was recovered from underneath a hedge, was 7in (18cm) long and had traces of Mikey's airborne blood on the blade - meaning it was close to the victim when he was stabbed.

During the trial, Cunningham, of Devizes, Wiltshire, claimed he was acting in self-defence when he stabbed Mikey after claiming his victim had swung a knife towards his friends in the garden.

Mr Justice Saini ruled that Cunningham, Bushnell and Knight could be identified at their sentencing hearing despite their ages, after an application by the PA news agency.

Passing sentence, the judge said Mikey's "future looked promising" and that his family had suffered a "loss which is unimaginable".

He said Bristol and the surrounding areas "are in the middle of a plague of knife crime".

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