Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Teen jailed for life for murdering family, planning school attack

Sentencing Prosper, now 19, Judge Bobbie Cheema-Grubb said, "Your ambition was notoriety. You wanted to be known posthumously as the world's most famous school shooter of the 21st century."

Nicholas Prosper

Nicholas Prosper used a shotgun to kill his mother, Juliana Falcon, 48, sister, Giselle, 13, and brother, Kyle, 16, at their home in Luton in September 2024. (Photo: Bedfordshire Police)

A UK teenager who killed three family members and planned to carry out a school massacre was sentenced to life in prison on Wednesday, with a minimum term of 49 years.

Nicholas Prosper, 18 at the time of the attack, used a shotgun to kill his mother, Juliana Falcon, 48, sister, Giselle, 13, and brother, Kyle, 16, at their home in Luton in September 2024. His brother also suffered more than 100 knife wounds.


Sentencing Prosper, now 19, Judge Bobbie Cheema-Grubb said, "Your ambition was notoriety. You wanted to be known posthumously as the world's most famous school shooter of the 21st century."

Upon his arrest, Prosper told police he had planned a mass shooting at a nearby primary school, targeting young pupils and teachers before killing himself.

He said he intended to surpass the US Sandy Hook and Virginia Tech massacres but was interrupted when his mother woke up before he could carry out the attack.

A struggle ensued, drawing the attention of neighbours, who alerted the police. After killing his mother, he placed a novel titled How to Kill Your Family on her body.

The judge said Prosper "explicitly sought to emulate and outdo Adam Lanza," who killed 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut in 2012.

"You aimed for 34 deaths, one more than the deadliest school shooting of recent times in the United States of America, at Virginia Tech in 2007," she added.

Prosper had drawn diagrams of classrooms at Luton's St Joseph’s Catholic Primary School, writing "kill all" next to them. "You filmed yourself acting out the killing in the kitchen," the judge noted.

'Utterly shocked'

Experts said Prosper showed symptoms of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). He was sentenced to life with a minimum term of 49 years, meaning he will serve at least 48 years and 177 days, considering time already spent in custody.

"You remain highly dangerous, and it may be you will never be released," the judge said. She also noted that Prosper, who refused to leave his cell for the hearing, had shown no remorse.

The court was told that after being asked to leave school in 2023, Prosper had little contact with others and spent most of his time online.

His internet activity revealed a deep interest in "notorious murderers, perpetrators of mass school shootings around the world and rapists," the judge said.

In a statement read in court, Ray Prosper, the perpetrator’s father, said, "The pain of our loss will never be healed. When I heard the horrendous news that day, part of my soul died too. This is a lose-lose situation for us all, and we have lost four family members."

Bedfordshire Police assistant chief constable John Murphy said the force was "utterly shocked and appalled by the sickening actions of this individual."

(With inputs from AFP)

More For You

UK-India FTA hailed as historic milestone in ties

Jonathan Reynolds with Piyush Goyal in London last week

UK-India FTA hailed as historic milestone in ties

BRITAIN and India finalised a long-awaited free trade agreement (FTA) on Tuesday (6), which both countries hailed as a historic milestone in their bilateral relations.

Prime minister Sir Keir Starmer described it as “a landmark deal with India – one of the fastest-growing economies in the world, which will grow the economy and deliver for British people and business.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Jonathan-Reynolds-Getty

Trade secretary Jonathan Reynolds said, 'Both have a huge interest in regional stability, in dialogue, in de-escalation and anything we can do to support that, we are here and willing to do.'

getty images

UK says ready to help India and Pakistan de-escalate tensions

THE UK is ready to support both India and Pakistan in de-escalating tensions following deadly clashes between the two countries, trade secretary Jonathan Reynolds said on Wednesday.

“Our message would be that we are a friend, a partner to both countries. We stand ready to support them. Both have a huge interest in regional stability, in dialogue, in de-escalation and anything we can do to support that, we are here and willing to do,” Reynolds told BBC radio.

Keep ReadingShow less
Operation-Sindoor-Reuters

India said the sites were used to organise attacks against it. (Photo: Reuters)

What is Operation Sindoor, India's strikes in Pakistan?

INDIA launched air and artillery strikes on Pakistani territory and Pakistan-administered Kashmir on Wednesday, in response to an attack on Indian tourists in Kashmir on April 22 that killed 26 people. Pakistan called the strikes a “blatant act of war” as tensions rose between the two nuclear-armed neighbours.

India said its military action, named Operation Sindoor, targeted nine sites used for what it described as “terrorist infrastructure” where attacks were planned.

Keep ReadingShow less
india strikes pakistan

A view shows a damaged building after it was hit by an Indian strike in Muridke near Lahore, Pakistan, May 7, 2025.

Reuters

India launches strikes on Pakistan after Kashmir attack; dozens killed in border clashes

INDIA and Pakistan exchanged heavy fire across their disputed border on Wednesday, after India carried out missile strikes targeting camps it said were linked to an earlier attack in Kashmir. The violence marked the worst confrontation between the two countries in two decades.

At least 36 people were reported killed. Pakistan said 26 civilians died in the Indian strikes and border firing. India said at least eight people were killed in shelling by Pakistan.

Keep ReadingShow less
Starmer and Modi

Starmer and Modi shake hands during a bilateral meeting in the sidelines of the G20 summit at the Museum of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Brazil, on November 18, 2024. (Photo: Getty Images)

Getty Images

UK and India finalise free trade agreement after three years of talks

INDIA and the United Kingdom on Tuesday concluded a long-awaited free trade agreement after three years of negotiations. The deal, finalised in the context of past US tariff actions under president Donald Trump, is the most significant trade pact for the UK since it left the European Union.

The agreement between the world’s fifth and sixth largest economies aims to increase bilateral trade by £25.5 billion by 2040 through improved market access and eased trade restrictions.

Keep ReadingShow less