Daily Mail

Are you mad, boy’s father asked him. Yes I am, he smiled. Have I killed someone?

- By Sam Greenhill

JONTY Bravery went to London that day to kill – he didn’t care who. After the full horrific sequence of events was made public for the first time at the Old Bailey yesterday, SAM GREENHILL reconstruc­ts a day of chilling, senseless violence.

WHEN the French boy was hurled off the Tate Modern, his shell- shocked father confronted Jonty Bravery and stuttered: ‘Are you mad?’

‘Yes, I am mad,’ the teenager calmly replied. As the little boy lay twisted and broken after his 100ft fall, his mother became hysterical with the stocky teenager, who just looked at her with ‘a big smile on his face’.

Moments earlier, the French couple’s sixyear-old son had been ‘skipping’ happily a yard or two in front of them as they enjoyed the views from the art gallery’s viewing tower. Bravery suddenly scooped him up, carried him to the balcony and threw him over the edge, then coolly asked: ‘Have I killed someone? Am I a murderer?’

It could have been any family. Bravery went to London that day to kill.

First, he hunted for a victim at The Shard, the tallest structure in Britain, but when he found the entry ticket was too expensive he asked for directions to the ‘next highest building’.

A passer-by pointed him to the Tate Modern, where 17-year-old Bravery began prowling round after children at the top of the gallery’s viewing tower. He began stalking two boys aged eight and 11, to the alarm of their mothers, before alighting on the French boy, who was on day four of his family summer holiday to London.

The full horrific sequence of events was made public for the first time yesterday at the Old Bailey. Bravery – who has autism and a personalit­y disorder – had plotted his murderous plan far in advance.

THE MURDEROUS PLOT

On the morning of Sunday August 4, last year, Bravery set off alone from his flat in Northolt, North-West London, and bought an Oyster travel card at 12.15pm to take the train to London Bridge, arriving at 1.15pm. He strolled to The Shard and asked a ticket seller the price of going up.

He baulked at the £34 cost and walked off.

Prosecutor Deanna Heer said he asked a member of the public ‘where the next highest building was’. At the Tate Modern’s tenstorey viewing platform – which is free – CCTV images showed Bravery mingling with sightseers at 2.15pm.

Miss Heer said: ‘Some noticed [him] because he was behaving in an unusual way, walking close to the railings around the balcony, looking over the railings, so he was aware of the size of the drop at that point.’

Bravery remarked to a visitor called Carol Hunter that ‘it was a long way down and he had vertigo and he wouldn’t want to fall off’, said the prosecutor. Miss Hunter thought it was an odd comment and walked away.

Then he turned his attention to two women, Rose Harwood and Nancy Barnfield, and their sons aged 11 and eight. Bravery leant on the balcony and leered at them as they took photos of the views.

‘According to them, he looked relaxed. He smiled at them, but they soon noticed he was following them and staring at their children. They felt uneasy, until he moved away,’ Miss Heer told the court.

STALKING HIS PREY

By now it was 2.32pm, and the six-year-old French boy and his family had just arrived on the viewing deck, having enjoyed a picnic lunch by the river on the South Bank. They were on a week- long holiday and had planned a full day enjoying London’s sights. CCTV showed

Bravery switching his attention away from Miss Barnfield’s group. The prosecutor said: ‘As they turned away from the railings and walked along the balcony, [the boy] wearing a blue tshirt and shorts skipped a little way ahead.

‘Ahead of him and facing him was the defendant, who scooped him up and – without any hesitation – carried him straight to the railings and threw him over.’ The child plunged head-first down the tower’s sloping side – which slightly slowed his fall – and landed in a crumpled heap on the fifth-floor roof of the main part of the gallery. The court heard he had smashed his head, was bleeding heavily and had broken his arms, legs, and hips, and his right ankle was ‘almost detached’.

A FAMILY’S HORROR

There are harrowing CCTV images – which were not shown in court – of the boy’s parents’ utter ‘disbelief and rising panic at what they had seen’, said Miss Heer. Bravery ‘could be seen to be smiling, he had his arms raised’, and ‘at one point he appeared to shrug and laugh’.

The father thought it was somehow just a joke, said Miss Heer, ‘but when he saw his son’s distorted body lying below, he ask [Bravery] if he was mad. He replied: “Yes, I am mad”.’

The prosecutor said the distraught father then ‘lashed out’ at Bravery, before the mother became ‘ hysterical’, adding: ‘She said he had a big smile on his face as he spoke to her.’

The mother tried to clamber

over the railings to reach her son, and had to be dragged back by her husband and members of the public.

The couple made their way down the stairs to the boy, who was still breathing. His father held his hand until medics arrived. He was airlifted to the Royal London Hospital.

Witnesses on the viewing deck were struck by Bravery’s ‘calmness and lack of emotion at the chaos about him’.

TWISTED SNIGGER

Miss Heer said: ‘ He seemed unbothered. Miss Barnfield says he showed no reaction at all. She became hysterical and grabbed her children and took them inside. Someone shouted at him, “Do you know what you’ve done?” and he replied “Yes”, with a snigger.’

He told onlookers: ‘It’s a long story. It’s not my fault. It’s social services’ fault.’ He asked a policeman if ‘on scale of one to ten’, it was the most serious incident he had ever dealt with.

During his police interview, the next day, Bravery claimed he had heard ‘voices’ telling him to kill, but he later admitted making this up. Shown a CCTV video of the atrocity, Bravery laughed as it played.

The prosecutor said: ‘He said he had to prove a point to every idiot who said he did not have a mental health problem. He said he had been planning the thing for a long time. He wanted it to be on the news because he wanted everyone including his parents to see what a mistake they had made in not putting him in hospital.’

The court heard that just hours before the attack, Bravery had used his iPad to conduct Google searches including: ‘If I have autism can I still go prison for attempted murder?’ and ‘Which is more likely to cause death – pushing a girl into River Thames or shooting a girl in the stomach?’ He had also googled ‘How to get to The Shard’.

He told forensic psychiatri­st Dr Joanna Dow at Broadmoor Hospital he had plotted three possible ways to get himself into a mental hospital: strangling a woman or child, drowning a child, or throwing someone from a tall building.

He told another psychiatri­st, Dr Nigel Blackwood, he was ‘disappoint­ed’ he had not managed to kill the French boy.

Bravery has been diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder and a personalit­y disorder.

A psychiatri­c report found ‘his callousnes­s and the striking lack of emotional empathy is not typical of autism but is more typically found in psychopath­y’.

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 ??  ?? Callous: Jonty Bravery was said to have a striking lack of emotional empathy
Callous: Jonty Bravery was said to have a striking lack of emotional empathy

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