Daily Mail

Boy, 16, ‘built nail bomb for massacre at school’

- By Chris Brooke

A BOY of 16 planned to ‘kill many people’ after making an almost complete canister bomb at home, a court heard yesterday.

The far-Right extremist and Nazi sympathise­r had already been given an official police warning after telling fellow pupils he would carry out a school shooting. through Paul Greaney his internet QC, prosecutin­g, research the said teenager ‘demonstrat­ed an interest in murder, guns and bombmaking’. Police searched his home and found he had built an ‘explosive’ device that was ‘not far from being a viable bomb’ by using a manual from the internet.

Mr Greaney said the boy had put nails inside canisters which were clipped together. All that was needed for a ‘viable CO2 bomb’ was the ‘simple addition of gunpowder... and a basic fuse’, he told Leeds Crown Court.

The teenager, who cannot be named for legal reasons, insisted that he was no terrorist and had been talking about bombs and bomb equipment to be ‘cool’. However, Mr Greaney told members of the jury: ‘This is no overblown prosecutio­n.’ What the schoolboy did was ‘serious and dangerous, and what he intended worse still’, he added. The boy, from Bradford, denies making an explosive substance with intent, making an explosive substance and three charges of possession of a document of use for terrorist purposes. The court heard that concerns about the boy’s extremist ideology had begun when he was 13. Over a two-year period culminatin­g in his arrest at 15, his online activity became ‘progressiv­ely dark’ as he watched extremist vidtold eos and ‘informatio­n about murder and mutilation’.

At 14, he spoke to pupils at school about ‘carrying out a school shooting’ and praised Adolf Hitler by stating ‘gas the Jews’. The boy a police officer he was just showing off, but admitted he had ‘actually manufactur­ed a drainclean­ing bomb’, said Mr Greaney.

The teenager was referred to the Government’s Prevent counterter­rorism strategy. He was seen on ten occasions in three months before receiving an official warning in 2017.

But four months later he copied bomb-making instructio­ns on to a CD, detailing how to make a ‘powerful bomb’ that can be used for ‘killing if shrapnel is added’.

Prevent intervened again when he was 15. Mr Greaney said he told fellow pupils ‘he was going to go on a rampage, aiming to kill many people and then be shot by the police or kill himself’. He admitted browsing for guns using a computer with a Nazi SS lightning bolt as the screensave­r.

Police then discovered he had been accessing bomb-making informatio­n and found CO2 canisters with holes drilled into them. Evidence indicated he had been making a canister bomb. On the same day, he had searched videos about violence against Muslims and pressure cooker bombs.

The case continues.

‘Told pupils he would kill people’

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