News about David Lord

A schoolboy was charged with the murder of Pasawm Lyhym, a Sunshine schoolboy

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 31, 2023
A 17-year-old boy has been charged with murder after a stabbing attack in Melbourne's west that killed a 16-year-old Melton South schoolboy in broad daylight (right). The youth from Hillside were arrested on Wednesday, nearly a fortnight after Pasawm Lyhym (left) tragically died, and police said there were no charges against them. On Wednesday, the 17-year-old is set to appear in Melbourne Children's Court. The homicide detectives' probe into the police is continuing.

Melbourne teen stabbing: Chilling CCTV shows knife-wielding boys chasing Pasawm Lyhym down street

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 22, 2023
WARNING CONTENTIAL: Pasawm Lyhym, 16, was reportedly stabbed at a bus stop in Sunshine in Melbourne's west on Thursday afternoon, and stunned bystanders who were returning home from school and work could not be restored. As probes into his death continue, new surveillance footage of teenagers reportedly embroiled in an altercation has surfaced. A terrified Pasawm is seen running for his life from the scene with two other youth reportedly wielding knives.

Two boys were released after a horrific stabbing at Sunshine station Melbourne's Pasawm Lyhym

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 20, 2023
Both a 17-year-old and 18-year-old have been released from detention after questioning as part of the probe into the death of Pasawm Lyhym (main) 16 years ago, which took place in Melbourne last Thursday. The incident involved two students from two separate colleges, according to Victoria Police. They are schoolchildren around the 15 or 16-year old age, and they know each other,' Detective Superintendent Janet Stevenson said. They've arrived at the Sunshine bus station, and there's where an altercation took place.'

Why the green zealots in Oxfordshire ignited a violent civil war between motorists and locals

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 25, 2023
Divinity Road in Oxford's bustling city center is so quiet you can hear birds singing in the trees and the whoosh of cyclists whizzing past the red-brick Edwardian semis. It seems that life here is a pleasant one, as you'd expect for £725,000, the cost of the last four-bedroom house sold here. Yet, as dusk falls, a loud banging sound punctures the silence, providing a glimpse at the tense riots that have engulfed Oxford's leafy suburbs of late. A motorist in a silver Toyota Prius has yelled vociferously from his vehicle and is pulling away the vast 'road blocked' signs and traffic cones that block the road's top. Residents had bought these to replace official bollards, which had been purchased by the Lib Dem, Green, and Labour parties, which runs Oxfordshire County Council, and vandals had removed them from the site.