In a school in Sheffield, a group of students locked themselves in a cupboard and closed the door after a girl shouted, “someone was stabbed”, a court listened.
In a case of a 15-year-old man in the case of a 15-year-old murder case of a 15-year-old murder of a 15-year-old murder at all saints Catholic High School, a jury was heard in a pre-pronounced police interview with a witness in a 15-year murder case.
In a video interview, on Friday, the Sheffield was played for gamblers in the Crown Court, the boy told the officials that he was in a custody room on 3 February when a disciple ran inside and shouted “there is blood”.
The 15 -year -old defendant, who cannot be nominated due to his age, has accepted the murder and brought a knife to the school premises, but denies the murder.
In an interview seen by the jury, the boy said that he and a group of other students “ran into a storage cupboard in the detention hall, so we were safe, closed ourselves and stopped the door”.
The teenager said that he does not need to tell the boy who was stabbed, Harvey Willgozo, because the defendant “always took a weapon and Harvey was a bit of argument with him”.
The witness explained how Harvey and defendants were pushing each other at the time of the first break that day, but they thought they were just “mess”.
“I thought it was a joke,” he said.
He said that the two boys had “repaid each other” in the morning.
When asked about the defendant carrying the weapons, the boy said: “Ever since he joined the school, he used to take them a lot.”
He told the detectives that the defendant “little ax” and “a variety of knives”.
He said, “He will either show me or ask me to feel outside his trousers and the top of the ax or the top of something,” he explained.
The boy told the police that it was a few months before the deadly incident.
The trial has also heard of the previous incidents in the school, including the defendant, which included Harvey five days before the death, causing the school to go to lockdown.
According to prosecutors, two members of the staff physically intervened in the dispute between two other students, and the defendant had to be restrained as they tried to join.
The jury was told that the defendant claimed that a boy had a knife that inspired the school to go to the lockdown, although the police replied that the weapons never found.
The test is going on.