Bodmin nightclub reveller killed man and injured five in ‘knife rampage’, jury told
A nightclub reveller went on a “knife rampage” leaving one man dead and five others injured, a court has heard.
Jake Hill, 25, stabbed six people in a matter of seconds outside the Eclipse nightclub in Bodmin, Cornwall, with a serrated hunting knife, Truro Crown Court was told.
He had joined a fight between 15 revellers outside the club shortly after 3am on 30 April last year, the court heard.
Hill and his two co-accused, Tia Taylor, 22, and Chelsea Powell, 22, had all been inside the club prior to the "rampage".
The court also heard a disturbance broke out between groups of people in the street after the venue closed.
Victims were either stabbed or slashed in the melee by Hill, who had collected the blade from a nearby hedge, where he had hidden it prior to entering the nightclub, the prosecution alleged.
Michael Riddiough-Allen, aged 31, was the fifth person to be stabbed and suffered a fatal wound to his abdomen before dying at the scene.
In the brawl, Hill also allegedly injured Liam Phillips, Ryan Burger, Rhiannon Tompsett and Stefan Williams.
A sixth person, Ryan Parsons, was stabbed in the head as the three defendants left the scene, the court heard.
Mark Cotter KC, prosecuting, told the jury the violence erupted as the three defendants were unsuccessfully attempting to catch a taxi after leaving the club.
While they were trying to organise the pick-up, disorder was breaking out in the street between various groups, including four or five women.
“The three defendants made their way into the general disorder and became embroiled in it,” Mr Cotter said.
“Following his entry into the disorder the prosecution allegation is that Jake Hill produced his knife and stabbed or slashed five people.
“Each of those individuals suffered a single wound. The prosecution further allege that Jake Hill as he left the scene stabbed a sixth person and again a single wound was inflicted.”
Mr Cotter said it was not possible to be certain in which order the first five people were stabbed.
“Safe to say they were all inflicted within a matter of seconds of each other and the man who lost his life, Michael Riddiough-Allen, was the last person to be stabbed within that group of five,” he said.
“No witnesses saw any of the injured persons do anything to anyone, yet alone Jake Hill, that could explain why Jake Hill stabbed them.
“That initial burst of knife violence culminated in a struggle that took place between Jake Hill and Michael Riddiough-Allen.
“Mr Riddiough-Allen had become embroiled in the disorder as someone who was trying to separate the parties.
“He was unarmed and he confronted and struggled with Jake Hill and was, we say, simultaneously assaulted by Tia Taylor and Chelsea Powell.
“During that encounter Michael Riddiough-Allen was stabbed by Jake Hill in the abdomen.”
Mr Cotter added: “The prosecution case is that Jake Hill having entered the disorder and became angry and violent.
“One witness, who saw some of the stabbings and the aftermath of others, described Jake Hill as being on a ‘knife rampage’.
“The prosecution case is that Jake Hill deliberately stabbed and slashed at individuals within the group and caused the various wounds and that when he did so he intended to kill or at the very least intended to cause really serious bodily harm.”
Jurors were told Taylor and Powell allegedly joined in with the attack on Mr Riddiough-Allen.
“The prosecution case is that by the time Jake Hill was beginning to struggle with Mr Riddiough-Allen they must have realised that he had a knife and was wielding it,” the prosecutor said.
“They had voluntarily, we say, inserted themselves into a violent environment and Tia Taylor and Chelsea Powell showed themselves as perfectly willing to participate in that violence when it was wholly unnecessary for them to do so.
“The prosecution case is that in joining Jake Hill’s knife attack on Michael Riddiough-Allen intended at least really serious bodily injury be caused to Michael Riddiough-Allen and assisted or encouraged Jake Hill in his attack on Michael Riddiough-Allen by backing him up and by inflicting blows to Mr Riddiough-Allen.”
Mr Cotter said the allegations of attempting to pervert the course of justice against Taylor and Powell came from statements they gave to the police after the incident.
“The prosecution case is that Tia Taylor and Chelsea Powell both individually deliberately lied to the police as to events that evening in order to frustrate the police investigation,” he said.
Hill, of Jubilee Terrace, Bodmin, Cornwall, denies a total of 12 charges, including one count of murder and the alternative of manslaughter, three counts of attempted murder and the alternative of wounding with intent, and two charges of wounding with intent and the alternative of unlawful wounding.
Taylor, of Northey Road, Bodmin, denies three charges – one count of murder and the alternative of manslaughter, and one count of attempting to pervert the course of justice.
Powell, of Granny’s Green, Bodmin, denies the same three charges as Taylor.
The trial continues.
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