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Man murdered after WhatsApp argument over who was 'least gay'

Paul Akinnuoye convicted of killing after fight in south-east London

Tom Embury-Dennis
Friday 23 February 2018 13:38 GMT
Paul Akinnuoye was found guilty of murder after stabbing Jordan Wright to death
Paul Akinnuoye was found guilty of murder after stabbing Jordan Wright to death (Met Police)

A student is facing life in prison for murdering a man over a WhatsApp argument about who was "least gay".

Paul Akinnuoye, 20, from Tunbridge Wells in Kent, stabbed to death Jordan Wright, 19, after the pair traded gay insults in a group called “Ice city boyz”, a court heard.

The defendant called Wright a “batty boy”, and he retorted: “On your mum’s life I’m straighter than you.”

The argument escalated and led to the pair agreeing to a fight in Shooters Hill, south-east London.

Akinnuoye armed himself with a small knife but the victim, who was due to start a construction apprenticeship days later, regarded it as a “fist-fight ting”, the court was told.

On the evening of 19 April last year, the defendant travelled from Tunbridge Wells and met with a group of men, including Wright, in Blackheath.

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Wright suffered repeated stab wounds, collapsed and died.

In the struggle, part of the knife was left at the scene while the defendant made off in a taxi.

A specialist sniffer dog found a piece of red plastic on the ground which Akinnuoye’s housemates later identified as belonging to a set of knives.

He tried to dispose of his phone and cover his tracks, prosecutor Tony Badenoch QC said.

During his trial, the defendant accepted he was at the scene but blamed someone else for the killing.

A jury at the Old Bailey deliberated for a day to find him guilty of murder.

Judge Philip Katz QC adjourned sentencing to a date to be fixed and remanded the defendant in custody.

Detective Inspector Jo Sideaway, of the Homicide and Major Crime Command, said the murder “devastated” the victim’s family and caused a “big shock” to the local community.

Wright’s mother, Katharine Alade, said: “You don’t realise until it happens to you how far reaching one moment of madness can be and what an impact it can make on your life forever. There is not one day when I don’t shed tears.

“I could have dealt with him dying at such a young age through illness, but not by the hands of a boy the same age as him and over what?”

His father Neville Wright added: “He was very loving, funny and a very caring person, as well as a very popular person. I think of him every day ... of what he would have achieved in life – he is gone, but not forgotten.”

Additional reporting by PA

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