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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Susie Beever

'I've cried every day for 20 years since my son was murdered – we need tougher laws'

Lorraine Fraser remembers every detail of the day her child was murdered by a gang of thugs.

The mum-of-two had put four-year-old daughter Shannon down to watch the Tweenies when a friend called saying her teenage son Tyrone had been stabbed near to the pub where she worked in Leeds.

“I remember screaming and just grabbing her and getting in the car,” she said.

“When I got down there, people were running and pointing. I just followed them and saw my own son lying in blood.

“It felt like all my insides just fell away from me. I'll never forget the wail that came out of me.”

Lorraine, pictured at Tyrone's grave in Leeds, admits she feels as though she's 'failed' him (Julian Hamilton/Daily Mirror)

Tyrone Clarke was just 16 when he was remorselessly beaten and stabbed by a mob of around 20 people – many of whom were of a similar young age.

But despite four people later being convicted over Tyrone’s murder, most of his attackers never faced charges.

Islamur Rahman, Anjum Amin, Kamer Akram and Liaquat Ali were jailed for life in 2005 for the crime, the fourth being just 17 when convicted of the most serious crime in the land.

A fifth suspect, Qasim Majid, was later named by West Yorkshire Police as a suspect and left the UK for Pakistan in the days after the murder – Lorraine discovered he obtained a passport through the country's British embassy after authorities failed to put his suspect status on a database.

A mob of around 20 people killed the 16-year-old, pictured here three weeks before his murder (Courtesy of Lorraine Fraser)

Lorraine, now 58, spoke to The Mirror as she marks nearly 20 years since her son’s murder on April 22, 2004.

In the two decades since, she has watched in abject horror as countless other British teenagers are lost to the cancerous growth of knife violence, either through death or prison.

“I’ve cried every day since Tyrone was killed. Those people destroyed me as a mother, and that’s how it is for every parent who has lost their child to violence.”

She said there hasn't been a single day were she hasn't cried for her child (Julian Hamilton/Daily Mirror)

In the week Lorraine opened up about her anguish, 18-year-old Jamie Meah was stabbed to death just a stone’s throw from the scene of Tyrone’s murder.

“Our young people are getting buried, yet the Government seems to be fast asleep,” said the retired social care worker.

“That generation is growing up now in a world where being stabbed to death is normal. Let me ask you, what about this is normal?”

Over the years, Lorraine has met with politicians including former Prime Minister David Cameron to discuss tougher punishments on people who carry knives.

In 2007, her legal team pushed to overturn 300-year-old joint enterprise laws meaning defendants in serious crimes like murder can be convicted on the basis they were present at the time.

The mum-of-two worked with her lawyer to push for changes to the law for cases with multiple offenders, and now wants to see tougher punishments for knife crime (Julian Hamilton/Daily Mirror)

Despite her successes, Lorraine heartbreakingly admits to feeling like she has “failed” her son’s memory with every young person she reads about who has been taken by knife crime.

In the year ending March 2022, there were 282 murders involving a knife or bladed weapon recorded in England and Wales – the highest figure since 1946 – according to the Office of National Statistics.

Of these victims, 99 were young people under the age of 25 and 13 were 16 or younger.

In West Yorkshire alone, there were 2,395 crimes involving knives in the year ending June 2022 – up 70% over the previous 11 years.

In a week of violence documented by The Mirror earlier this month, nine people were killed by violence on British streets, three of whom were teenage boys.

“Nothing has been learned in two decades,” Lorraine added.

Lorraine admits she cries everyday because of what the men did to her child (Julian Hamilton/Daily Mirror)
Tyrone was just 16 (Julian Hamilton/Daily Mirror)

“I’ve met that many politicians I’ve lost count. They all say the same things and look at me with sympathy.

“There’s going to be no young people left at this rate to become doctors, lawyers, lorry drivers.

“Violent criminals need big, big time. I want to see tough, tough, tough measures. Let’s face it, they’ve tried everything and it isn’t working. Just look where we are."

“For anyone who's going through this - it’s a pain in our hearts that will never go,” she added. I will die with a broken heart.

A West Yorkshire Police spokesperson confirmed the investigation into others involved in Tyrone's murder remained open, with no further arrests made.

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