Shropshire Star

Mother in plea to find killer of son whose good deed saw rape gang jailed

Abraham Badru had changed his name after giving evidence in a gang rape court case.

Published
Abraham Badru

The mother of a man who was shot dead has told how her son hid his identity because he feared being targeted after he stopped a gang rape.

Abraham Badru, 26, was shot outside his home in Hackney, east London, in March 2018, and the killer has not been found.

Appealing for help to find the person who killed her son, Ronke Badru told how he would still hide his face more than 10 years after he was given a police bravery award for rescuing a girl from an attempted knife-point sex attack on a Hackney estate.

Abraham Badru death
Ronke Badru, the mother of Abraham Badru Kirsty O’Connor/ PA

Mr Badru was just 14 in 2007 when he witnessed the incident and he subsequently gave evidence at court where nine people were convicted, including one who was jailed for life. At the time he was threatened by the culprits and his home was pelted with eggs.

Mrs Badru, who lived with her son until his death, said: “He was wearing caps to cover his face and any time he wanted to go out I would have to go out and check if there was anyone in the compound or in the garden and then he would go.”

To escape the initial threats, Mr Badru went to the south-west of England to study for A Levels and a degree, returning to London in 2016 and calling himself “Prince” in an attempt to hide his identity.

Abraham Badru death
Tributes on Ferncliff Road in Hackney, where Abraham Badru was shot. Kirsty O’Connor /PA

His mother said she found it “difficult” watching him hide away and added that she felt she did not have power and wished she had the money to get him a house in a safer area.

Police are still investigating the motive for Mr Badru’s death, with one line of inquiry being the death threats sent by members of the gang and another being the string of relationships he had with different women.

Detective Chief Inspector Noel McHugh who is leading the case said the silence “is not going to stop the case from progressing, because we’re trying to get justice for Abraham and his family”.

“It is astonishing there are people out there who clearly know exactly what happened to Abraham that night on the 25th of March. They know who is responsible; they know where the gun is and they know why Abraham was shot,” he said.

Mrs Badru said: “Every day I cry, I try to put up a brave face to people but inside me I’m pained.

“I know what I am going through inside me but to people I just try put on a brave face that everything is normal but it is not normal because Abraham is my only child. I have no other child.”

On the day he died, Mr Badru had been shopping, before collecting a takeaway and seeing his father and step-sister.

He then visited a woman between 10.20pm and 10.40pm before driving home. During the journey he was on the phone to a second woman for 44 minutes, and was still on the call at 11.11pm when he was shot.

Mr Badru had changed his plans at the last minute and detectives are trying to find out who would have known where he would be at the time he died.

An 18-year-old woman was arrested on suspicion of conspiracy to murder in November and released under investigation.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.