It just keeps getting worse...
Authored by Steve Watson: The case of 18-year-old white British student Henry Nowak has delivered yet another layer of disturbing detail.

Officers from Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary arrived at the Southampton scene roughly five to ten minutes after he was stabbed five times with a ceremonial knife. Henry remained conscious and spoke loudly at first. He told them he had been stabbed and could not breathe. They chose instead to believe the man who had just knifed him.
New evidence released this week shows it took those officers a full eight minutes to discover the fatal wound. During that time they lifted Henry, striking his head against a wall, and later began CPR. A female officer started compressions. According to the transcript and reports, officers performed chest compressions over his clothing and directly onto the area of the stab wound.
🚨 BREAKING: Newly released evidence shows how police officers took eight minutes to discover the stab wound that killed Henry Nowak.
— The Mercian (@TheMercianNews) June 24, 2026
The attending officers also hit Henry's head on a wall as he was lifted, before a female officer begins CPR.https://t.co/C5Wb1IQZ93
It took police officers 8 minutes to check Henry Nowak for stab wounds. When they realised he wasn’t breathing they did chest compressions over his clothes ONTO A STAB WOUND, somehow managing to make the situation even worse.
— Patrick Christys (@PatrickChristys) June 24, 2026
Bodycam footage shows officers dragging Henry across gravel, turning him, and forcefully pulling his arms behind his back to apply handcuffs. He lost consciousness within about three minutes of that restraint and was pronounced dead at 00:37 on 4 December 2025 after 51 minutes of resuscitation efforts.
A paediatric critical care specialist with battlefield medicine experience, Dr Krzysztof Magier, reviewed the footage and post-mortem report. He concluded there is a high probability that the police actions contributed to Henry's death.
The main source of bleeding was damage to the subclavian vein. Venous bleeding under low pressure often forms a natural clot that can slow or stop on its own. Forcefully twisting the arms behind the back and handcuffing likely stretched the vein, tore the forming clot, and triggered sudden massive internal haemorrhage.
Dr Magier stated: "I am convinced that if Henry had arrived there alive, the doctors would not have let him die." He added that paramedics arriving first could have given Henry a roughly 50% chance of survival through fluids, tranexamic acid to stabilise the clot, and other interventions. Southampton University Hospital, a major trauma centre, was only two to three minutes away by ambulance.
He wasn’t breathing → you start chest compressions immediately.
— WasAcop (@WasAcop) June 24, 2026
That’s basic first aid protocol.
Taking 8 minutes to check for stab wounds, handcuffing him while he’s saying he can’t breathe, and then compressing over clothes directly onto the wound is a complete failure of…
I read that they also banged his head when they moved him after realising that he'd been stabbed. Honestly, when you think this case can't get any worse, it does. 😢
— Leanne (@LeanneSpurs) June 24, 2026
They were told he had blood coming out of his mouth when they arrived, and he repeatedly said he'd been stabbed.
— PixelatedBoot (stamping on a human face - forever) (@PixelatedBoot) June 24, 2026
Totally unacceptable dereliction of duty.
It would help if the police were taught life saving rather than DEI protocol.
— Pat Herbert (@PatHerbert2) June 24, 2026
Henry's family has asked that his death not be used to sow further division. The facts, however, speak for themselves. When police training and culture elevate racial grievance narratives above the immediate duty to preserve life, the result is not justice - it is preventable tragedy.
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