Jonny Humphries
BBC News, Liverpool
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Bebe King, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Alice Aguiar and were murdered in the attack on 29 July 2024
The Southport murders were "one of the most egregious crimes in our country's history" the chairman of the public inquiry into the atrocity has said.
The inquiry will examine how the "deteriorating and deeply troubling behaviour" of Axel Rudakubana, who went on to "cause such devastation" on 29 July 2024, was dealt with by public bodies.
Alice Aguiar, nine; Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven and six-year-old Bebe King died while eight other children and two adults were seriously wounded during the attacks at a dance studio in the Merseyside town.
The first live hearings have now begun at Liverpool Town Hall, chaired by retired senior judge Sir Adrian Fulford, who said he was committed to delivering "sensible and achievable" recommendations.
Sir Adrian told a council chamber packed with legal representatives, lawyers, the media and the public that "ordinary language simply fails to reflect the enormity of what [Rudakubana] did.
"None of the most powerful adjectives even begin to suffice.
"There are no words that adequately describe what occurred and I am not going to try, and then fail, to find them."
'Risk posed'
Sir Adrian said the inquiry, announced by Home Secretary Yvette Cooper in April, would involve two stages.
The first will analyse "the perpetrator's history and his dealings with all of the relevant agencies".
He continued: "We will identify the decisions that were made or not made, how information was shared and extent to which the risk he posed was addressed, along with any missed opportunities to prevent what occurred."
The second phase would involve looking at the "wider phenomenon of children and young people who are being drawn into extreme violence".
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