
Standing outside Southampton Crown Court alongside members of his family, the grieving father delivered an emotional statement that has since sent shockwaves across Britain. His words painted a devastating picture of an 18-year-old university student whose final moments were marked not only by a brutal knife attack, but by what his family describes as a catastrophic failure by those who were supposed to protect him.
“The jury confirmed what we’ve always known,” Mark said. “Henry’s life was taken from him unlawfully, violently, and without justification.”
The case of Henry Nowak has become one of the most disturbing and controversial criminal cases in recent British memory, sparking fierce debate about knife crime, police conduct, and public trust in law enforcement.

A Bright Future Cut Short
Henry Nowak was just 18 years old.
A finance student at the University of Southampton, he was described by family and friends as kind, ambitious, inclusive, and full of promise. He loved football, had strong friendships, and was beginning what should have been the most exciting chapter of his life.
According to his family, Henry had dreams to pursue, a degree to complete, and a future waiting for him.
Instead, on the night of December 3, 2025, everything changed.
After a night out with university football teammates, Henry was walking home through Southampton when he encountered 23-year-old Vickrum Digwa.
What happened next would ultimately leave a young student dead, a family shattered, and a nation asking difficult questions.
The Attack That Shocked Britain
Prosecutors told the court that Digwa stabbed Henry five times with a 21-centimetre blade he claimed to carry for religious reasons. During the trial, the jury rejected Digwa’s claims of self-defence and found him guilty of murder. He was later sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 21 years.
Evidence presented during the trial revealed chilling details.
Witnesses heard Digwa accuse Henry of racist abuse, a claim prosecutors described as false. Court proceedings heard that Digwa misled police officers at the scene and continued maintaining a version of events that the prosecution said was entirely fabricated.
Judge William Mousley reportedly condemned Digwa’s actions, stating that he had abused privileges associated with carrying a ceremonial blade and had helped inflame racial tensions through false allegations.
Yet it was not only the killing itself that horrified the public.
It was what happened afterward.
“I Can’t Breathe”
According to bodycam footage released following the trial, Henry repeatedly told officers that he had been stabbed.
He also repeatedly told them that he could not breathe.
The footage reportedly captures one officer responding: “I don’t think you have, mate,” before Henry was placed in handcuffs.
For his family, these moments are almost impossible to comprehend.
Speaking outside court, Mark Nowak said his son told officers he could not breathe nine times and informed them four separate times that he had been stabbed.
Yet, according to the family, Henry was treated as a suspect rather than a victim.
Instead of receiving immediate emergency care, he was handcuffed, arrested on suspicion of assault, and read his rights.
“That was the last thing he heard,” his father said.
Those words have become one of the most haunting aspects of the case.
As Henry’s chest filled with blood from the stab wounds, he was reportedly struggling to stay conscious. His family believes precious minutes were lost because officers accepted Digwa’s account of events while failing to recognise the severity of Henry’s condition.
“He Did Not Die With Dignity”
Perhaps the most emotional moment of the family’s statement came when Mark Nowak described what he believes happened in his son’s final moments.
“Henry did not die with dignity. He did not die with the care he deserved.”
The grieving father accused police of treating his son in an “inhumane and degrading” manner.
At the same time, he contrasted that treatment with what he described as the comparatively respectful handling of the man later convicted of murder.
“The contrast is unbearable,” he said.
The remarks have resonated widely across social media and news platforms, where many have expressed outrage after viewing portions of the bodycam footage and learning more about the circumstances surrounding Henry’s death.
Police Under Intense Scrutiny
Following the conviction, Hampshire Police acknowledged that officers had been “misled” at the scene and issued an apology regarding their handling of the incident. The force has also confirmed that the matter was referred to the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), which continues to investigate the officers’ actions.
But for Henry’s family, questions remain.
They want to know why officers failed to recognise a critically injured teenager.
They want to know why his own words were not believed.
And they want accountability for decisions made during those crucial minutes.
Mark Nowak specifically called upon the Home Secretary to ensure that investigators have the resources and independence necessary to conduct a full and transparent inquiry.
“Our family should not have to fight for the truth anymore,” he said.
A Family Refusing to Stay Silent
Despite their anger and grief, the Nowak family has repeatedly stressed that they do not want Henry’s death to become a source of division.
Instead, they hope his story can drive meaningful change.
Throughout their statement, family members called for stronger action on knife crime, greater investment in prevention programs, and tougher measures surrounding the carrying of knives in public spaces.
“This is not a case about racism,” Mark Nowak said. “This is a case about murder.”
The family argues that Britain faces a knife crime crisis that demands urgent political attention.
They insist that no other family should experience the nightmare they have endured.
“We Love Him Beyond Words”
For all the legal proceedings, investigations, headlines, and political debate, one devastating reality remains unchanged.
Henry Nowak is gone.
Nothing can restore the future that was taken from him.
Nothing can erase the empty chair at family gatherings or the milestones he will never reach.
As the family concluded their statement outside court, Mark Nowak addressed his son directly.
“Wherever he is, we are so proud of him.”
The father paused before delivering a final message that captured the heartbreak of a family forever changed.
“We love him beyond words.”
And while Vickrum Digwa will spend at least the next two decades behind bars, the questions surrounding Henry’s final moments — and whether more could have been done to save him — are likely to haunt Britain for years to come.


