List of major crimes in the United Kingdom


This is a list of major crimes in the United Kingdom that received significant media coverage and/or led to changes in legislation.
Legally each deliberate and unlawful killing of a human being is murder; there is no crime of assassination or serial killing as such, for example.

Assassinations

See also the category ":Category:Assassinated British people|Assassinated British People".
DateVictimLocationDetails
1812Spencer PercevalLondonShot by John Bellingham. Only British Prime Minister to have been assassinated.
1978Abd ar-Razzaq an-NaifLondonAbd ar-Razzaq an-Naif was Prime Minister of Iraq in 1968. He was assassinated on 9 July 1978, in London. His gunman was quickly captured and sentenced to life imprisonment in 1979; Naif was reportedly killed on the order of Saddam Hussein.
1978Georgi MarkovLondonMarkov was a Bulgarian dissident writer assassinated on 11 September 1978, in London. A micro-pellet containing ricin was fired into his leg via an umbrella wielded by someone with probable links to the Bulgarian secret police.
1985Gérard HoarauLondonHoarau was an exiled opposition leader from the Seychelles and was head of the Mouvement Pour La Resistance that sought the peaceful overthrow of the France-Albert René regime which had come to power on 5 June 1977 in a coup d'état. He was assassinated on 29 November 1985, in London.
2006Alexander LitvinenkoLondonLitvinenko was a Russian dissident and ex-agent, poisoned with radioactive polonium-210 on 1 November 2006, and who died 22 days later. His killer remain unknown, but a link with Russia's Federal Security Service is suspected.
2016Jo CoxBirstall, West Yorkshire41-year-old Helen Joanne Cox, Labour Member of Parliament for Batley and Spen was assassinated on 16 June 2016 by Thomas Mair, known for his far-right affiliations. In November 2016, after a week-long trial at Old Bailey, Mair was found guilty of murder and sentenced to life in prison.

Child/teenage killings

19th and 20th centuries

2000s–present

Individual murders

Murder is the unlawful killing of another human without justification or valid excuse, especially the unlawful killing of another human with malice aforethought.

19th century

1900s–1940s

1950s–1990s

2000s

Killed by medical and pseudo-medical staff

Multiple murders

Murdered police officers

DateName of IncidentLocationDetails
1940The Death of Jack AveryHyde Park, London, EnglandWar Reserve Constable Jack William Avery was a war reserve police officer who was murdered in Hyde Park, London, on 5 July 1940, having served less than one year with the Metropolitan Police Service. Avery was stabbed in the groin by Frank Stephen Cobbett, after Avery approached him having been advised by a member of the public that Cobbett was acting suspiciously. 42-year-old Cobbett, of no fixed address, was originally sentenced to death for murder, but after an appeal served fifteen years penal servitude for manslaughter instead. In 2007, Ian Blair, then Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis, unveiled a memorial to Avery close to the place where he was attacked in Hyde Park.
1952The Derek Bentley and
Christopher Craig case
Croydon, Surrey, EnglandDerek Bentley and Christopher Craig were arrested by the Metropolitan Police following a shootout in which one police constable was killed and another wounded. Although Craig shot and killed the constable, his accomplice Derek Bentley was charged with the murder and hanged.
1959The shooting of Detective Sergeant Raymond PurdyKensington London, EnglandGerman petty criminal Guenther Podola shot Purdy while fleeing arrest. Podola was the last man executed in Britain for killing a policeman.
1966The Shepherd's Bush MurdersShepherd's Bush, West London, EnglandThree plainclothes police officers of the Metropolitan Police's CID Division — Constables David Wombwell and Geoffrey Fox and Detective Sergeant Christopher Head — were killed while questioning three criminals parked near Wormwood Scrubs Prison. The three men, John Whitney, John Duddy and Harry Roberts were later arrested and sentenced to life imprisonment. Duddy remained in prison until his death in 1981, Whitney was paroled in 1991 but was murdered eight years later, and Roberts remained in prison for 48 years until he was finally released on parole in 2014.
1969The Linwood bank robberyLinwood, near Glasgow, ScotlandA bank robbery in Linwood, near Glasgow, where three police officers were shot in the aftermath ; two officers were later awarded George Medals. The lead robber, Howard Wilson, served 32 years in prison for the robbery, the murder of the two police officers and the attempted murder of the third; he was paroled in 2002.
1971The death of Gerry RichardsonBlackpool, Lancashire, EnglandGerald Irving Richardson, GC was a police officer in the Lancashire Constabulary and one of the highest-ranking officers to be murdered in the line of duty in Great Britain. He was posthumously awarded the George Cross in 1972.
1975The Murder of Stephen TibbleWest Kensington, London, England22-year-old PC Stephen Andrew Tibble, QPM, was fatally shot by Liam Quinn, a member of the Provisional Irish Republican Army, during a chase through Central London on 26 February 1975.
1981The Death of Kenneth HoworthLondon, EnglandKenneth Robert Howorth, GM, was a British explosives officer with the Metropolitan Police Service who was killed whilst attempting to defuse a bomb planted by the Provisional Irish Republican Army in Oxford Street.
1984The shooting of PC Yvonne FletcherSt. James's Square, London, EnglandWPC Yvonne Fletcher was one of 12 people hit by bullets fired from the Libyan embassy in London while she was policing a demonstration outside. She died on her way to hospital. The other 11 people who were hit survived. Nobody has ever been charged with her murder, but this crime prompted Britain to end its diplomatic links with Libya.
1984The Murder of Brian BishopFrinton-on-Sea, Essex, EnglandPC Brian John Bishop was shot in the head by an armed robber in Frinton-on-Sea, Essex, on 22 August 1984. He died from his injuries five days later in a London hospital.
1985The Murder of Keith BlakelockBroadwater Farm, London, EnglandPC Keith Blakelock, a London Metropolitan Police constable, was killed on 6 October 1985 during rioting on the Broadwater Farm housing estate in Tottenham, north London. Violence broke out after a local black woman died of heart failure during a police search of her home the previous day. It took place against a backdrop of unrest in several English cities, including Liverpool and other districts of London, and a breakdown of relations between the police and black communities. Three local black men including Winston Silcott were convicted of PC Blakelock's murder in 1987, but their convictions were quashed in 1991, although Silcott remained in prison for a further 12 years for another murder, which he claimed to have committed in self-defence.
1993The Death of Hugh MooreBushey, Hertfordshire, EnglandCommander Hugh John Moore, QPM, of the City of London Police, died from heart failure on 4 December 1993, eleven days after a violent struggle with a man who he had attempted to arrest.
1995The Death of Phillip WaltersIlford, East London, EnglandPC Phillip John Walters, of the Metropolitan Police Service, was shot dead while investigating a domestic disturbance in Ilford, east London, on 18 April 1995. Walters responded to reports of a domestic disturbance at a flat in Empress Avenue, Ilford, with his colleague Sergeant Derek Shepherd, who he had partnered in the job for the eighteen months since he entered service. Upon arrival, the pair discovered three men beating the male occupant of the property; it later transpired that they were hired to beat the man who was the former boyfriend of a woman. As the suspects attempted to escape, one produced a Smith & Wesson handgun and shot Walters in the chest as he was tackled by the officer. The bullet penetrated Walters' heart and he died later in hospital.
1997The Death of Nina MackayStraford, East LondonPC Nina Alexandra Mackay, of the Metropolitan Police Service, was fatally stabbed on 24 October 1997 by a paranoid schizophrenic man she was attempting to arrest. She is the only female police officer in Great Britain to have been stabbed to death while on duty and her killing was the first of a female officer since the murder of Yvonne Fletcher in 1984.
1999The Murder of Raja AhmedMiles Platting, Manchester, EnglandPC Raja Bashrat Ahmed, of the Greater Manchester Police, was murdered when his motorcycle was deliberately rammed into the path of a moving lorry. Career criminal Steven Draper was jailed for life for murder in 2000.
2003The Death of Ged WalkerBulwell, Nottingham, EnglandPC Gerald "Ged" Walker was a police dog handler with Nottinghamshire Police who was killed in the line of duty in Bulwell, Nottingham. On 7 January 2003, PC Walker was dragged 100 yards and fatally injured by a stolen taxi as he reached into the vehicle to attempt to remove the keys from the ignition. He died in hospital two days later from serious head injuries. In December 2003, 26-year-old drug addict David Parfitt was convicted of PC Walker's manslaughter and sentenced to thirteen years in prison. He had been on licence at the time of the incident for a previous robbery offence.
2004The Death of Michael SwindellsBirmingham, EnglandDC Michael Swindells, QGM, was stabbed to death on 21 May 2004 in Birmingham whilst attempting to arrest a suspect who had earlier threatened members of the public with a knife. The killer, who suffered from a mental illness, was later detained indefinitely for manslaughter.
2005The Murder of Sharon BeshenivskyBradford, West Yorkshire, EnglandSharon Beshenivsky, a West Yorkshire Police constable, was the 89th police officer and the sixth female officer to die in the line of duty in England and Wales, and the second female officer to be fatally shot. She was shot dead by a criminal gang during a robbery in Bradford, West Yorkshire. Her colleague, PC Teresa Millburn, was also shot in the incident, receiving serious wounds to the chest. Closed-circuit television cameras in Bradford tracked a car rushing from the scene and used an automatic number plate recognition system to trace its owners. Six men were later found guilty of killing PC Beshenivsky and sentenced to life imprisonment.
2007The Murder of Jonathan HenryBedfordshire, EnglandJonathan Henry was murdered in Luton, Bedfordshire, whilst on duty and responding to reports of a stabbing in the town centre.
2012The Murders of Nicola Hughes and Fiona BoneMottram in Longdendale, Tameside, Greater Manchester, EnglandPC Nicola Hughes and PC Fiona Bone were two Greater Manchester police constables killed during a "routine call" in response to a burglary in Mottram in Longdendale, on the edge of the Hattersley housing estate, in Tameside, Greater Manchester, on 18 September 2012. Hughes and Bone had completed three and five years of service at the time of their deaths, respectively. It was the first time two female officers were killed on duty in the United Kingdom. Chief Constable Sir Peter Fahy called the killings "cold blooded murder". Dale Cregan admitted murdering both officers, as well as two other men in an unrelated incident earlier in 2012, and was sentenced to life imprisonment the following year.
2019The Death of Andrew HarperSulhamstead, Berkshire, EnglandOn the evening of 15 August 2019, Police Constable Andrew Harper of the Thames Valley Police was killed while responding to reports of a burglary in Bradfield Southend, on the A4 west of Reading, Berkshire. It is believed PC Harper was dragged under a vehicle fleeing the scene and may also have been struck by a police car. The cause of PC Harper's death was multiple injuries. An initial investigation turned up ten suspects, one of whom, Jed Foster, went to trial; but the charge was dropped. Three teenagers, aged 17 to 18, are due to appear at the Old Bailey on December 13. Meanwhile, investigations in the cause of PC Harper's death are still ongoing.

Organised crime

Robberies

DateName of IncidentLocationDetails
1963The Great Train RobberyLedburn, Buckinghamshire,
England
After using railway signals to stop a Royal Mail freight train en route to London, Bruce Reynolds leads a 15-man group to storm the train and successfully escaped with £2.3 million. However, because the culprits left their fingerprints behind, police were able to trace thirteen of the robbers to their safehouse in Oakley, Buckinghamshire. Several members of the group, Ronnie Biggs, Ronald "Buster" Edwards and Charlie Wilson, managed to escape from prison soon after their trial. Biggs returned to Britain in 2001 after spending more than 30 years on the run, but was returned to prison for eight years before being released due to ill health in 2009. He died in December 2013.
1983The Brink's-Mat robberyHeathrow Airport EnglandSix armed robbers broke into the Brink's-Mat warehouse in Heathrow Airport and got away with £26 million in gold bullion with the inside help of security guard Anthony Black.
2000The Millennium Dome raidGreenwich, London, EnglandOn 7 November 2000, a criminal gang attempted to steal the flawless Millennium Star diamond valued at over £200 million, from an exhibition at the Millennium Dome in Greenwich, London. Five men were later sentenced on various different robbery charges.
2004The Northern Bank robberyBelfast, Northern Ireland£26.5 million was stolen from the Donegall Square headquarters of Northern Bank by a large armed gang.
2006The Securitas depot robberyTonbridge, Kent, EnglandThe largest cash robbery in British history, netting £53,116,760 in cash. The majority of the suspects were arrested.
2009The Graff Diamonds robberyBond Street, LondonTwo men wearing prosthetic make-up steal £40 million of gems in an armed robbery on Graff Diamonds, a jewellery store in Bond Street, London.
2015The Hatton Garden safe deposit burglaryHatton Garden
London, England
In April 2015, the Hatton Garden Safe Deposit Company, an underground safe deposit facility in London's Hatton Garden area, was burgled. The burglary occurred during a period in which both the Easter Bank Holiday and Passover coincided. The police first announced that the facility had been burgled on 7 April, and reports based on CCTV footage state that the attack on the facility commenced on 2 April. The theft is being investigated by the Flying Squad, a branch of the Specialist, Organised & Economic Crime Command within London's Metropolitan Police Service.

Serial killings

See also List of serial killers by country.
DateName of IncidentNo. of
Deaths
LocationDetails
1827–1828The Burke and Hare murders17Edinburgh, ScotlandWilliam Burke and William Hare sold the corpses of 17 victims to provide material for dissection.
1865The Edward William Pritchard case2Glasgow, ScotlandA doctor who was hanged for murdering his wife and mother-in-law by poisoning. He was also suspected of the murder of a servant but was never tried for it.
1865–1873The Mary Ann Cotton murders21EnglandBelieved to have murdered up to 21 people, mainly by arsenic poisoning. Many of her victims had married her.
1896The Amelia Dyer case247
Reading, Berkshire
London England
Amelia Elizabeth Dyer, was the most prolific baby farm murderer of Victorian England. She was tried and hanged for one murder, but there is little doubt she was responsible for many more similar deaths — possibly 400 or more — over a period of about 20 years.
1888Jack the Ripper5+Whitechapel, London, EnglandAt least five prostitutes were murdered and mutilated by an unidentified serial killer, dubbed "Jack the Ripper" by the press. The killer was never apprehended.
1915The George Joseph Smith case
3Leicester, East Midlands, EnglandGeorge Joseph Smith, a con artist and polygamist, murdered three of his wives before being arrested and executed on 13 August 1915.
1943–1953The John Christie Killings6–8Notting Hill, London. EnglandJohn Reginald Halliday Christie murdered at least six women — including his wife Ethel — by strangling them in his flat at 10 Rillington Place, Notting Hill, London. Christie moved out of Rillington Place in March 1953, and shortly afterwards the bodies of three of his victims were discovered hidden in an alcove in his kitchen. Christie was arrested and convicted of his wife's murder, for which he was hanged in 1953.
1944–1949The John George Haigh case
6–8London, EnglandJohn George Haigh murdered six people and disposed of their bodies in drums of sulphuric acid. He then forged documents turning the murder victims' possessions over to himself. Haigh was eventually caught after the disappearance and eventual murder of socialite Henrietta Durand-Deacon, apparently believing the police would be unable to prosecute him without her body.
1951–1952The John Straffen case3Bath, Somerset, Broadmoor, EnglandJohn Thomas Straffen who was the longest-serving prisoner in British legal history. He killed two young girls in the summer of 1951. He was found to be unfit to plead and committed to Broadmoor Hospital; during a brief escape in 1952 he killed again. This time he was convicted of murder and sentenced to death. Reprieved because of his mental state, he had his sentence commuted to life imprisonment and he remained in prison until his death more than 55 years later.
1956–1958The Peter Manuel Case
7–9Glasgow & Lanarkshire,
Scotland
Peter Manuel was an American-born Scottish serial killer who was convicted of murdering seven people across Lanarkshire and southern Scotland between 1956 and his arrest in January 1958, and is believed to have murdered two more. Prior to his arrest, the media nicknamed the unidentified killer "the Beast of Birkenshaw". Manuel was hanged at Glasgow's Barlinnie Prison; he was one of the last prisoners to die on the Barlinnie gallows.
1963–1965The Ian Brady and Myra Hindley case
5Oldham, Lancashire, EnglandFive children were killed in the area of Greater Manchester over a two-year period by serial killers Ian Brady and Myra Hindley. After being turned in by Hindley's brother-in-law David Smith, Brady was found guilty of three murders and Hindley of two at their trial in May 1966, for which they received life sentences. They admitted the two other murders 20 years later. Hindley remained in prison until her death in November 2002, while Brady was held at a secure mental hospital until his death in 2017.
1968–1969The Bible John Murders3Glasgow, ScotlandThree women were found strangled between 1968 and 1969 by an unidentified serial killer known only as Bible John. Although police investigated the murders for over 20 years, the murderer was never identified although serial killer Peter Tobin is a suspect.
1970–1974The Ronald Jebson Murders3Epping Forest
Greater London. England
Ronald Jebson killed Susan Blatchford, and Gary Hanlon. Their bodies were discovered in a copse on Lippitts Hill, after they went missing from their homes in Enfield, north London, in March 1970. 30 years after the murders, Jebson confessed to the crimes; he was already serving a life sentence for the 1974 murder of 8-year-old Rosemary Papper. Jebson remained in prison until his death in April 2015.
1973–1978The Robert Maudsley case
4Robert John Maudsley was a serial killer responsible for the murders of four people. Jailed for life for a single murder in 1975, he committed three of the murders in prison. He was reported to have eaten part of the brain of one of three men he killed in jail, which earned him the nickname "Hannibal the Cannibal" among the British press.
1974–1975The Patrick Mackay case5–12?Dartford, Kent, EnglandMackay was a serial killer who confessed to murdering 11 people in London and Kent.
1975–1981The Peter Sutcliffe Murders
13-20+Yorkshire, EnglandPeter Sutcliffe, known to the press as the "Yorkshire Ripper", murdered 13 women and attacked seven others in the north of England between 1975 and 1980. Captured in January 1981 and sentenced to life imprisonment later that year, he was imprisoned at Parkhurst Prison until his transfer to Broadmoor Hospital later in the 1980s after he was violently assaulted by another inmate.
1978The Peter Dinsdale killings26Hull, EnglandDinsdale was one of Britain's most prolific killers. He confessed to a total of 11 acts of arson, and was convicted of 26 counts of manslaughter. 11 of these were overturned on appeal. Lee was imprisoned for life in 1981.
1978–1983The Dennis Nilsen murders15+LondonDennis Nilsen murdered several men over a period of five years, including foreign students as well as local homeless men and male prostitutes, who were lured to his apartment and strangled before being dismembered. A number of Nilsen's victims have never been identified.
1982–1986The Robert Black murders4+Scotland &
North of England
Robert Black is a Scottish serial killer and child molester. He kidnapped, raped and murdered three girls during the 1980s, kidnapped a fourth girl who survived, attempted to kidnap a fifth, and is the suspect in a number of unsolved child murders dating back to 1969 and the 1970s throughout Europe. On 16 December 2009 Black was charged with the murder of Jennifer Cardy, a 9-year-old girl whose body was found at McKee's Dam near Hillsborough, County Down, in August 1981. He was initially jailed for life for abducting a seven-year-old girl in July 1990, and police soon found evidence to charge him with the murders of three girls during the 1980s. He was convicted of all three murders in May 1994 and sentenced to a further 10 concurrent terms of life imprisonment, with a recommended minimum term of 35 years.
1991–2006The Peter Tobin case3Margate, KentPrior to his first murder conviction, Tobin served ten years in prison for a double rape committed in 1993, following which he was released in 2004. In 2007 he was sentenced to life with a minimum of 21 years for the rape and murder of Angelika Kluk in Glasgow the previous year. Skeletal remains of two further young women who went missing in 1991 were subsequently found at his former home in Margate. Tobin was convicted of the murder of Vicky Hamilton in December 2008, when his minimum sentence was increased to 30 years, and of the murder of Dinah McNicol in December 2009. He is now being investigated for other unsolved cases of murder dating back to the 1960s.
1993–1994The Steven Grieveson Case
4+Sunderland, County DurhamGrieveson murdered four teenage boys in Sunderland in North East England between 1993 and 1994.
1993–2004The Peter Bryan case3East London, EnglandPeter Bryan is a cannibal who committed several murders between 1993 and 2004.
1994The Fred and Rosemary West case
12Gloucester, EnglandBetween April 1973 and September 1979, Fred and Rosemary West lured young women into their home where they were sexually assaulted and murdered. In February 1994 they were arrested after corpses were found buried in the garden and under their house in Gloucester. It is speculated that the pair committed further murders between 1980 and 1992, and may have killed a total of around 30 people, but their only known victim after 1980 was their 16-year-old daughter, Heather, who was murdered in 1987 by Fred West, who hanged himself whilst awaiting trial at Winson Green Prison on New Year's Day 1995. On 22 November 1995, Rosemary West was sentenced to life imprisonment and the trial judge recommended that she should never be released. Fred West had committed two murders during the 1960s before he met Rosemary, including that of his wife. Fred's eight-year-old daughter Charmaine is also believed to have died at the hands of Rosemary West while Fred West was serving a prison sentence for theft in late 1970 or early 1971.
2002–04The Levi Bellfield case3+Surrey, Hampton, Isleworth, Twickenham, EnglandMurder of Milly Dowler, a 13-year-old girl, murder of Marsha McDonnell, 19-year-old woman, attempted murder of Kate Sheedy, aged 18 and finally murder of Amélie Delagrange, a 22-year-old French student in foreign languages applied, by serial killer Levi Bellfield. For these 3 criminal cases, Levi is sentenced to life imprisonment. Levi is also suspicious in other cases of missing women in the 1990s, as well as the murder of his childhood girlfriend, 14-year-old Patsy Morris in 1980.
2006The Steve Wright killings
5Ipswich, Suffolk, EnglandFive women from Ipswich who were working as prostitutes were found murdered around the town in December 2006. Steve Wright, a local forklift truck driver, was charged with five murders and found guilty on all charges in February 2008. He was jailed for life and the trial judge recommended he should never be released. A subsequent appeal against his convictions by Wright was rejected by the High Court.
2013The Peterborough ditch murders3Peterborough. Cambridgeshire, EnglandThree men were stabbed to death in March 2013, with their bodies found dumped in ditches outside Peterborough. The perpetrator of the murders was Joanna Dennehy, a local woman who was later sentenced to life imprisonment, with a recommendation that she never be released.
2014The Stephen Port case
4Barking, EssexStephen John Port is a convicted serial rapist and serial killer, and is responsible for murdering at least four men and committing multiple rapes. Port received a life sentence with a whole life order on 25 November 2016. Police announced they are now investigating at least 58 deaths connected to the use of gamma-Hydroxybutyric acid in response to the Port case.

Sex crimes

Spree killings

Terrorism

Excludes incidents that happened during the Troubles in Northern Ireland. See also Attacks on the London Underground, List of terrorist incidents in Great Britain, and List of terrorist incidents in London.
DateName of IncidentNo. of
Deaths
LocationDetails
1867The Clerkenwell explosion12Clerkenwell, LondonA bomb planted by Fenians at New Prison in Clerkenwell exploded, killing twelve passers-by with more than 120 injuries.
1972The 1972 Aldershot bombing7Aldershot, EnglandA bomb attack by the Northern Ireland-based Official Irish Republican Army, the first of its kind on the mainland, targeted a British Army base in Aldershot. Seven civilian staff were killed.
1973The 1973 Old Bailey bombing1London, EnglandThe first attack in England by the Provisional IRA. Four car bombs were planted at significant targets in London including Scotland Yard & the Ministry of Defence. Two bombs were defused but two bombs exploded, the worst damage was caused by the bomb at the Old Bailey were over 200 people were injured & one man died of a heart attack. The attack caused outrage in England & got extensive media coverage.
1973The Bombings of King's Cross
and Euston stations
London, EnglandTwo bombs at mainline stations injured 13 people and brought chaos to central London. The first explosion at King's Cross station – which injured five people – occurred without any warning at 1224 BST, seconds after a witness saw a youth throw a bag into a booking hall. Fifty minutes later a second blast rocked a snack bar at Euston station, injuring a further eight people.
1973The 1973 Westminster bombingLondon, EnglandA bomb exploded in Thorney Street, which leads off Horseferry Road. The bomb was planted in a car which was known to have been stolen in London, and was parked outside Horseferry House, a building occupied by the Home Office, and opposite Thames House, which is mainly occupied by the Department of Trade and Industry. Both these buildings, and others nearby, were extensively damaged. At least 40 people were injured.
1974The M62 coach bombing12M62 motorway, West Riding of Yorkshire, EnglandA bomb attack on a coach killed nine British Army soldiers and three civilians. The attack was carried out by the Provisional Irish Republican Army.
1974The 1974 Houses of Parliament bombingLondon, EnglandA bomb exploded at the Houses of Parliament in London, causing extensive damage and injuring 11 people.
1974The 1974 Tower of London bombing1London, EnglandAn explosion in the Tower of London left one person dead and 41 injured. This was the second bomb in London on this day. At 0430 BST there was an explosion at government buildings in Balham, South London. Nobody was injured in the morning blast but there was substantial damage to surrounding buildings.
1974The Guildford pub bombings5Guildford, EnglandTwo bombs at a pub in Guildford cause the deaths of four soldiers and a civilian. IRA terrorists were responsible.
1974The Brook's Club bomb attackBrook's, St James's Street, LondonA bomb exploded in the Brooks Club, London, injuring three members of staff.
1974The Harrow School bombingHarrow, EnglandThe Harrow School bombing happened on 24 October 1974, when the Provisional IRA's Balcombe Street Gang bombed Peterborough Cottage, a three-storey former caretaker's house in the grounds of Harrow School. A warning was given and there were no deaths or injuries.
1974The Birmingham pub bombings21Birmingham, England21 people were killed when bombs went off in two pubs in central Birmingham. Six men were wrongly convicted and spent 16 years in prison before being released in 1991.
1974The 1974 London pillar box bombingsLondon, EnglandProvisional IRA exploded bombs inside pillar boxes in various places around London, injuring 40 people.
1974The Oxford Street bombingLondon, EnglandThe IRA carried out a bomb attack on Selfridge's department store in Oxford Street, London. A time bomb had been placed in a car which was then parked outside the store. Three telephone warnings were given and the area was evacuated. The explosion was later estimated to have caused £1.5 million worth of damage.
1982The Hyde Park and Regent's Park bombings11London, EnglandBomb attacks against a military ceremony in London killed eleven soldiers.
1983The Harrods bombing6London, EnglandSix people were killed when a bomb detonated near the Harrods department store in London.
1984The 1984 Heathrow Airport bombingHeathrow Airport, EnglandOn 20 April 1984, a bomb exploded in the baggage area of Terminal 2 at Heathrow Airport. The bomb exploded at 7:55 pm, as 60 people were inside the baggage area. The blast injured 22, one seriously. The Angry Brigade, an anarchist group, claimed responsibility for the bombing. British officials dismissed the claim, and instead pointed their fingers at "Libyan-related Arab groups". coming just three days after the murder of Yvonne Fletcher.
1984The Brighton hotel bombing5Brighton, EnglandA bomb attack targeting members of the government killed five people. The then Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, narrowly escaped injury.
1988The Lockerbie Disaster270Lockerbie, Dumfries and Galloway, ScotlandIn one of the worst terrorist attacks in the UK, London-New York commercial flight Pan Am Flight 103 crashed near Lockerbie, Scotland as the result of a bomb having been planted in the forward cargo hold. A joint investigation by the Dumfries and Galloway Constabulary and the Federal Bureau of Investigation linked the bombing to Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, a Libyan intelligence officer and the head of security for Libyan Arab Airlines. He was jailed for life in January 2001 with a recommended minimum of 20 years, but was released on compassionate grounds due to terminal cancer in August 2009, and returned to his native Libya, where he died in 2012.
1989The Deal barracks bombing11Deal, EnglandEleven soldiers died after the IRA bombed a military facility in Deal.
1992The Baltic Exchange bombing3London, EnglandThree people were killed in a bombing targeting London's financial centre, causing severe damage.
1993The Warrington bomb attacks2Warrington, EnglandTwo bombs caused the deaths of two children in Warrington.
1994The Heathrow mortar attacksWarrington, EnglandThe IRA launched a series of mortar attacks at the capital's main airport. On 9 March, four mortar bombs fired from a car parked at the Excelsior Hotel landed on or near the northern runway. On 11 March, four mortar bombs fired from waste ground landed on an aircraft parking area near Terminal Four. On 13 March, five mortar bombs launched from waste ground landed in the vicinity of Terminal Four. None exploded and there was no damage, but the attack caused much disruption to travel when areas of the airport were closed over the period.
1996The 1996 Docklands bombing2London, EnglandThe IRA bombed the South Quay area of Canary Wharf, London, killing two people and injuring more than 100, and causing an estimated £100 million worth of damage.
1996The Aldwych bus bombing1London, EnglandA bomb detonated prematurely on a bus travelling along Wellington Street, Aldwych, London WC2, killing Edward O'Brien, the IRA terrorist transporting the device and injuring eight others.
1996The 1996 Hammersmith Bridge bombLondon, EnglandA major bomb that could have caused catastrophic damage failed to explode properly in west London.
1999The 1999 London nail bombings3London, EnglandA series of nail bombs in London caused the deaths of three people, including an unborn child.
2000The 2000 MI6 attackLondon, EnglandThe SIS Building in Vauxhall, Lambeth was attacked using a Russian-made RPG-22 anti-tank rocket. Striking the eighth floor, the missile caused superficial damage. The Anti-Terrorist branch of the Metropolitan Police attributed responsibility to the Real IRA.
2001The 2001 BBC bombingLondon, England of high explosive had been placed in a red taxi and left near the main front door of BBC Television Centre, on Wood Lane in the White City area of West London. Just after midnight, police were attempting to carry out a controlled explosion on the bomb when it went off. Staff had already been evacuated after a coded warning. One person suffered cuts to his eye caused by glass debris. Damage included numerous smashed windows in the front entrance.
2001The 2001 Ealing bombingLondon, EnglandA car bomb containing of explosives in Ealing Broadway, West London, England, injuring seven people. Apart from the damage caused directly by the explosion, around £200,000 of further damage to property in the adjacent Ealing Broadway shopping centre was caused by flooding from a ruptured water main.
2005The 7 July 2005 London bombings56London, EnglandFour suicide bombers detonated explosives in camping rucksacks on three underground trains and a double-decker bus, resulting in the deaths of 52 people.
2005The 21 July 2005 London bombingsLondon, EnglandFour attempted bomb attacks disrupted part of London's public transport system two weeks after the 7 July 2005 London bombings causing 1 wounder. The 27-year-old Brazilian electrician Jean Charles de Menezes is shot dead by mistake by police. The perpetrators of this attack are heavily condemned.
2007The 2007 London car bombsLondon, EnglandTwo unexploded car bombs were discovered in London. The first device was found in a car parked near the Tiger Tiger nightclub in Haymarket. Two large gas canisters and a large number of nails were found in the car. The second device was left in a blue Mercedes-Benz saloon in nearby Cockspur Street, but was not discovered until after the car had been towed away for illegal parking.
2007The Glasgow Airport attackGlasgow Airport,
Paisley, Renfrewshire,
Scotland
A day after the failed car bomb attacks in London, an attack at Glasgow International Airport occurred. A flaming Jeep Cherokee was driven into the entrance of Main Terminal. Two men, one alight, fled the vehicle before being apprehended by a combination of police officers, airport security officers and witnesses. One of the men died in the following months due to injuries sustained in the attack. New barriers and security measures have been added to prevent a similar incident from taking place.
2017The 2017 Manchester Arena bombing22Manchester, EnglandA terrorist attack took place at the Manchester Arena on 22 May 2017, where singer Ariana Grande was performing.
2017The 2017 London Bridge attack8London, EnglandAn Islamic terrorists attack on the evening of June 3, 2017, causing 8 deaths and 48 wounders; the three assailants Khuram Shazad Butt, Rachid Redouane and Youssef Zaghba are shot dead.
2017The 2017 Finsbury Park attack1London, EnglandA white pickup truck drives on worshipers leaving a mosque in North London, killing 1 and injuring 10. The perpetrator, Darren Osborne whose investigation shows that he acted out of racism, is sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum tariff of 43 years with simultaneous terms for murder and attempted murder.
2018The 2018 Westminster car incidentLondon, EnglandA terrorist attack on August 14, 2018 injuring three people in front of the British Parliament near Westminster by Salih Khater, the 29-year-old male British citizen, of Sudanese origin. Khater was due to stand trial on 4 February 2019, but in January 2019, Mr Justice Sweeney pushed the date back to 24 June 2019. The defendant entered not guilty pleas to all charges, but did not provide any further comments. Khater was remanded in custody.
2019The 2019 London Bridge stabbing2London, EnglandA terrorist attack on November 29, 2019, killing two young people committed by Usman Khan; he has been convicted of terrorism.
2020The 2020 Streatham stabbing1London, EnglandSudesh Amman stabbed two people whilst being surveyed by specialist police before being shot and killed, resulting in one other civilian being injured from shattered glass. Sudesh Amman was released from prison two weeks prior to the attack.
2020The 2020 Forbury Gardens stabbings3Reading, Berkshire, EnglandOn 20 June 2020 shortly before 19:00 BST, a man with a knife attacked people socialising in Forbury Gardens, Reading, Berkshire, United Kingdom. Three people died from their wounds, and three others were seriously injured. A 25-year-old Libyan man was arrested nearby shortly afterwards on suspicion of murder, and subsequently under the Terrorism Act 2000.

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