Two separate crimes have left London on edge. A 14-year-old boy was gunned down in broad daylight in Woolwich. Across the city, a Jewish volunteer ambulance service had four vehicles deliberately set ablaze. The Metropolitan Police is now pursuing active investigations on both fronts.
By London Daily Post Crime Desk · Updated: 6 April 2026, · Sources: Metropolitan Police, Counter Terrorism Policing London
London woke up this Monday morning carrying a grief it has not shaken since the weekend began. Two crimes, each devastating in its own right, have left residents, community leaders, and law enforcement facing hard questions about what is fracturing beneath the surface of the city. One killed a schoolboy who had barely begun to live. The other targeted the very people trained to save lives in a faith community already on high alert.
Boy, 14, Gunned Down in Woolwich
WHAT HAPPENED
On the afternoon of Thursday, 2 April 2026, Metropolitan Police officers were called to Lord Warwick Street in Woolwich at around 3:40 pm following reports of a shooting. Officers attended alongside the London Ambulance Service and found Eghosa Ogbebor, 14, with serious injuries. Despite the efforts of paramedics — including an air ambulance crew — he was sadly pronounced dead at the scene. He was a child.
What made this tragedy even harder to process was a significant error in how it was first reported publicly. The Metropolitan Police initially described the victim as a man in their press release. The correction — confirming the deceased was a 14-year-old boy — only came the following day. In UK law, the age of a homicide victim carries specific legal, procedural, and safeguarding obligations. Misidentifying a child as an adult, even briefly, is not a minor bureaucratic slip.
Eghosa Ogbebor was reportedly killed amid an alleged postcode war being waged by rival gangs in the area. Flowers were laid at the end of Lord Warwick Street in the days that followed. A forensic tent remained at the scene as officers worked through the weekend, collecting evidence.
“I know the concern this has caused within Woolwich and the wider community, particularly considering Eghosa’s young age. While we have made three arrests, our investigation continues, and I would urge anyone with any information to come forward.”
— Detective Chief Inspector Lucie Card, Metropolitan Police — leading the murder investigation
SIX ARRESTS — INVESTIGATION STILL ACTIVE
The Metropolitan Police moved quickly. By Sunday, 5 April, six people in total had been arrested in connection with the case. A 16-year-old boy and a 19-year-old man were detained in Woolwich on Saturday on suspicion of murder and remain in custody. A 46-year-old man was also arrested on suspicion of helping an offender evade justice and remains in custody. Three earlier suspects — aged 14, 16, and 18 — arrested on Friday, 3 April, were subsequently released on bail while enquiries continue.
An increased police presence remains across the Woolwich area. Residents reported scenes of armed officers on the streets near Woolwich Dockyard on Saturday night as further arrests were made. The murder investigation is ongoing and active.
| KEY FACTS — WOOLWICH MURDER (AS OF 6 APRIL 2026) |
| ▸ Victim: Eghosa Ogbebor, 14 — shot at Lord Warwick Street, Woolwich at 3:40 pm on 2 April 2026 |
| ▸ Pronounced dead at the scene; family supported by specialist liaison officers |
| ▸ Met Police initially misidentified the victim as a man — corrected the following day |
| ▸ Linked to an alleged postcode gang rivalry in south-east London |
| ▸ Six people arrested in total; two in custody on suspicion of murder |
| ▸ Three earlier suspects (aged 14, 16, 18) released on bail while enquiries continue |
| ▸ 46-year-old man in custody on suspicion of assisting an offender |
| ▸ Lead officer: DCI Lucie Card, Metropolitan Police Major Crime Unit |
| ▸ Anyone with information: call 101 quoting CAD 4848/2APR or Crimestoppers: 0800 555 111 |
Golders Green: Jewish Ambulances Set on Fire, Suspects Head to the Old Bailey
THE ATTACK
In the early hours of Monday, 23 March, four ambulances belonging to Hatzola — a volunteer-led Jewish emergency service operating in Golders Green, north-west London — were set on fire. Gas canisters stored inside the vehicles exploded as a result of the blaze. All four vehicles were destroyed. Hatzola serves vulnerable members of the Jewish community with rapid-response emergency care, and the attack struck at the heart of a service built entirely on voluntary effort and community trust.
Counter Terrorism Policing (CTP) London took the lead on the investigation almost immediately — a decision that reflects both the targeted nature of the attack and the specialist capabilities required. The incident has not been formally declared a terrorism matter, but CTP’s involvement signals that investigators consider the context of a Jewish community institution being deliberately torched to require their specific expertise.
Three suspects were subsequently charged: Hamza Iqbal, 20, and Rehan Khan, 19, both British nationals from Leyton, and a 17-year-old boy, a dual British and Pakistani national from Walthamstow. All three were charged with arson, being reckless as to whether life would be endangered under Section 1(2) of the Criminal Damage Act 1971 — an offence carrying a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.
A COURTROOM ARREST NO ONE SAW COMING
On the morning of Saturday, 4 April, Metropolitan Police officers attending Westminster Magistrates’ Court for the hearing of the three charged suspects spotted a 19-year-old man in the building whom they recognised as being connected to the arson attack. He was arrested on the spot — inside the court itself — for arson with intent to endanger life. It was an extraordinary moment that demonstrated the sheer pace and determination of the ongoing investigation.
The three charged suspects were remanded in custody at the Saturday hearing and are due to appear at the Old Bailey on Friday, 24 April. Two other men, aged 45 and 47, arrested in late March, have been released on bail until late April as enquiries continue.
| KEY FACTS — GOLDERS GREEN ARSON (AS OF 6 APRIL 2026) |
| ▸ Attack: 1:35 am, Monday 23 March 2026 — four Hatzola ambulances destroyed, gas canisters detonated |
| ▸ Hatzola is a volunteer Jewish community emergency service based in Golders Green, NW London |
| ▸ Counter Terrorism Policing London is leading the investigation; not declared terrorism |
| ▸ Charged: Hamza Iqbal (20, Leyton), Rehan Khan (19, Leyton), 17-year-old (Walthamstow) |
| ▸ Charge: Arson reckless as to whether life endangered — Criminal Damage Act 1971, s.1(2) |
| ▸ All three remanded in custody; next hearing at the Old Bailey on Friday 24 April |
| ▸ Fourth man (19) arrested inside Westminster Magistrates Court on 4 April |
| ▸ Two further suspects (aged 45 and 47) are on bail until late April |
| ▸ Armed police patrols remain in place around Golders Green and vulnerable sites |
What These Crimes Tell Us About London Right Now
These two incidents are not operationally linked. Detectives working the Woolwich murder and those pursuing the Golders Green arson are separate teams with separate lines of inquiry. But viewed alongside each other, they illuminate two of the deepest fault lines in London’s public safety landscape: youth violence rooted in territorial gang culture, and targeted attacks on minority community institutions.
The Metropolitan Police’s response to both has been visible and energetic. Six arrests in the Woolwich case within 72 hours are notable. The identification and charging of four individuals in the Golders Green case — including one arrested inside a courtroom — speaks to a determined investigative effort. But for a family mourning a 14-year-old, and for a community wondering whether their volunteer ambulances are safe to park on the street at night, speed of arrest is only part of what justice looks like.
| POLICE APPEAL — INFORMATION NEEDED
Woolwich Shooting: Call 101 quoting CAD 4848/2APR | Crimestoppers (anonymous): 0800 555 111 Golders Green Arson: Call 101 | Crimestoppers (anonymous): 0800 555 111 |




























