
Investigations Reporters

The Constitutional Board said a report said one of Stephen Lawrence’s killers would now accept the attack on the black teenager.
David Noris was jailed in 2012 after denying that he was part of a racist attack on Stephen, 18, who was stabbed to death by a young white gang in Eltam, south of London.
The parliamentary immune system issued a decree on Thursday to hear the hearing of Noris’s parliamentary sitting in public.
In December, he obtained his parliamentary immunity after his term expired.
the Report Report “Recently, he said he had accepted that he was present at the scene and stabbed the victim but claimed he had not handed over the knife. He would not accept racist views,” he said.
The Conservative Board does not mention the nature of the reports.
Norris and Gary Dobson, two of the five main suspects in the murder, have been convicted under a joint factory law, which allows people to be convicted of murder, even if they have not been deadly.
Meet police have repeatedly said six people participated in the Stephen attack.
The other three other main accused – Locke Knight, and the Brothers of the Neil and Jamie Arkort – have never been convicted of the murder and have not always refused.
A sixth suspect named Matthew White died in by the BBC two years ago.
The MIT murder investigation was closed in 2020. Negotiations are currently being held for an independent review in this case, which began due to a series of Meet failures that were revealed by the BBC.

Noris, who was sentenced after the trial of Kon Bayle, had previously confessed to his role in the murder for any official authority or investigation.
Noris conducted an interview with an interview when he was arrested in 1993 at the age of 16 after the murder. In Stephen’s research in 1997, he refused to answer questions.
In 1998, he found in a general investigation into the murder, but the attack could not be asked directly. The following year, he conducted a television interview with ITV in which he refused to be part of the murder.
Noris was against his parliamentary immunity session in front of the people, but his parliamentary immune system decided against him. The Stephen family wanted the meeting to be heard in front of the people.
“He has done what is in the interest of justice to have a general session in this case,” said Peter Ruck K. “The many reasons that are in the interest of a public meeting are more than the points raised in the name of Mr. Noris,” he said.
The hearing is scheduled to be set later this year.
If Noris is released on a license, he can be returned to prison at any time if he violates his permits.