Sarah Everard – Wayne Couzens Presented Himself as Family Man

The murder of Sarah Everard was one of a violent deaths that galvanised concerns over women’s safety

After the murder of Sarah Everard, vigils were held in cities across the UK, both as a memorial and as a protest to highlight the steps women are forced to take to stay safe.

Her death by a police officer walking down a busy London street at 9:30 p.m. prompted thousands of girls and women to share their experiences and fears.

A Home Office survey on dealing with violence against women and girls was resumed following the murder of Sarah Everard and received more than 160,000 responses.

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Activist Karen Ingala Smith, who heads a project called Counting Dead Women, says 109 women have died in violent circumstances in the UK so far this year, with the suspect or suspects being men.

These cases include 28-year-old elementary school teacher Sabina Nessa, who was killed on September 17 while walking to a bar near her home in Kidbrooke, southeast London.

Delivery driver Koci Selamaj, 36, of Terminus Road, Eastbourne, East Sussex, appeared before the judges earlier this week for his murder.

Additional investigations include the death of 45-year-old Maria Rawlings, who was beaten and strangled on her way home from Romford hospital, east London, in May. Valentin Lazar, 20, from Barking, east London, has been charged with her murder.

Agnes Akom, who died in May after disappearing from her home in northwest London (Metropolitan Police / PA)

The brothers had stayed together at Fryent Country Park, Wembley, in northwest London after meeting friends to celebrate Miss Henry’s 46th birthday when Hussein repeatedly stabbed them both.

The teenager from Guy Barnet Grove, Eltham, South East London, was convicted of his murders earlier this year but has yet to be sentenced.

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