Car recovered in Jayden Moodie murder probe after moped stabbing
Detectives had been searching for a car with "extensive front damage" and say their discovery is a "significant development".
Thursday 10 January 2019 06:31, UK
Police hunting the killers of a 14-year-old boy who was stabbed to death have recovered a car believed to have been used to knock him off his moped.
Jayden Moodie was killed in Leyton, east London, on Tuesday evening in what police have described as a targeted attack.
Detectives said a car knocked the teenager off his moped, then three males got out of the vehicle and stabbed him before getting back in and driving off.
The car was thought to have "extensive front damage".
A black Mercedes B Class has now been recovered in Leyton and is being tested by forensic teams.
Detective Chief Inspector Chris Soole said: "We are treating the recovery of the car as a significant development in our enquiries, which are still very much in their early stages."
Officers found Jayden with fatal injuries after being called to a road traffic collision shortly before 6.30pm.
Paramedics tried to save the boy but he was declared dead at 7.09pm. His next of kin have been informed.
Zoe Grant, Jayden's godmother, told Sky News she was "numb" and "shocked".
Jayden was "full of life, fun loving, a ray of sunshine", she said, adding: "There needs to be more police on the streets and more for youngsters to do. The violence is out of hand."
Levi Clayton, 27, said Jayden often visited his home in Nottingham.
He told Sky News that while Jayden could be quiet, he was "confident" with his friends.
He added: "When you're brought up around certain people in a certain area you know you can't escape the crowd - it's how it is.
"He went through a typical teenage stage. It was better for him to be here (Nottingham). He wanted to be a bit of a bad boy. He wanted to be flashy."
Anthony Anderson, a mechanic who works in the area, said he gave Jayden "fatherly advice".
He said the boy often dropped in to his garage to get his bike fixed, and described him as a "very nice guy" who had a mature attitude and seemed older than 14.
"He's somebody I really spoke to a lot, tried to get him off the street, tried to just get him to go to school," he said. "It really, really hit me when I heard last night."
Detective Chief Inspector Larry Smith said police officers were doing "everything we can" to catch those who carried out the attack.
"Everything that we have learned about this attack so far indicates it was targeted and intent on lethal force from the outset," he said.
Around a fifth of homicide victims in London last year were teenagers, most of whom were stabbing victims. The youngest victim last year was 15.
The borough of Waltham Forest, where the killing happened, is due to receive £3m over the next four years for programmes preventing gang crime and violence.
Chief Superintendent Richard Tucker said the age of the victim "beggars belief" and had "shocked and appalled" the community.
A section 60 order has been put in place in the area to allow officers to search anyone for weapons.
Claire Coghill, the leader of Waltham Forest Council, described the incident as a "tragedy that will be felt right across our borough in all our communities" and appealed for witnesses to come forward.