Knife wholesaler surrenders 35,000 āzombieā blades
A knife wholesaler whose weapons have been used in several killings has surrendered more than 35,000 āzombieā blades.
Police said the knives and machetes were designed to ākill and maimā.
Under a government surrender scheme Luton-based Sporting Wholesale will receive Ā£10 compensation for each knife.
The company said it would not comment.
Supt Alex House, who leads on knife crime for Bedfordshire Police, said the knives and machetes had āno other useā than as weapons.
āThereās no other practical use for them,ā he told the BBC. āIf you look at the designā¦ the purpose is to kill and maim.ā
Zombie knives were first banned in 2016 but a new, broader definition designed to outlaw more blades will take effect in England and Wales on 24 September.
From then it will be illegal to own a knife with a sharpened blade longer than 8in (20cm), if it also has other features, including:
- A serrated cutting edge
- More than one hole in the blade
- Spikes
- More than two sharp points in the blade
The weapons will be shredded and their metal recycled by a specialist company.
Mr House added that it was a āhorrific amount of knivesā.
āThe fact that we have now got them all here and they are going to be destroyed will absolutely save lives.ā
Sporting Wholesale imported knives in bulk and sold to retailers. It owns the knife brand Anglo Arms, which the company admitted in 2021 had gained a āreputation with gangsā.
The company said earlier this year that āover the last five to six years knife crime has increasedā. It added āas a resultā¦ we reduced the Anglo Arms range to cover practical and traditional knives onlyā.
Eddy Eliaz is the firmās managing director and major shareholder.
His younger brother Adam Eliaz is the director and major shareholder in DNA Leisure, an online retailer, located on the same industrial estate. DNA Leisure also surrendered 1,542 knives.
Both companies announced in June they would no longer sell knives, beyond their current stock.
A post on Sporting Wholesaleās website said āafter supplying the trade with cutlery and archery products for over 20 yearsā it was āsaddened to say that Sporting Wholesale Ltd are now ceasing the sale of these itemsā.
It added one final shipment of the products was due to be delivered ābut no new orders will be placedā.
āThis is all quite unfortunate, but the UK is now not a place where these items can be openly sold,ā it continued.
The move followed press coverage the previous month of the sentencing of Rayis Nibeel and an accomplice for the murder of Omar Khan in Luton.
In 2023 Nibeel had bought 79 knives and machetes from DNA Leisure despite being only 16. He used a family memberās ID to buy the blades online over 13 separate transactions.
DNA Leisure said that Nibeel had committed āfraudā and the company had used an āage-verified courierā to make the deliveries.
The knife that killed Mr Khan was sold as part of a pair by DNA Leisure, which described them as the āAnglo Arms bayonet style fixed blade knife setā. In April this year, a similar set was being sold for Ā£29.95 by DNA.
A wound from an Anglo Arms machete killed 14-year-old Gordon Gault after an attack in November 2022 in Newcastle. Two teenagers were jailed for manslaughter.
A murder trial also heard how an Anglo Arms bullet lock knife was used to fatally stab Joshua Clark and Haidar Shah in Halifax in October 2023.
Of those attacks, only the weapon used to murder Omar Khan is being outlawed.
There has been criticism that the new ban, which was designed by the previous Conservative government, does not go far enough.
On 9 September, the Labour government held a summit at Downing Street focused on knife crime. It said it was considering a further ban on ninja swords and making it harder to buy dangerous weapons online.
Bedfordshire Police said it is also working to tackle a black market, which could be bolstered by the stricter ban.
Det Insp Graham Newton, from the forceās anti-gangs unit, said while the zombie knife law change was welcome, he was aware that ālike other prohibited items, there will be some people that try to make a criminal gainā.
He promised that detectives would be as āinventiveā in trying to catch illegal sellers as the sellers themselves.
āWe need to stop the knives at source and then stop the violence happening on the street.ā
Si Philbert, a youth practitioner with Wingman Mentors and St Giles Trust, said while the new ban was ānot enoughā it was āa startā and āoverdueā.
Wingman works with Bedfordshireās Home Office-funded Violence and Exploitation Reduction Unit to try to prevent knife crime.
āIf zombie knives didnāt exist,ā Mr Philbert, 49, added, āweād still have a problem with knife crime.ā
Mr Philbert said ānine times out of 10ā young people carry knives out of fear.
He said he encouraged young people to āchange their environmentā from a āwar zoneā to a āsafer spaceā¦ where they donāt feel like they need to protect themselvesā.
āIf you can prevent them from picking up a knife in the first place, itās better than just banning the knives.ā
The zombie knife surrender scheme is open until the end of 23 September.
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