Teenager pleads guilty to murder of 'sweet' 12-year-old walking home from school

Teenager pleads guilty to murder of 'sweet' 12-year-old walking home from school

WATCH: West Midlands Police confirm Leo Ros, 12, was fatally stabbed ‘as he walked home through country park’

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GB NEWS

George Bunn

By George Bunn


Published: 29/01/2026

- 13:22

Updated: 29/01/2026

- 15:10

Leo Ross was fatally stabbed in the stomach at The Shire Country Park in Hall Green, Birmingham

A teenager has pleaded guilty to murdering 12-year-old Leo Ross in Birmingham last year.

Leo Ross was thought to have been coming home from his school in Hall Green, Birmingham, when he was attacked.


The teenager, who cannot be named for legal reasons, entered his plea today at Birmingham Crown Court.

Leo was described in a family statement released shortly after his death as an "amazing, kind, loving" boy.

The youth, who was 14 at the time of the killing and is now 15, also admitted two counts of causing grievous bodily harm with intent and assault occasioning actual bodily harm in relation to previous attacks on separate victims, as well as having a bladed article on the day he killed Leo.

He denied assault occasioning actual bodily harm and assault by beating in relation to two other people and those charges were ordered to lie on file.

Subsequent police inquiries established that the knife used to kill him was thrown into a nearby river, while the youth responsible, riding a bike, had previously hunted down and attacked several women in local parkland.

An inquiry by West Midlands Police also found that the killer opted to hang around to talk to officers at the murder scene, falsely claiming he had stumbled across Leo lying fatally injured beside the River Cole.

Leo Ross

12-year-old Leo Ross was stabbed in the stomach while walking from school in the Hall Green area of Birmingham

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WEST MIDLANDS POLICE

It also emerged that Leo had no connection with his attacker and was subjected to what senior officers believe was a completely random and unprovoked stabbing.

Bodycam footage was played to Birmingham Crown Court showing the moment the killer posed as a Good Samaritan after claiming he found the dying Leo and raised the alarm.

The defendant’s guilty pleas were entered more than six months after a trial was postponed to allow psychiatric experts to assess the defendant.

Judge Paul Farrer KC said sentencing would be set for February 10 and would likely last the full day.

\u200bFlowers placed near the scene in Scribers Lane, Hall Green

Flowers placed near the scene in Scribers Lane, Hall Green

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PA

Birmingham Crown Court

Today's hearing took place at Birmingham Crown Court

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Judge Farrer told the defendant: "I can’t sentence you today for a number of reasons.

"You will be sentenced on February 10 and you will be brought from wherever you are being kept to Birmingham where you can speak to your lawyers.

"In the meantime you are remanded into youth detention."

\u200bA mural dedicated to Leo Ross

A mural dedicated to Leo Ross

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PA

Jonathan Roe, from the Crown Prosecution Service, said: "This was a senseless act of violence that has devastated a family and robbed a 12-year-old boy of his life.

"Leo Ross should have had his whole future ahead of him, and he should have been able to walk home from school without harm.

"It seems unimaginable that a 14-year-old would use a knife to intend to murder another or seriously injure them causing their death, but that is what occurred on that day.

"The defendant’s guilty plea today means Leo’s loved ones have at least been spared the ordeal of a trial. Our thoughts remain with them as they continue to cope with this unimaginable loss.

"There are no excuses for carrying a knife and I hope this case serves as a reminder of the devastating consequences of carrying and using knives."

Anti-knife crime street art on Scribers Lane in Birmingham,

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PA

Leo’s birth mother, Rachel Fisher, said: "My son Leo was the sweetest, most kind-hearted boy. He didn’t have a bad bone in his body.

"My baby’s life was stolen for no reason whatsoever. My life will never be the same again without him. He will be loved and missed forever."

In a statement released through West Midlands Police, a spokesman from Leo’s foster family said: "Not a day goes by where we don’t think about Leo. His loss has impacted us deeply and his absence is felt constantly.

"Leo was the sweetest, kindest boy who put others before himself. He was loved by all that knew him, he made friends with everyone he met, young or old. He was wise beyond his years, full of knowledge and facts, full of life. A life cut short by a senseless act.

"We hope justice is served and we can get some closure, whatever the outcome, it still does not give Leo his life back, the life he truly deserved to live to its fullest."

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