đ A CHILD WALKING HOME FROM SCHOOL. A LIFE TAKEN FOR NO REASON. Twelve-year-old Leo Ross should have been home in ten minutes. Instead, he never made it. Stabbed at random while walking through a Birmingham park, Leo became the youngest victim of knife crime in the West Midlands a gentle, kind boy who loved fossils, made friends everywhere, and âdidnât have a bad bone in his body.â Strangers tried to save him. Flowers now mark the path where he fell. His family, his school, and an entire community are left with a grief that will never fully fade. This wasnât gang violence. It wasnât provoked. It was senseless. And it stole a child who had his whole life ahead of him. Rest in peace, Leo. You should still be here.
A 15-year-old boy has pleaded guilty to murdering 12-year-old Leo Ross as he walked home from school in Birmingham last year.
The teenager, who cannot be named for legal reasons, entered his plea on Thursday at Birmingham Crown Court.
Leo was thought to have been making his way home from his school in Yardley Wood, Birmingham, when he was stabbed in the stomach on 21 January 2025.

At 12 years old, he is believed to be the youngest victim of knife crime in the West Midlands.
Leo Ross killer âenjoyed hurting peopleâ
Members of the public came to help him as he lay on a riverside path in a park and called the emergency services but Leo died in hospital.
His friend turned up but Leo never did.
His foster family described him as âthe sweetest, kindest boy who put others before himself.â
âHe was loved by all that knew him, he made friends with everyone he met, young or old,â they added.
Leoâs birth mother, Rachel Fisher, said her son âdidnât have a bad bone in his bodyâ.
âMy babyâs life was stolen for no reason whatsoever, my life will never be the same again without him,â she said.

Killer caught on camera at murder scene
The defendant, who was 14 at the time of the stabbing, also pleaded guilty to two counts of causing grievous bodily harm with intent and one of assault occasioning actual bodily harm, over separate attacks on three elderly women.
Those victims were pushed to the ground, hit by him and suffered serious injuries, the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said.
Detectives found the knife used in the stabbing had been thrown into a nearby river â the teenager pleaded guilty to possession of a bladed article.
Investigators also discovered 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 is believed to be the youngest victim of knife crime in the West Midlands
Leo had no connection to his attacker, police believe, and he was subjected to what senior officers described as a completely random and unprovoked stabbing.
The boy showed no remorse and gave no explanation during his interview, only saying âno commentâ when asked about Leoâs murder and the earlier assaults, police said.
The defendantâs 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 10 February and, in the meantime, the 15-year-old would be remanded into youth detention.

Acting head teacher Tim Boyes said Leo was lovable and bright
Leo was a pupil at Christ Church C of E Secondary Academy and Tim Boyes, their acting head at the time of the stabbing, said his death had a huge impact on staff and pupils.
He recalled the moment the school got a call to say a student had been stabbed.
âI jumped in the car and was at the scene whilst paramedics and police were just beginning to deal with the horrible crisis,â he said.
Boyes said he remembered Leo as âa quirky, lovable, bright, unusual little boyâ.
âFor a 12-year-old, he was quite young and he had a naivety and simplicity,â he said.
Boyes said unlike many boys his age who were into football, Leo was âpassionate about fossilsâ.
Flowers were left at the scene of the stabbing along with written messages which included saying Leo was âloved by many peopleâ and âour lives wonât be the same without youâ.
Speaking after Thursdayâs hearing, Jonathan Roe, from the CPS, called the stabbing a âsenseless act of violenceâ that ârobbed a 12-year-old boy of his lifeâ.
Det Insp Joe Davenport thanked members of the community who tried to save Leoâs life.
âThis was a heartbreaking and senseless attack on a young boy who was completely innocent,â he said.
At the hearing, the teenager also denied charges of assault occasioning actual bodily harm on 22 October 2024 and assault by beating on 29 December 2024 in relation to two more victims and those charges were ordered to lie on file.


