Horrific police body cam footage shows the moment 18-year-old Henry Nowak shouted âI canât breatheâ as he was arrested on the ground after being stabbed by a knife-obsessed Sikh man.
The innocent victim begged officers to call an ambulance after being knifed six times by stranger Vickrum Digwa, 23, who used an eight-inch ceremonial dagger to carry out the murder in Southampton city centre last December.
Digwa did not know the teenager, but told a âwicked lieâ about him to the first officers on the scene, claiming Mr Nowak shouted racist abuse, punched him and knocked off his turban.
The injured student was then arrested as he lay dying on the ground, drowning in his own blood.
Newly released footage shows the teenager saying four times, âIâve been stabbedâ, to which one policeman replies, âI donât think you have mateâ.
Officers pull Mr Nowak along the ground as he continues to beg for help, telling them he cannot breathe at least seven times before he is ordered to place his hands in the cuffs.
The student died from drowning in his own blood shortly after his wrongful arrest, Southampton Crown Court heard.
The footage also shows Digwa â who was sentenced to 21 years in prison yesterday â telling police that his victim had not been stabbed. A female officer replies: âI know, but we have to check donât we.â

Police body cam footage shows innocent victim Henry Nowak, 18, being forced into handcuffs by officers after he was stabbed repeatedly by a knife-obsessed Sikh man

Murderer Vickrum Digwa is seen lying to police as he tells them the teenager ripped off his turban in a racist attack
Henry was a finance student at the University of Southampton and was described as âkind and talentedâ by his family

An image issued by the Crown Prosecution Service shows the eight-inch ceremonial dagger used by Digwa
The video begins with police arriving at the scene, as Digwaâs father Moga Singh holds Mr Nowak upright while he is slumped against a house.
The killer â who claimed he had been the victim of a racist assault â tells the officers present that he has been injured and points to his eye.
Digwa is seen in the video without his turban on and tells police it is because Mr Nowak tore it off in a violent attack.
However, the court was previously told that the murderer had the turban on after stabbing his victim and must have taken it off himself before police arrived.
Judge William Mousley KC said he was âsureâ Mr Nowak never said anything racist to the murderer.
Last night Reform UK leader Nigel Farage reposted the video on social media, describing it as âthe most shocking footage of discrimination that you will ever seeâ.
âA white boy being handcuffed by police officers more concerned by an accusation of racism than an act of murder. This must be a turning point. White lives matter too,â he said.
Robert Jenrick also reposted the footage, which he described as âharrowingâ, saying: âHe was the victim, but treated like a criminal.â
After the killerâs sentencing, Mr Nowakâs family criticised police for letting him die without âdignityâ.
Mark Nowak, the teenâs father, said âjustice alone is not enoughâ, adding that the way his son was treated, compared to Digwa, was âunbearableâ.
âLet me be absolutely clear â we hold Vickrum Digwa solely and 100 per cent responsible for the brutal murder of our son,â the father said.
âBut Henry should not have died on the streets of Southampton in police custody. The way he was treated was inhumane and degrading.
âHis murderer, however, was afforded decency. He was believed. He was not handcuffed when arrested. He was not handcuffed when transported to the police station. As far as we understand, he was never handcuffed at all.
âAnd, as Vickrum Digwa himself told the court, while under arrest for Henryâs murder, police even took him to the kitchen so he could choose his food. The contrast is unbearable.â

An image released by the CPS of killer Digwa wearing a Sikh kirpan ceremonial knife

The knife used by Digwa is pictured after he murdered his 18-year-old victim


Last night Robert Jenrick and Nigel Farage reposted the video on social media

Digwa, 23, was found guilty of murdering student Henry, 18, with an eight-inch ceremonial blade
As family members wept outside court, Mr Nowak addressed his son, saying: âI want Henry to know wherever he is we are so proud of him and we love him beyond words.â
The father called for a âfull, fearless and transparentâ investigation into the police handling of his sonâs murder.
MPs reacted with fury following Digwaâs conviction for murder last week, questioning how the killer was so easily able to dupe officers into arresting his dying victim â a blunder described as a âshocking example of two-tier policingâ.
He was jailed for life with a minimum term of 21 years, after a jury found him guilty of âaggressively pursuingâ Mr Nowak and stabbing him six times â including a chest wound 8cm deep.
Passing sentence, Judge William Mousley KC told the defendant that being able to wear a knife in public was a âprivilegeâ that came with a âhuge responsibilityâ, adding it was âfundamental principleâ of Sikhism that the knife was ânever to be carried for an offensive purposeâ.
Continuing his remarks to the defendant, he said of Mr Nowak: âI am sure that Henry said nothing racist.
âYou are the only person to make that claim and it is completely at odds with his previous character.
âYou have brought shame upon your family and your religion.
âYour actions have stirred up racial tension in Southampton and across the country which have made many Sikhs worried about their safety.â

Mark Nowak, Henryâs father, delivers a family statement outside Southampton Crown Court yesterday
Henryâs mother Lucy Ross looks emotional outside court after the sentencing of her sonâs killer
Henry pictured with his father Mark, who yesterday blasted police for how his son was treated in his final moments
Prosecutor Mr Lobbenberg earlier told the sentencing hearing: âHenry Nowak dying alone, humiliated and handcuffed was a direct consequence of Vickrum Digwaâs dishonesty.
âVickrum Digwa chose on two occasions to make videos, first of Henry fleeing and then of Henry dying with close-ups of his face. The Crown says that is both intrusive and humiliating.
âHis defence describing Henry as a violent drunk racist aggressor compounds the grief of the family.â
The court heard that the killer slept in a bedroom with an âarsenal of weaponsâ that he and his brother shared.
Digwa had a fascination with antique Sikh weaponry and even described the murder weapon in âloving termsâ when he was questioned about it.
Hampshire Police was last week forced to apologise to Mr Nowakâs family for arresting the fatally injured teenager.
Deputy Chief Constable Robert France told the Daily Mail: âIâm sorry that he was handcuffed and arrested.â
There are calls for the force to release bodycam footage of the arrest, while the Independent Office for Police Conduct is looking into how the officers acted.
The case has caused international outrage, with tech billionaire Elon Musk offering to fund a private prosecution against the police. It also raises questions about whether anti-racism training may be having a catastrophic impact on officersâ judgment.

Following the killerâs sentencing, the Nowak family released photos of Henry as a child

Henryâs father Mark said: âHenry should not have died on the streets of Southampton in police custody. The way he was treated was inhumane and degradingâ
The trial heard Mr Nowak was in his first term at the University of Southampton when he went for a night out in the city on December 3. The teenager headed home at around 11pm.
Jurors were told he was speaking to friends on Snapchat when he came across Digwa, who was âcarrying an extremely large knife in a sheath openly displayed over his clothingâ.
A video of the two men talking was found on Mr Nowakâs phone, which was discovered in his killerâs pocket.
In the clip, the teenager can be heard saying: âYouâre a bad man, say youâre a bad man, go on.â
Digwa replied: âI am a bad man.â The footage then cut off.
After the fatal blows were dealt, Digwa âaggressively pursuedâ and filmed his victim as he tried to escape. His brother, Gurpreet, then arrived and called 999, claiming his sibling had been âattacked raciallyâ.
Officers arrived soon after, at which point Digwa used his âtrump cardâ â accusing Mr Nowak of racism.
This was a âwicked lie about a dying manâ, Mr Lobbenberg told the jury.
Digwaâs obsession with weapons was obvious for several years before the fatal attack, with a video obtained by the Daily Mail showing the killer, left, putting on a demonstration with ceremonial knives at a Sikh event
In the 30-second clip, Digwa can be seen performing a âGatkaâ with his older brother Gurpreet, right

Sources in the local Sikh community said Digwa and his brother were briefly Gatka teachers, but they had abruptly cut ties with him over concerns they had about his behaviour
Last week, the Daily Mail revealed that Digwaâs obsession with weapons was obvious for several years before the fatal attack, with a video from 2023 showing him putting on a demonstration with ceremonial knives at a Sikh event.
In the 30-second clip, Digwa can be seen performing a âGatkaâ with his older brother Gurpreet.
A Gatka is a Sikh weapons demonstration and both Digwa and his brother were described as âteachersâ of Gatka.
Sources in the local Sikh community said Digwa and his brother were briefly Gatka teachers, but they had abruptly cut ties with him over concerns they had about his behaviour.
The video, filmed in May 2023, shows them sparring with knives and small shields in front of a crowd of onlookers at an event in London.
Digwa can be seen picking up a knife and a shield from an array of weapons on the floor and using circular motions to jab the knife into his brotherâs shield.
The two can be seen dressed in traditional Sikh clothing and turbans, jumping from side to side as they continue to hit each otherâs shields.
The footage will raise questions about whether enough was done to stop Digwa before his obsession with knives turned deadly.
Police and Crime Commissioner for Hampshire and Isle of Wight Donna Jones said she finds it âextremely disturbingâ Digwa was legally allowed to carry the eight-inch knife under religious exemption because he is a Sikh.
She said she had written to the Prime Minister about this aspect of this âshocking case that has ârocked the countryâ.
Speaking about the evidence that officers did not believe Mr Nowak had been stabbed, the commissioner said: âThis has been a catastrophic error. We need the IOPC to carry out their full independent investigation into the police handling of this call, how it came from the control room to the officers that were deployed, and what the officers did when they arrived on site.â
She said the âmisleadingâ call Digwaâs brother made to police claiming they had been âattacked racially by some white personâ did âlead to the complexity of those officers when they arrived on siteâ.
âNow as I say this is subject to an IOPC investigation and it is right and proper that that is carried out fully and I will be, as I said, reviewing and ensuring that any recommendations are implemented forthwith,â she added.


