Elon Musk ratchets up outrage over Henry Nowak case when police handcuffed dying victim of Sikh killer as billionaire offers to pay for legal action against officers

Elon Musk has ignited a storm on social media surrounding the Henry Nowak case, as law enforcement faces criticism following the arrest of the dying teenager due to false racism accusations made by his Sikh assailant.

The 54-year-old tech mogul has shared multiple posts condemning both Hampshire Police and the media, pointing out the purportedly insufficient coverage of Mr. Nowak’s tragic killing on December 3, 2025.

Earlier this week, Vickrum Digwa, 23, was convicted of murder after fatally stabbing the university student with an eight-inch ceremonial knife as Nowak was returning home from a night out in Southampton.

During the trial at Southampton Crown Court, jurors were shown a video where Digwa is heard declaring himself a ‘bad man.’ Mr. Nowak’s response, ‘Are you a b…’, was abruptly cut off just before the attack occurred.

Digwa falsely accused Mr. Nowak of racism, misleading the police into arresting the mortally wounded teenager as he succumbed to his injuries, tragically drowning in his own blood.

The 23-year-old also perpetuated a ‘wicked lie’ in court, claiming self-defense. He alleged that Mr. Nowak had made a racist remark, knocked off his turban, and struck him, all of which were fabrications.

But his bogus claims were rejected by the jury, who later found him guilty of the unlawful killing of the ‘kind, intelligent and talented’ 18-year-old Southampton University student.  

Meanwhile, amid furious political backlash from the likes of Reform leader Nigel Farage over Mr Nowak’s death, Hampshire Police apologised for handcuffing the dying teenager.    

Deputy chief constable Robert France told the Daily Mail: ‘This case is an absolute tragedy. I’m sorry that Henry’s life couldn’t be saved that night, and I’m sorry that he was handcuffed and arrested. He was the victim.’

Similarly, the Crown Prosecution Service has also faced political backlash as their decision to drop efforts to prosecute two brothers who were filmed punching a policeman was branded ‘disgraceful’ and ‘completely wrong’. 

Prosecutors said they would not seek a third trial after two juries were unable to reach verdicts on whether Mohammed Fahir Amaaz and Muhammad Amaad had assaulted PC Zachary Marsden at Manchester Airport on July 23, 2024. 

Yet the officer could still end up in the dock himself over his attempted arrest of Amaaz, 21.

Meanwhile, Musk offered to fund a private prosecution against Hampshire Police after they arrested dying teen, Mr Nowak, sparking outrage online. 

Elon Musk (pictured on November 19, 2025) has ratcheted fury online over the murder of Henry Nowak after it emerged the teenager was arrested amid bogus claims of racism from his Sikh killer

Vickrum Digwa, 23, was found guilty of murdering student Henry Nowak, 18, with an eight-inch ceremonial blade earlier this week

Henry was a finance student at the University of Southampton and was described as ‘kind and talented’ by his family

Of Digwa’s allegations, Nicholas Lobbenberg KC, prosecuting, told the court that Digwa used racism as a ‘trump card’ to dupe police into arresting the wrong man during the trial – an action he described as a ‘wicked lie about a dying man’. 

The Southampton university student, who was in the first term of his accountancy and finance course, collapsed in the street soon after he was arrested by officers, dying from his injuries. 

The Independent Office for Police Conduct is now investigating the circumstances of Mr Nowak’s wrongful arrest. 

The teenager, who had been on a night out with friends from his football team, had decided to go home at around 11pm, and had ‘drunk less than the legal limit to drive’. 

Jurors were told he was speaking to friends on Snapchat when he came across Digwa, who was ‘carrying an extremely large knife in a sheath openly displayed over his clothing’.

The killer had trained with weapons since he was 12, and was ‘skilled’ with blades, prosecutors told the court, as it was alleged Digwa stabbed Mr Nowak thrice in the front and back during a street confrontation. 

Digwa chose to sleep in his bedroom with ‘an arsenal of weapons’ and was said to have a fixation with them, the court heard. He also spoke of the Kirpan – a type of ceremonial dagger carried by Sikhs with which he allegedly killed Mr Nowak – in ‘loving terms’.

Sikhs are legally permitted to carry a Kirpan knife in public in the UK under religious exemption laws.  

Digwa was discovered not only to have a small Kirpan around his neck, fulfilling his religious obligations, but a ‘Shastar’ blade, which is much larger in size at around eight inches long, the court heard.

Describing Digwa as a ‘man who likes weapons’ and ‘searches for them on his phone’, Mr Lobbenberg told the court of the killing: ‘He wasn’t at a temple, he had been helping with his brother’s work for Deliveroo.’

Meanwhile, a video of the incident was found on Mr Nowak’s phone, which was later discovered in Digwa’s pocket. 

In the video, played to the jury, Mr Nowak can be heard saying ‘Hello car’ and singing to himself before yawning, with the footage then cutting to show Digwa walking away from him.

Digwa used racism as his ‘trump card’, accusing Mr Nowak of racial abuse when police officers arrived so they would arrest the wrong man 

Digwa’s mother Kiran Kaur, 53, was found guilty of assisting an offender by stashing the murder weapon

Mr Nowak is then heard saying: ‘Innit bad man, what bad man. You’re a bad man, say you’re a bad man, go on.’

Digwa replied, ‘I am a bad man’, to which Mr Nowak replied: ‘Are you a b…’, before the footage cuts off.

Digwa’s father and brother went to the scene shortly afterwards, along with his mother, Kiran Kaur, who was captured on video footage taking the knife back to their family home.

Kaur was found guilty of assisting an offender and is set to be sentenced on July 17, while her murderous son will be handed his fate at Southampton Crown Court this upcoming Monday. 

Not only did Digwa tell the court ‘wicked lies’ of alleged racial abuse from Mr Nowak, but he also lied about the teenager being drunk, as he was under the legal limit of alcohol to drive, Mr Lobbenberg said.  

He told the court: ‘The biggest lie, ladies and gentlemen, is why he drew his knife. He told you from that witness box, Henry Nowak said he was going to kill me. He was going to f*** me up.

‘We suggest that was never said. You can be sure it was never said because why, if it had been said, would you not tell the 999 operator the most important thing as to why you acted.

‘He didn’t tell the police at the scene who were asking. He didn’t tell his brother when he was saying what happened.

‘If this was in the forefront of his mind, seared into his memory, why wouldn’t you tell someone?

‘Instead, he didn’t even put the threat to kill in his defence case statement. It came from him for the first time in the witness box.’

Mr Lobbenberg said that there was a stream of lies from Digwa starting from the minutes after the incident.

He said: ‘We say this, ‘drunk’ is a lie, ‘going to kill me’ is a lie and we say ‘P***’ is a lie. The consequence and purpose of these lies is significant.

‘Why he tells them is he is seeking to hide what he has done. And racism was his trump card to try to make sure what he had done was lawful.

‘We say that was a wicked lie about a dying man and it is a wicked lie about a dead man to you now.’

Describing Mr Nowak as an ‘unarmed young man with a phone’, the prosecutor said in his closing speech: ‘This is not a case about Sikhism. This is not a case about racism. This is a case about murder.’

Following the verdict, several politicians have criticised the police force for arresting Mr Nowak as he lay dying, with Farage describing it as ‘the most shocking example of two-tier policing [he has] ever seen’.

Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp also criticised the police’s actions, saying: ‘It is shameful that the police handcuffed Henry as he lay dying, especially as he told them he had been stabbed.

Reform MP Robert Jenrick has written to the home secretary expressing his concerns about the arrest of Mr Nowak while he was fatally injured

Reform MP Robert Jenrick has written to the home secretary expressing his concerns about the arrest of Mr Nowak while he was fatally injured

‘The police seemed more interested in cuffing someone accused of making a racist comment than in saving a dying man. They believed his attacker’s allegations of racism without critical assessment.

‘Henry’s last words were “I can’t breathe.” If he had been an ethnic minority, there would probably be protests and riots by now.’

Reform MP Robert Jenrick has written to Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood about the case, urging her to ensure the conduct of officers at the scene is fully investigated.

‘There are so many questions around this tragic death that require answers,’ his letter said.

‘So far, this case has been met with stony silence from the Prime Minister and the rest of your colleagues.

‘This is in marked contrast to how they responded to other incidents involving deaths involving the police, both in the UK and abroad. It is high time you found your voices and did the right thing.’

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