Fishmongers’ Hall survivor ‘played dead’ during terror attack, inquest told
Isobel Rowbotham was stabbed by Usman Khan in the attack on the afternoon of November 29 2019.
A survivor of the Fishmongers’ Hall terror attack has told how she “played dead” after Usman Khan stabbed her repeatedly and tried to “finish” her.
Convicted terrorist Khan, 28, killed Cambridge University graduates Saskia Jones, 23, and Jack Merritt, 25, on the afternoon of November 29 2019.
He injured three more people during a five-minute rampage at a Learning Together event before being shot dead by police on London Bridge.
Giving evidence at Guildhall in the City of London, Ms Rowbotham, a student at Anglia Ruskin University in Cambridge, said she had been in the foyer when Mr Merritt emerged covered in blood.
She said: “He was shouting that he had been stabbed. He was holding his stomach and had obviously been injured.
“There was a lot of blood. He was wearing a white shirt so the red blood was quite obvious. He was hunched and in a lot of pain.
“I looked around to my left and then I saw Usman (Khan) coming towards me with knives in his hands.”
Ms Rowbotham said he was a few metres away, holding two big kitchen knives and moving “purposefully”.
“He was not going to stop. I turned to my left and just tried to hunch and protect myself.”
When he stabbed her repeatedly it felt like being punched, she told jurors.
“I remember his final stabs were in my neck and it felt sort of like he thought they were final stabs, as in they were intended to finish me.
“I was on the floor and had closed my eyes but could still hear.
“I decided to play dead just in case he came back again and realised I wasn’t dead straightaway.
“I tried to slow down my breathing and blood flow as much as possible.”
Ms Rowbotham was given first aid before being taken to hospital, the court heard.
Housekeeping supervisor Ama Otchere came across Khan coming out of the men’s toilet with “anger in his face” after he had stabbed Mr Merritt.
As she backed away, he put his finger to his lips as if to tell her not to scream, the court heard.
Describing the attack on Ms Jones, Ms Otchere said: “As soon as he saw the lady came to the cloakroom he used the knife to stab the lady’s shoulder.
“The lady was screaming and I just ran from the scene.”
The witness said she believed Khan was reciting from the Koran in Arabic.
He told jurors: “I saw, looking down from the balcony, a female who was lying collapsed on that first flight of stairs with her head on the upper staircase and her legs below.
“I noted particularly that her face was chalk white. She appeared unconscious to me or perhaps even dead.”
Initially, Khan was “quite neurotic” and focused on his time in prison but went on to discuss writing and trying to visit his family during later conversations, the court heard.
The witness said: “He was quite a neurotic character as a baseline, very energetic.”
In a call the week before the attack, Khan seemed “a bit off”, jurors were told.
Mr Larmour said: “It was very short, normally he likes to talk a lot. It did seem like he wanted to get off the line as quickly as possible. He seemed a bit off.”
Mr Larmour said he discussed the call with a colleague, telling her Khan had seemed “a bit weird and depressed”.
On the morning of November 29, Mr Larmour had met Khan at Euston Station and escorted him to Fishmongers’ Hall.
Describing the attack that afternoon, Mr Larmour, who had found out about Khan’s conviction for preparing terrorist acts on a Google search, said he heard screams.
Mr Merritt walked towards him with blood on his shirt saying: “I just got stabbed”, the court heard.
Mr Larmour dropped his phone, jumped over a table and went into a reception area where he tended to Mr Merritt, the court heard.
Pc Kate Langtry told the court how she and her colleagues provided first aid to Mr Merritt at the scene.
She said: “He was very grey in the face, he was thrashing quite violently. I understood him to be severely injured at this stage.”
She went on: “There was no pulse and he was no longer breathing and we commenced CPR.
“He had gone from thrashing quite violently to now very still.”
After paramedics arrived, the officers took Mr Merritt outside on a stretcher.
Medics carried out open chest surgery in the street, but Mr Merritt could not be saved.
The inquest into the victims’ deaths was adjourned until Thursday.