Man who murdered rugby player outside nightclub jailed for life
Jake Hill hid a hunting knife in a hedge by a nightclub then used it to attack multiple people outside.
A carpenter who stabbed four people with a knife and then murdered a man who intervened to protect others has been jailed for life with a minimum term of 28 years.
Jake Hill, 25, attacked five people in around 20 seconds outside the Eclipse nightclub in Bodmin, Cornwall, shortly after 3am on April 30 last year.
Truro Crown Court heard Hill had stashed a serrated hunting knife in a hedge nearby before entering the club, removing it again as people left at closing time.
Mother-of-two Tia Taylor, 22, punched and kicked Mr Riddiough-Allen, continuing after Hill inflicted a fatal stab wound to his abdomen. Mr Riddiough-Allen died at the scene.
During his trial, Hill claimed he acted in self-defence but a jury rejected this and convicted him of one count of murder and four counts of wounding with intent.
Taylor admitted charges of manslaughter and perverting the course of justice when their trial was underway. A third defendant, Chelsea Powell, 22, was convicted of perverting the course of justice.
She paid tribute to Mr Riddiough-Allen as a “man of exceptional qualities” who had stepped forward to protect others despite seeing that Hill had a knife.
The judge said: “Mr Allen’s death and the wounding of four other individuals all came about, Jake Hill, because of your decision to carry a knife on the evening in question.
“The knife you carried was particularly dangerous. It was a hunting knife with an extremely sharp cutting edge and a serrated area along the top of it. You had absolutely no reason to be carrying such a knife.”
The court heard Hill had bought the knife a few days before he used it, wearing it in a sheath on a belt diagonally across his chest.
“You liked the feel and image of being a hard man,” the judge told Hill. “In that, you were wholly misguided.”
Mr Riddiough-Allen had been celebrating his rugby team’s end-of-season party with friends, with the group going on to the nightclub.
A fight broke out, which did not involve Mr Riddiough-Allen or Hill, after the club closed at around 3am on April 30 and people made their way outside.
CCTV cameras captured Hill running across the road and looking for his knife in the hedge before heading straight into the fight with Taylor and Powell following behind.
Liam Phillips was stabbed in the abdomen by Hill, with Ryan Burger stabbed in the thigh. Burger survived the injury after a bouncer applied a tourniquet around his leg.
Hill also stabbed Rhiannon Tompsett in the leg and Ryan Parsons in the chest.
“There could be no justification for pulling your knife and deliberately, as the jury found, stabbing four people.
“Mr Allen was described by all who knew him as a gentle giant. He was loved and adored by all who knew him.
“His willingness to help others was evident to the end. Mr Allen was not involved in the disorder that night but it is clear from the CCTV footage that he could see that you were.”
“Mr Allen didn’t jump back or run from you. He stepped forward and took hold of you in what I am sure was an attempt to prevent you from hurting anyone else.”
Taylor punched and hit Mr Riddiough-Allen as he lay on the floor, including after Hill had moved away.
Hill, Taylor and Powell then left the scene. He tried to flush the knife down the toilet at Taylor’s home before hiding it in a kitchen vent.
Hill, who had been hiding in the loft, fell onto the landing when police were inside and was arrested.
In a witness statement to the police, Powell provided false information about what had happened that night. She was acquitted of charges of murder and manslaughter by the jury.
She said: “We are incredibly proud of Michael. His nature to protect others was evident. There’s not a moment that goes by that we don’t think about him.”
Speaking after the case, Detective Inspector Ilona Rosson from Devon and Cornwall Police, said: “Michael Riddiough-Allen tried to protect those around him and disarm a man who felt the need to carry a knife.
“In doing so, he tragically lost his life. This case highlights the devastation and irreversible damage that carrying and using a knife can cause. No good can come from it.”