DID HENRY NOWAK’S KILLER STILL HAVE ANOTHER KNIFE WHEN HE WAS ARRESTED? NEW EVIDENCE RAISES DISTURBING QUESTIONS ABOUT WHAT POLICE MISSED

The murder conviction answered one question.

Vickrum Digwa killed Henry Nowak.

But the evidence now being discussed has opened another, deeply disturbing one:

Was Digwa still armed even after police had taken him into custody?

According to recent reports, Digwa, 23, was taken to a police station after the fatal stabbing of 18-year-old Henry Nowak in Southampton — and officers later discovered he was still carrying a kirpan, a Sikh ceremonial dagger. The revelation has triggered fresh outrage, not only because Henry had already died from stab wounds, but because it suggests police may have failed to fully search or secure the man who had just been arrested in a murder investigation.

Henry was stabbed multiple times with a large blade. Prosecutors said Digwa then gave officers a false account, claiming Henry had racially abused him and knocked off his turban. That false narrative helped shape the first chaotic minutes at the scene, where bodycam footage later showed Henry saying he had been stabbed and could not breathe while officers restrained him.

Now, the alleged discovery of another blade after Digwa’s arrest is forcing the public to look again at the killer’s preparation, mindset, and access to weapons.

Was the second blade part of his religious dress?

Was it overlooked during the arrest?

Or does it point to a wider pattern of weapon possession that should have raised alarms before Henry ever crossed his path?

The court heard that Digwa used a 21cm knife in the fatal attack, a blade he claimed to carry for religious reasons. Prosecutors rejected his self-defense story, and a jury found him guilty of murder. He was sentenced to life in prison with a minimum term of 21 years.

But the questions have not stopped.

Reports have also described Digwa as having a troubling history around weapons, including footage from years earlier allegedly showing him with what appeared to be an airgun. Other reporting has raised questions about previous warning signs and whether authorities could have acted sooner.

For Henry’s family, the most painful issue is not just that Digwa had a weapon.

It is that so many warning signs may have been missed.

A knife at the scene.
A false story to police.
A dying teenager treated as a suspect.
And now, a reported second blade discovered only after Digwa was already inside a police station.

The case has already sparked an official review into the police response, public anger over the bodycam footage, and renewed debate about knife laws, religious exemptions, and arrest procedures.

The public may never accept that this was simply one sudden moment of violence.

Because if Digwa was still armed after arrest, the question becomes much bigger than what happened on that Southampton street.

It becomes a question of what police failed to see before, during, and after Henry Nowak’s final minutes.