Teenagers who posed for selfies after killing homeless man jailed

Three teenagers who took a selfie after killing a 51-year-old homeless man outside King’s Cross station have been sentenced to a total of 23 years in prison.
Mia Campos-Jorge, 19, Eymaiyah Lee Bradshaw-McKoy, 18, and Jaidee Bingham, 18, repeatedly kicked Anthony Marks, beat him with a gin bottle, and hit him with a car hood in a retaliatory attack within county limits in August 2024.
Mr Marks died in hospital the following month from serious injuries to his face and arms.
In the photographs of the night, the young people, who were 16 and 17 years old at the time, were seen laughing before and after committing the murder.
Drug dealer Bingham, known as the Ghost, hit Mr Marks twice in the head with a glass bottle after he fell to the ground, causing the fatal injury.
Audio from the CCTV camera picked up male and female voices shouting: “Hit him again. Kick him. Do it again. Have you learned your lesson?”
As they fled in a car with fake license plates, video footage showed the young people in a celebratory mood and Bingham saying, “We destroyed a man today.”
The teenagers, then 16 and 17 years old, had started working in a drug organization in the district borders earlier that month.
After one of the girls was robbed, the attackers confronted Mr Marks, believing he knew the location of the stolen drugs.
As the argument escalated, the fight ended when one of the citizens chased the girls with a cricket bat.
Bingham, of Dagenham, was jailed for at least 16 years for murder following the mass conviction of the youths on October 30, 2025.
Campos-Jorge and Bradshaw-McKoy, from Tottenham and Lambeth respectively, were found guilty of manslaughter and both were sentenced to more than three years in prison.
Detective Inspector Jim Barry, the Met’s Northern Crime Specialist and leader of the investigation, said: “This is a particularly callous murder that shines a light on the brutal brutality of gangs in the borough.
“The ages of Bingham, Bradshaw-McKoy and Campos-Jorge are particularly shocking.
“But the fact that they were young does not excuse their acts of violence as part of the drugs pipeline that brought fear and intimidation to the streets of London.
“They believed they were escaping justice and even took selfies together and laughed at what they had done.
“There’s a sense of fairness that officers are able to use these to locate crime scenes.”




