The head of the Prevent -Terrorism program, Michael Stewart, has said that he will leave his role after a report in the Southport attack in which three young girls were killed, discovered that it had not stopped the murderer.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper was worried about the destructive assessment that a litany of missed opportunities found to kill the malignant Axel Rudakubana, it was reported today.
His knife attack on a class of young girls at a Taylor Swift -theme event in July led to the death of Alice da Silva Aguiar, Nine, Bebe King, six, and Elsie Dot Stancombe seven.
Ten others, including two adults, were injured in the attacks.

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper was worried about the damn assessment that a litany of missed opportunities found to kill the malignant Axel Rudakubana, it was reported today

The murders led to great unrest around the United Kingdom after false rumors circled that the suspect was a Muslim asylum seeker who had arrived in a small boat
Rudakubana, 18, was sentenced to life in prison with a minimum duration of 52 years in January.
A quick 'Prevent Learning Review' performed in the Southport attack showed that the murderer was marked three times before he spoke out murdered, and the concern about him was fired early because he had no fixed terrorist ideology.
Stewart was also taken into account for a controversial home officer assessment that suggested that police record non-crime reasons and the broadening of the definition of extremism.
He has now agreed to resign, reports the Times.
After the publication of the report, Minister of Home Office Dan Jarvis told the Commons that the government rejected the proposals.
The Minister of the Interior will explain a new framework to tackle extremism and hateful ideologies next year.
This is a crushing new story and is updated.