A man who drove four teenagers on a revenge mission that led to two best friends being murdered in a case of mistaken identity has been handed two life sentences.
Mason Rist, 15, and Max Dixon, 16, died after being stabbed by the teenagers in a frenzied attack outside Mason’s home on Ilminster Avenue in Knowle West, Bristol, on 27 January.
Antony Snook, 45, tried to claim he had been oblivious to the plan, but a jury rejected this defence and found him guilty of the murders.
Riley Tolliver, 18, and three boys, aged 17, 16 and 15, were also found guilty of murder and will be sentenced on 16 December.
Sentencing Snook at Bristol Crown Court to a minimum of 38 years in jail, the honourable Mrs Justice May told him there had been multiple opportunities to “stop this madness, to lock the car doors”.
“You were so weak and cowardly to lend yourself to the revenge scheme of others,” she said.
She added it was “impossible to fathom” why he had agreed to drive the four boys in his car to the area.
“You would have experienced the atmosphere in that car. Felt the blood lust. Mason and Max, tragically in the wrong place at the wrong time,” she said.
Tolliver and the three youngest defendants, who cannot be named for legal reasons, had been driven to and from Knowle West by Snook.
Max and Mason were wrongly identified as being responsible for bricks being thrown at a house in the Hartcliffe area earlier that evening.
CCTV cameras outside Mason’s home captured Snook’s Audi Q2 pulling onto Ilminster Avenue, where the four youngest defendants then jumped out, wielding large machetes.
The friends were ambushed in an attack that lasted just 33 seconds, while Snook sat waiting in his parked car with the lights off.
The teenagers then got back into Snook’s car, which performed a U-turn in the street and sped away, leaving the boys collapsed in the street.
The friends died in hospital within 15 minutes of each other in the early hours of the next morning.
‘Unbearable pain’
During the sentencing hearing, victim personal statements prepared by the mothers and sisters of Max and Mason were read to the court.
Ray Tully KC, prosecuting, summarised the statement from Nikki Knight, the mother of Mason, describing how the attack on her son took place outside their home.
“She, as a mother, feels she failed to protect her son. That is a thought that will stay with her,” he said.
“Ultimately, she says when trying to find words to put her emotions and feelings down on paper, it is an impossible task.”
Leanne Ekland, Max Dixon’s mother, told the court she had rushed to the road where her son was stabbed and cradled him as he lay fatally injured on the pavement.
“He looked at me and said he wanted to sleep, he was so pale,” she said.
“The pain was unbearable. I knew then my life had been changed and my heart ripped out. I have never felt so much pain.”
Chloe Rist, Mason’s sister, told the court how their family had been overprotective of him “because he was so vulnerable and harmless”.
“I beat myself up that I didn’t stop him going out,” she said. “I couldn’t think of a worse a way to go than be stabbed to death.”
Ms Rist described how she could no longer play tag with her children after seeing her little brother “run for his life” on the CCTV footage, and felt unable to return to their family home just feet away from the crime scene.
Max’s sister, Kayleigh Dixon, broke down in tears as she addressed Snook directly in court.
She said: “I want you to know that you killed me that day. I can’t sleep. I want you to know how much you have traumatised me.
“I do not believe I will fully recover and I hope that justice will be served, and you will spend the rest of your life suffering.”