Teenager who threw boy, 6, from Tate Modern 100ft balcony jailed for life

Jonty Bravery has been sentenced after throwing a six-year-old boy from the Tate Modern viewing platform. (PA)
Jonty Bravery has been sentenced after throwing a six-year-old boy from the Tate Modern viewing platform. (PA)

An autistic teenager who told police he wanted to be "on the news" after throwing a six-year-old boy from the Tate Modern viewing platform has been jailed for life.

Jonty Bravery, 18, who admitted attempted murder of the child in December last year, appeared at the Old Bailey via video link on Friday, wearing wearing a white T-shirt and dark shorts.

The court was told Bravery “laughed and shrugged” when he was shown the CCTV of the incident.

Prosecutor Deanna Heer said: "He said he wanted to be on the news so that everyone, especially his parents, could see what a mistake they had made by not putting him in hospital."

Court artist sketch of Jonty Bravery being sentenced by Mrs Justice McGowan as he appeared in court at the Old Bailey via videolink. (PA)
Court artist sketch of Jonty Bravery being sentenced by Mrs Justice McGowan as he appeared in court at the Old Bailey via videolink. (PA)

Heer said Bravery had conducted a variety of searches including, "Are you guaranteed to escape prison if you have autism?", "What are the chances of death if you push into the River Thames?" and a web page entitled "How to get away with rape."

A report into Bravery's behaviour, carried out after the incident, found "his callousness and the striking lack of emotional empathy... is not typical of autism but is more typically found in psychopathy".

The teenager was jailed for life, with a minimum term of 15 years to be served.

Bravery sat with his T-shirt pulled over his head, then crouched on the floor next to the chair with his back to the videolink camera as details of the case were read out.

Emergency crews attending a scene at the Tate Modern art gallery, London, Sunday, Aug. 4, 2019. London police say a teenager was arrested after a child "fell from height" at the Tate Modern art gallery. The Metropolitan Police Service said on Twitter that the child was taken to a hospital in an air ambulance, adding "We await an update on his condition." (Yui Mok/PA via AP)
Emergency crews attending a scene at the Tate Modern art gallery following the incident in August 2019. (AP)

Sentencing Bravery, of Ealing in west London, Justice McGowan said: “The fear he (the victim) must have experienced and the horror his parents felt are beyond imagination.

“You had intended to kill someone that day – you almost killed that six-year-old boy.”

McGowan said Bravery’s autism spectrum disorder (ASD) did not explain the attack, and acknowledged how expert evidence confirmed he posed “a grave and immediate risk to the public”.

“You will spend the greater part – if not all – of your life detained… you may never be released,” she added.

Bravery said he wanted to highlight his apparent discontent with his treatment for a host of mental health issues when he committed the offence in front of horrified onlookers at the London tourist attraction on 4 August last year.

Bravery, pictured in a court sketch from a previous hearing last year. (PA)
Bravery, pictured in a court sketch from a previous hearing last year. (PA)

CCTV footage showed Bravery, then 17, looking over the edge of the 100ft high art gallery balcony, 10 storeys up, before seizing the young victim by the limbs and hurling him over the edge.

Bravery then sought out Tate staff and confessed: "I think I've murdered someone, I've just thrown someone off the balcony.”

He told police he heard voices in his head telling him to kill or injure someone.

The victim, on holiday in London with his family at the time of the attack, suffered a bleed to the brain, fractures to his spine and broken legs and arms.

Bravery had confessed to psychiatrists that he had researched online for the easiest way to kill someone.

Court artist sketch by Elizabeth Cook of the 17 year old appearing at the Old Bailey in London charged with attempted murder after allegedly throwing a six-year-old boy from a viewing platform at the Tate Modern art gallery.
Bravery appeared at the Old Bailey in London charged with attempted murder. (PA)

Among the terms he searched for were “Guaranteed ways to go to jail”, and “Where can I buy sulphuric acid in Northolt?”

Bravery later told police he had to prove a point "to every idiot" who said he had no mental health problems - and asked if the incident was going to “be on the news”.

He said: "I wanted to be on the news, who I am and why I did it, so when it is official no-one can say anything else."

During the trial, defence counsel Philippa McAtasney QC said her client was immature, and that it “beggars belief” that he was deemed suitable to go out unsupervised.

She pointed out that Bravery’s parents “abhor” what their son did and cannot forgive him - but also feel “let down by the system”.

Emergency crews attending a scene at the Tate Modern art gallery, where a teenager has been arrested after a child fell from height and has been taken to hospital from the gallery in central London by air ambulance.
Emergency crews attend the scene at the Tate Modern art gallery in August 2019. (PA)

Following sentencing, a spokesman from Hammersmith & Fulham Council said a serious case review had been ordered.

It said: “We wish to extend our sincere sympathies to the young child and his family after the terrible event at Tate Modern in August 2019.

“We have been pleased to learn of the progress the child is making. A serious case review is under way. We are co-operating fully and will learn from the findings.”

Bravery's victim, who cannot be named because of a reporting restriction due to his age, suffered a bleed to the brain, spinal fractures, and broken legs and arms.

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Police officers overlook from the viewing platform at the Tate Modern art gallery, following the arrest of a 17-year-old male on suspicion of attempted murder after a six-year-old boy was thrown from the tenth floor viewing platform.
Police officers overlook from the viewing platform at the Tate Modern art gallery, following the arrest of Jonty Bravery. (PA)

The latest update on a GoFundMe page, which has raised more than £200,000 for the boy's medical treatment in his native France, said he remained in a wheelchair and had problems eating, speaking and moving, but was continuing to make progress.

The update, posted on behalf of his family on May 15, stated: "There is still a long way to go but we are holding on."

A victim impact statement from the victim's parents, taken six months after the incident, said they had not left their son's side at all, other than for just a couple of hours.

They only returned to the family home on rare occasions to collect belongings. Either they, or a grandparent, stayed with him overnight in hospital.

A picture shows the viewing platform level of the Tate Modern gallery in central London on August 5, 2019. - A six-year-old boy thrown from a tenth-floor viewing platform at London's Tate Modern gallery is no longer in a life-threatening condition, police said Monday. A 17-year-old boy arrested following the incident on Sunday afternoon remains in custody, on suspicion of attempted murder. (Photo by Tolga Akmen / AFP)        (Photo credit should read TOLGA AKMEN/AFP via Getty Images)
The viewing platform level of the Tate Modern gallery. (Getty)

Describing Bravery’s actions as “unspeakable”, the couple said: “Words cannot express the horror and fear his actions have brought up on us and our son who now, six months on, is wondering why he’s in hospital.

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“How can he not see in every stranger a potential ‘villain’ who could cause him immense pain and suffering?

"We have been so scared of losing him that now it is impossible for us to spend more than a few hours away from him."

In a series of social media posts, which have since been deleted, Piers Bravery – the father of the defendant – attempted to raise awareness of autism and its treatment.

In one tweet sent to health secretary Matt Hancock, less than three months before the incident, Mr Bravery said: "Yes, @MattHancock, you do have a duty.

Police, ambulance crews and fire crews are seen outside the Tate Modern gallery in London on August 4, 2019 after it was put on lock down and evacuated after an incident involving a child falling from height and being airlifted to hospital. - London's Tate Modern gallery was evacuated on Sunday after a child fell "from a height" and was airlifted to hospital. A teenager was arrested over the incident, police said, without giving any details of the child's condition. (Photo by Daniel SORABJI / AFP)        (Photo credit should read DANIEL SORABJI/AFP/Getty Images)
Police, ambulance crews and fire crews are seen outside the Tate Modern gallery after it was put on lock down and evacuated. (Getty)

“You are a public servant so do your job and stop more children dying and being abused in these repugnant institutions.”

No members of either the victim’s or Bravery’s family were present in court during sentencing on Friday.

Bravery, who has autistic spectrum disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder and who is believed to have a personality disorder, pleaded guilty to attempted murder last December.

He was living in supported accommodation and had autism, and received specialist care following an assault on a female care worker in October 2017, but was "frequently aggressive to staff".

He was also abusive and failed to comply with boundaries and lashed out at staff every "six weeks or so", prosecutor Deanna Heer said.

He has been held at Broadmoor Hospital since mid-October.