Man jailed for murdering girlfriend Samantha Drummonds and her three family members

Joshua Jacques, fuelled by drugs and alcohol, said he stabbed the family to death ‘as a sacrifice’
Samantha Drummonds was killed in April 2022
PA Media
Miriam Burrell1 March 2024
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A man has been jailed for life with a minimum term of 46 years for the murder of his girlfriend Samantha Drummonds and three members of her family.

Joshua Jacques was sentenced at the Old Bailey on Friday for killing the family, which he claimed he stabbed to death as a “sacrifice”.

Jacques, 29, was fuelled by drugs and alcohol when he attacked Samantha Drummonds and her family with a knife in their home in Delaford Road, Bermondsey, south London, early on April 25 2022, the Old Bailey heard.

Police found the bodies of Ms Drummonds, 27, her mother Tanysha Ofori-Akuffo, 45, grandmother Dolet Hill, 64, and Ms Hill’s partner, Denton Burke, 58, after being alerted to a disturbance by a neighbour.

Officers found Mr Burke’s body at the foot of the stairs and the three women “heaped together” in the kitchen.

Armed officers discovered Jacques naked and lying in the upstairs bathroom in a praying position, screaming “Allah, take me!”, “Kill me now”, “Get rid of me”, and “God please forgive me”.

Later, at Lewisham Hospital, Jacques said: “I ain’t even in the wrong, I did them for sacrifice”, and also warned: “I will do something stupid again.”

He admitted manslaughter but denied murder on the basis that he was mentally unwell at the time.

An Old Bailey jury deliberated for two hours to find Jacques, from Minard Road, Lewisham, south-east London, guilty of four counts of murder.

Joshua Jacques, 29, killed Samantha Drummonds and her family in their home in Bermondsey, south London
PA Wire

Jacques committed a “horrific catalogue of murders” after abusing skunk cannabis, a judge told the Old Bailey.

Addressing Jacques in the dock, Mr Justice Bryan said he had inflicted the murders “in the most brutal of circumstances on three generations of the same family” after increasing his daily intake of skunk cannabis.

He said Jacques’ offending had been contributed to by cannabis abuse and that he was “well aware” of the impact of it on his mental health.

He added: “It is a salutary lesson to all those who peddle the myth that cannabis is not a dangerous drug.

“It is, and its deleterious effect on mental health and its potential to cause psychosis is well established.”