Nineteen-year-old Mia Campos-Jorge was found guilty of manslaughter over the death of Anthony Marks in August 2024

A Tottenham teenager is among three “drug runners” sentenced to a total of more than 23 years for the “vicious” killing a man in August 2024.
Anthony Marks, aged 51, was hit with a car bonnet before being chased down, stamped on and beaten with a gin bottle in a vicious county lines retribution attack.
He was found by Metropolitan Police officers with serious injuries to his face and arms at King’s Cross Station at around 5.25am on Saturday, 10th August 2024. He died from his injuries in hospital a month later on Saturday, 14th September.
Photos from the night show the teenagers – who can now be named as they are aged over 18 – posing for selfies both before and after they carried out the brutal killing.
Met detectives secured the conviction after tracking the assailants across CCTV footage, identifying suspects from across London and tracing the drug gang through forensic analysis of mobile phones to piece together the events of the night.
Jaidee Bingham, aged 16 at the time of the attack and known as ‘Ghost’, Eymaiyah Lee Bradshaw-McKoy, then aged 16, and Mia Campos-Jorge, then aged 17, were convicted at the Old Bailey on Thursday, 30th October 2025.
Bingham, now aged 18 and of Merrielands Crescent in Dagenham, was found guilty of murder. He was sentenced to a minimum of 16 years. Eymaiyah Lee Bradshaw-McKoy, now aged 18 and of Longford Walk, Lambeth, was found guilty of manslaughter. She was sentenced to three years and eleven months. Campos-Jorge, now aged 19 and of Milton Road in Tottenham, was found guilty of manslaughter and sentenced to three years and six months.
Detective Inspector Jim Barry, who led this investigation, said: “This is a particularly callous murder that gives an insight into the ruthless brutality of county lines gangs.
“The ages of Bingham, Bradshaw-McKoy and Campos-Jorge are particularly shocking. But the fact that they were teenagers does not excuse their violent actions as part of a drug line that has brought fear and intimidation to London’s streets.
“They believed they had escaped justice, even posing for selfies together and laughing about what they had done. There is a sense of justice that officers were able to use these to place them at the scene of the crime.
“This verdict shows how the Met is taking the fight to criminal gangs and committed to getting justice for their victims.”
Bingham, Bradshaw-McKoy and Campos-Jorge started their work for the ‘county lines’ drug gang on the evening of Friday, 9th August 2024. After one of the girls was robbed, Bingham was tasked with finding out who had taken the drugs. They believed Marks knew what had happened and confronted him at 5am on Saturday, 10th August.
After an altercation, he was chased from Argyle Street to Whidbourne Street by Bingham and Bradshaw-McKoy, with CCTV footage showing Bradshaw-McKoy wielding long object, believed to be a car bumper.
In a brutal attack, Marks was repeatedly kicked and hit over the head with a glass bottle. They only left when a member of the public chased them off, armed with a cricket bat.
Police found Marks covered in blood in King’s Cross Station later that morning, after he stumbled into the transport hub for help.
Met officers were able to interview Marks and use CCTV to create a detailed picture of the night when he was attacked. In the following days, they located the teenage suspects at their homes across south, north and east London, and seized their mobile devices.
Images and video footage placed them together at an apartment streets from the scene, with messages between them appearing to reference the incident.
Officers were then able to secure footage that tracked them from the crime back to the apartment, building the case that led to their conviction.
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