This is the dramatic moment one of the Huntingdon train stabbing suspects is tasered and arrested by armed police – as he was heard to shout out: ‘Kill me, kill me.’
The shocking mobile phone footage was taken by a taxi driver who was near the front of the station waiting to pick up a passenger at the rail station in Cambridgeshire.
Video shows the man being tasered as five armed cops tackle him to the ground – while a police dog and its handler can also be seen.

The Taser can be heard pulsing as officers shout ‘give me your f***ing hands’ as they try to put him in handcuffs.
British Transport Police received reports of multiple stabbings on the train at 7.42pm yesterday before officers raced to the scene in Huntingdon in eight minutes.
A 32-year-old black male and a 35-year-old black male of Caribbean descent were arrested by Cambridgeshire Police when officers stormed on board. Both men are British nationals.
Superintendent John Loveless, speaking at the scene today, told of 11 people had been treated in hospital and two remained in a ‘life-threatening condition’, while four had been discharged.
Officers have also today said there was ‘nothing to suggest this is a terrorist incident’.

This is the dramatic moment one of the Huntingdon train stabbing suspects is tasered and arrested by armed police
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This is the dramatic moment one of the Huntingdon train stabbing suspects is tasered and arrested by armed police

Video shows the man being tasered as five armed cops tackle him to the ground - a police dog and its handler can also be seen

Video shows the man being tasered as five armed cops tackle him to the ground – a police dog and its handler can also be seen

The force has declared the attack a 'major incident' (Pictured: The train sitting at the platform on Sunday morning)

The force has declared the attack a ‘major incident’ (Pictured: The train sitting at the platform on Sunday morning)

British nationals confirmed as suspects in Huntingdon train stabbings

Police had at one point declared Code Plato, a word used by police and emergency services when responding to a ‘marauding terror attack’ – but this declaration was later rescinded, BTP confirmed.
Viorel Turturica, 42, the taxi driver who captured the footage, said before the man was arrested he was shouting ‘kill me, kill me, kill me’ to the officers.
The taxi driver said: ‘I had arrived at the station pick up point at 7:41 pm and was waiting for a passenger.

‘As soon as I see the passenger a few minutes later, I then see everybody running out of the station.
‘Then, 10 seconds later, a man dressed in black holding a huge kitchen knife in his hand runs past my car at 7.47pm.
‘The police arrive seconds later and I could hear him shouting, “Kill me, kill me, kill me” to them.
‘They then taser him and as soon as he is down they say to him, “Drop your weapon” – that’s when I started recording.
‘I didn’t understand the gravity until after I left the area and saw the huge police presence. I was shocked and then I knew it was bad.’
Another picture shows several ambulance staff treating a victim outside the station.

Viorel Turturica (pictured), 42, the taxi driver who captured the footage, said before the man was arrested he was shouting 'Kill me, kill me, kill me' to police officers

Viorel Turturica (pictured), 42, the taxi driver who captured the footage, said before the man was arrested he was shouting ‘Kill me, kill me, kill me’ to police officers

An aerial view of the train station as well as police presence at the scene on Saturday night

An aerial view of the train station as well as police presence at the scene on Saturday night

Forensic police officers attend the scene at Huntingdon station on Sunday morning following the major incident  the previous evening

Forensic police officers attend the scene at Huntingdon station on Sunday morning following the major incident  the previous evening

Harrowing video of scene after Huntingdon ‘terror’ attack

The LNER journey was going as planned when, just after departing Peterborough station at 7.30pm on Saturday, what the mass stabbing attack began to unfold.
The usual buzz of a Saturday night train became louder and more disorienting for Olly Foster, who told the BBC that when he first heard people shouting ‘run, run, there’s a guy literally stabbing everyone’ he thought it might have been a cruel Halloween prank.
Passengers were seen hiding in train toilets to escape the rampage, the Times reported, after a man with a large knife made his way through a carriage.
There was ‘blood everywhere’, a witness said, amid growing distress as people tried to flee to safety.
An emergency alarm was pulled and the train driver brought the Class 800 Azuma to a halt in the quiet Cambridgeshire town of Huntingdon.
Mr Foster, who told BBC News the incident ‘felt like forever’, said at first he did not notice the blood on the red seat moquette fabric, but as people began to panic he found his hand was ‘covered in blood’.
There was also ‘blood all over the chair’ on which he had leaned.
One of the victims is thought to be an older man, who Mr Foster told of seeing deliberately getting in an attacker’s way to shield a younger girl from the knife – sustaining injuries to his head and neck as he did so.

Superintendent John Loveless from British Transport Police speaks to the press at Huntingdon Station on Sunday morning

Superintendent John Loveless from British Transport Police speaks to the press at Huntingdon Station on Sunday morning

Passenger Olly Foster, who was in coach H, described how he was listening to an audiobook when a man 'suddenly ran past screaming "Run! Run! There's a guy stabbing literally everyone and everything"'

Passenger Olly Foster, who was in coach H, described how he was listening to an audiobook when a man ‘suddenly ran past screaming “Run! Run! There’s a guy stabbing literally everyone and everything”‘

Emergency responders at Huntingdon Station in Cambridgeshire after a number of people were stabbed

Emergency responders at Huntingdon Station in Cambridgeshire after a number of people were stabbed

Superintendent John Loveless, from British Transport Police, provided an update on Sunday morning while speaking at the scene in Huntingdon.
He said: ‘It’s a shocking incident and first and foremost, my thoughts are with the family and friends those who have been affected and those who are injured.’
Supt Loveless told today how 11 people had been treated in hospital and two remained in a ‘life-threatening condition’, while four had been discharged.
He said: ‘Ten people were taken to hospital by ambulance and another person self-presented later that evening.
‘While nine were initially believed to have life-threatening injuries following assessment and treatment four, thankful to say, have been discharged.
‘However, two patients remain in a life-threatening condition.’
A passenger, who gave his name as Gavin, told Sky News he saw an ‘extremely bloodied’ victim who collapsed on the carriage floor.
By 7.39pm, Cambridgeshire Constabulary police had been called, with British Transport Police (BTP) on its way by 7.42pm.

A forensic investigator pictured carrying a bag full of evidence on Sunday morning as investigations continue

A forensic investigator pictured carrying a bag full of evidence on Sunday morning as investigations continue

Eyewitness says Huntingdon train attackers were ‘stabbing everyone’

Sirens wailed through the November night with ambulance crews and firefighters also called to the scene.
Ben Obese-Jecty, the MP for Huntingdon, said he had ‘never seen as big a response’ to an incident.
Armed police were seen running down the platform at the station, trying to safely evacuate passengers and neutralise any ongoing threat.
After one suspect was shot with a Taser by police, a passenger told Sky News: ‘Essentially, as they got closer to him, started shouting, like, “Get down, get down”.
‘He then was waving a knife, quite a large knife, and then they detained him. I think it was a Taser that got him down in the end.’
Forensic officers in white coveralls were seen taking photographs of the scene on Saturday night, where two people were arrested.
The train still sat stationary at Huntingdon on Sunday morning, as emergency services tried to piece together what exactly happened.
Officials said inquiries into establishing the ‘full circumstances and motivation’ were still ongoing.

Police on the platform by the train at Huntingdon station in Cambridgeshire after the mass stabbing

Police on the platform by the train at Huntingdon station in Cambridgeshire after the mass stabbing

Objects lie scattered on the ground at Huntingdon Station following a series of stabbings on a train

Objects lie scattered on the ground at Huntingdon Station following a series of stabbings on a train

Witness details the scene on train where people were stabbed

Chief Superintendent Chris Casey said: ‘This is a shocking incident and first and foremost my thoughts are with those who have been injured this evening and their families.
‘We’re conducting urgent enquiries to establish what has happened, and it could take some time before we are in a position to confirm anything further. At this early stage it would not be appropriate to speculate on the causes of the incident.
‘Our response is ongoing at the station and will be for some time. Cordons are in place and trains are not currently running through the area, and there are also some road closures.
‘I thank the public for their patience and their cooperation this evening which has already greatly assisted our policing response. We will update you again as soon as we have more information.’
Anyone with information who hasn’t already spoken to police is asked to contact BTP by texting 61016 quoting reference 663 of 01/11/25.