Jimmy Mizen’s killer posted twisted new clips to TikTok and Instagram showing the convicted criminal rapping in a luxury car one month after he was recalled to jail.
Jake Fahri returned to prison in late January after he was found to have boasted about his 2006 killing of Mizen, then 16, at a Southeast London bakery. The 35-year-old had served 14 years behind bars for killing the teen before his release on licence in 2023, and was returned to prison in January after it was discovered he was the face behind masked drill rapper TEN, whose lyrics contained mentions of Jimmy’s killing.
Despite being one month into a year-long recall, videos have continued to surface on TEN’s account, with six posts added since he returned to a cell last month. The continued online presence has ignited fears that he could be attempting to rebuild his rapping career, and led to calls for him to be taken offline.
The new videos show a nasked Fahri, who killed Mizen after he threw a large glass that shattered and severed an artery in his neck, rapping from inside a car as blue and red lights flash outside. In one clip, he can be heard saying: “Never been afraid to die, he said the same, they called his bluff.”
And in another he appears to defend YouTuber Yung Filly, Andres Barrientos, as he awaits trial for rape in Australia. Jimmy’s mum, Margaret, said Fahri’s continued posting feels “a bit like he and his friends are taunting us”, and called for his internet presence to be axed for good.
Fahri was returned to prison last month after his unmasking as TEN brought increased scrutiny on his music, which was featured on BBC1Xtra 18 months after his initial release on licence. Lyrics on his tracks, which were featured on streaming platforms like Spotify and YouTube, included twisted lyrics about his killing of Mizen.
In one track, he rapped: “Stuck it on a man and watched him melt like Ben and Jerry’s. Sharpen up my blade I’ve got to keep those necessary. Stay alert and kept it ready, any corner could be deadly. Judge took a look at me, before the trial even started he already knows he’s gonna throw the book at me.”
And in another he says: “See a man’s soul fly from his eyes and his breath gone… I wanted more, it made it less wrong. Seeing blood spilled same floor he was left on.” The HM Prison and Probation Service told the BBC following the revelations that it was investigating the content “as a priority”, with a spokesperson adding: “We take any material that could glorify violence or distress victims extremely seriously.”
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