Man charged with murder after boy, 15, killed in Middleton e-bike crash - Guess what happened before

A man has been charged with murder after a 15-year-old boy was killed in a crash between an e-bike and a car in Middleton.

The teenager, later named as Devon Simmonds, died in the crash on Rowrah Crescent, in Langley, at around 11.55am on Tuesday (July 22). Emergency services attended, but the teenager was pronounced dead at the scene.

Floral tributes, along with handwritten cards, pictures and balloons have since been left at the scene. Dozens of youths were also seen gathered at the precinct on Tuesday evening, with fireworks let off in Devon's memory and tributes scrawled on walls in graffiti.


Greater Manchester Police have confirmed that Terrence King, 59, of Castlerrigg Drive, Middleton, has been charged with murder. He was remanded into custody to appear at Manchester Magistrates' Court on Thursday (July 24). He has been further remanded to appear at Manchester Minshull Street Crown Court on July 28.


A 15-year-old boy previously arrested on suspicion of theft as part of the wider investigation has been bailed pending further enquiries.

Greater Manchester Police are continuing to investigate the fatal crash and are asking witnesses to come forward with information by submitting it to the public major incident portal.

Detective Inspector Andrew Naismith, from GMP’s Major Incident Team, said: “This investigation is already moving at considerable pace and we have now secured a murder charge as part of our work.

“There is still much to do, and our officers are carefully combing through all available evidence to build a picture of the events of that day.

"I am aware of footage of the incident circulating online, and I would ask people to not share this footage due to ongoing proceedings, and out of respect for the boy’s family, who I would remind people are grieving at this time.

“As we continue with our investigation, I would urge anyone with information to please get in touch – either to GMP directly or via Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.”

Information can be provided through GMP's MIPP portal, or by contacting the investigation team on 0161 856 1995, quoting log number 1364 of 22/07/2025. You can also contact 101 or the Live Chat at gmp.police.uk

The independent charity Crimestoppers can also be contacted anonymously on 0800 555 111.

*Update*


Police have issued an update on an investigation into the alleged murder of a teenage boy who died when the e-bike he was riding was hit by a car.


Devon Simmonds-Caines, 15, died in the crash in Langley, Middleton on Tuesday morning. Terrence King, of Castlerrigg Drive, Middleton, has been charged with his murder.


The 59-year-old has been remanded in custody to appear at Manchester Minshull Street Crown Court on July 28. In an update on Saturday, GMP said the investigation into Devon's death is continuing, with extra patrols being introduced on the Langley estate.


The force also urged the public not to share videos of the incident on social media, saying it was 'aware of footage online purporting to show preceding events leading up to the incident – and which are not currently connected to the investigation'.


Chief Insp Jennifer Partington said: "The investigation into the death of Devon is continuing, with multiple officers working through all the relevant evidence in the case. We are aware of footage circulating online alleging to show immediate precursory events leading to the incident, and which we are not considering to be connected to the investigation at this stage.

"We would like to remind people that this is an active case and there is a grieving family, and would ask the community to not share footage or speculate on what is an ongoing investigation."

In a tribute released through Greater Manchester Police last night (Friday) Devon's family described the teenager as a 'bubbly person' who 'only wanted the best for everyone around him'.

They said: "Devon was an outgoing, bubbly person who always kept himself motivated even when he didn't want to be. Devon loved everyone that loved him and showed respect to everyone that respected him.

"He wasn't afraid to speak his mind and only wanted the best for everyone around him. When he would love, he would love really hard. He wasn't a show off kid and kept himself to himself.

"We as a family are grateful for the tributes being made to Devon and would like to thank the local communities for their support; from both those who knew Devon and those who didn't. We want peace and to remember Devon calmly, surrounded by his loved ones.

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Not what I was expecting based on the headline. That certainly was legally indefensible but big picture, the world is probably better place without that guy, it's not like he was going to turn his life around and win a nobel prize for curing cancer if he's running around with his hoodlum buddies robbing people with a machete. Teenagers getting into a little bit of trouble is one thing but running amok with deadly weapons robbing people, yeah I don't feel "oh no he was just a kid" when it ends in death.

When I say tearing around I mean it. There was a kid on a stand-up scooter doing like 35mph on the shoulder.

Some areas are lousy with these E bikes and scooters. I had the misfortune of being in Miami again for work recently and actually encountered one of the 12 o clock boys style mobs that was mostly E bikes but also had a couple of ATVs, just running rampant through the streets of downtown doing wheelies, burnouts, donuts, kicking cars. It was bedlam. I hate most big cities but Miami is a boiling hellhole and I hate it when I get stuck down there. I've actually seen a couple of dipshits on E bikes that are basically electric dirt bikes on hiking trails in the PNW lately. I suspect they figure nobody can catch them and because they're so quiet they're unlikely to attract ranger or police attention, I wouldn't be surprised if some militant tree hugger put a couple of dark colored ropes up across some of these trails. In the city you'll see people on these things ripping it up to no consequence, including the scooters which look extremely dangerous at the speeds I've seen them doing, literally keeping up with traffic on 40mph+ highways in metro areas.
 
why are e-bikes so associated with crime?
Like with many things criminals use, the price is probably right for what you get.

Way faster than running, in urban areas more than quick and small enough to dodge cops in traffic and alleys, probably more available to steal from some rich cunt that doesn't realize yet that rowdies are looking to steal their e-bike, depending on regulations it may even be something you don't need to tell the government about to buy, regulations may also dictate that being on a stolen e-bike vs a stolen motorcycle/car get punished WAY differently, quiet as a bonus, just off the top of my head.
 
You are seriously asking why a nigger stole a bike?
Who would have thought that the real cyberpunk dystopia would be niggers stealing electric bikes and trying to chop up Whites with swords, while the international electronic communication array tries to censor all footage of it. This is the lamest and gayest reality we could have had.
 
Who would have thought that the real cyberpunk dystopia would be niggers stealing electric bikes and trying to chop up Whites with swords, while the international electronic communication array tries to censor all footage of it. This is the lamest and gayest reality we could have had.
Isn't this basically the plot of Snow Crash?
 
The US has second-degree murder to cover incidents where a person is clearly too wound up to be thinking rationally, not sure if England has the same or not. Guy clearly steering into the thief would make a second-degree charge a slam-dunk for any prosecutor here.
similar thought but i would imaging the uk court is going to look for escalating circumstances in the event to determine intent / premeditation .
IE: ok you weren't in the car when your child was attacked if you were truly not thinking then you would of ran the man with the machete and ebike on foot but since you chose to enter your car and go through the steps to operate the vehicle and seek the person down will be hard sell especially when the legal system is already not in native Brits favor
 
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