Digwa, 23, was handed a life sentence with a minimum of 21 years in prison on 1 June for the murder of Mr Nowak in Southampton, after falsely accusing the student of launching a racist attack.
A three-minute police body-worn video showed the 18-year-old being handcuffed moments before he became unconscious as he lay dying from stab wounds.
The case sparked outrage and violent protests amid claims the police had not believed Mr Nowak when he told them he had been stabbed.
Now, new police body-worn camera footage has been released, showing Digwa telling officers at the scene that Mr Nowak was drunk and had racially attacked him.
These comments were described in court as "wicked lies" about Mr Nowak, with Digwa's trial told that Mr Nowak's alcohol intake was below the drink-drive limit.
Digwa can also be heard denying any knowledge when asked about a wound suffered by Mr Nowak.
Separately, Hampshire Constabulary has confirmed that after being arrested, Digwa was not handcuffed apart from when he was being taken to and from court.
In the footage, Digwa says: "I was literally just walking in and I've seen [him]. He's then barged into me. I kinda said to him, 'Clearly, you're drunk'. I could smell, like you can smell the alcohol."
He adds that Mr Nowak called him a racial slur before saying to Digwa that he was a "bad man" and Digwa responded, "Yeah, I'm a bad man", as Mr Nowak started recording him.
He continues: "Obviously, then I just push him away, he's then grabbed me, then started grabbing my turban and pulled my hair, started grabbing my hair, he was, like, punching me and all that sort of stuff."
After Digwa is arrested on suspicion of attempted murder, he tells the officer: "I have been racially attacked."
A longer transcript of separate footage previously released by the Crown Prosecution Service showed the moment officers realised Mr Nowak had been stabbed.
In body-worn camera footage from the incident, Mr Nowak can be heard repeatedly saying: "I've been stabbed," to which an officer replies: "You've been stabbed?
"Whereabouts? Don't think you have, mate."
The officer later says, "he's saying he's been stabbed so let's just check him and see", and a female police officer calls for an ambulance, describing how Mr Nowak's pupils are not reacting before the video ends.
In the transcript of the footage, an officer identified as police officer one said: "I'm not sure he's breathing."
The officers uncuffed Mr Nowak and started CPR, with an officer cutting his clothing and police officer one asking if he has been stabbed there, with an unseen gesture, after seven minutes and 33 seconds.
The female officer replies: "Yes, he's got a stab… there's a mark there."
Police officer one continues CPR before telling a paramedic arriving on the scene that "we just discovered a stab wound in his chest". The recording ends after eight minutes and 49 seconds.
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It was released with no objection from Mr Nowak's family, and after consultation with Hampshire Constabulary.
The case has been referred to the police watchdog - the Independent Office for Police Conduct - to investigate the officers' actions.
Temporary Deputy Chief Constable Robert France, of Hampshire Constabulary, previously apologised on behalf of the officers for being unaware of Mr Nowak's injuries.
The jury inquest into his death next year at Winchester Coroner's Court will also look at whether any "act or omission by a police officer" caused or contributed to his death.
Rossi, originally from Rhode Island, was jailed last year for raping two women in Utah in 2008.
The Utah Department of Corrections said the 38-year-old was pronounced dead at a local hospital.
It said: "Rossi died from complications of an existing medical condition after choosing to discontinue medical treatment.
"This notification follows communication with Rossi's family and his victims."
It added: "Rossi was serving a cumulative sentence of 10 years to life for two counts of first degree felony rape."
Jurors found Rossi guilty of rape in August after a trial in which his accuser and her parents each took the stand.
Rossi left a "trail of fear, pain and destruction" behind him, the victim in the case told a court shortly before Rossi was sentenced.
"This is not a plea for vengeance. This is a plea for safety and accountability, for recognition of the damage that will never fully heal," she said.
He was first identified in 2018 after a decade-old DNA rape kit was examined.
How Rossi was caught
But in February 2020 - months after he was charged in one of the cases - an online obituary claimed he had died of non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
Rossi was arrested in Scotland the following year while being treated for COVID, after hospital staff recognised his distinctive tattoos - including the crest of a university he never attended.
A protracted court battle meant he wasn't extradited until January 2024, with Rossi claiming he was an Irish orphan named Arthur Knight who was being framed.
Investigators identified at least a dozen aliases that Rossi, whose legal name was Nicholas Alahverdian, had used to evade capture over the years.
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Mohammed Fahir Amaaz, 21, punched PC Lydia Ward in the face, knocking her down and breaking her nose, and assaulted PC Ellie Cook.
Amaaz was also convicted of the earlier assault of a member of the public at an airport Starbucks.
Reading a statement during Amaaz's sentencing hearing at Liverpool Crown Court, Ms Ward said: "I want you to take a good look at me."
"You chose to attack a female. You knocked me to the ground with one punch, with so much force you broke my nose.
"How would you feel if a male did that to your mother? How would you feel if it was your mother standing here today explaining how she was violently assaulted by a male?
"What you did was cowardly."
The incident happened at a car park pay area on 23 July 2024 after Amaaz and his 26-year-old brother, Muhammad Amaad, went to collect their mother from a flight.
Police were called after Amaaz went into Starbucks and headbutted Abdulkareem Ismaeil - who he claimed racially abused his mother on the plane.
The brothers resisted when officers tried to detain them and told the court they did not know they were being approached by police.
Prosecutors said Amaaz threw 10 punches, two elbow strikes and a kick, while Amaad aimed six blows at firearms officer PC Zachary Marsden.
Footage of a kick and stamp by PC Marsden on Amaaz was widely shared on social media in the days after the incident, sparking protests.
Days later a CCTV clip leaked to the media revealed that beforehand a number of punches were thrown towards the male firearms officer and his two female colleagues.
Ms Ward said: "What angers me is that afterwards, when only part of the footage was out in the public, you played the victim.
"You are not a victim. I am the one who was injured, not you. You had the whole world listening to you and you showed no remorse. Not one ounce.
"You allowed the public to feel sorry for you. You made out like we had done something wrong when all we were doing was our job."
Jurors at Liverpool Crown Court found Amaaz guilty of actual bodily harm to PC Ward, and of assaulting PC Cook and Mr Ismaeil.
Amaaz and Amaad were also charged with assaulting firearms officer PC Marsden, but the jury was unable to reach a verdict. Last month, a decision was made by the Crown Prosecution Service not to pursue a third trial.
The men claimed they acted in lawful self-defence, or defence of each other.
Bolton, now a prominent critic of the US president, pleaded guilty on Friday to a single count of illegally retaining classified information during a federal court hearing in Maryland.
The 77-year-old told the judge: "I'm sorry for it."
His plea agreement with the Justice Department may enable him to avoid time in jail, but that will be decided by District Judge Theodore Chuang at sentencing, which is set for 28 October.
The plea agreement recommends limiting any prison sentence to five years, and will also see Bolton pay a $2.25m (£1.7m) fine.
He can withdraw his guilty plea if the judge imposes a longer prison sentence or a larger fine.
Bolton had previously accused Mr Trump of attempting to "intimidate his opponents" after being criminally indicted.
How we got here
Bolton was charged last October with 18 counts of either retaining or disseminating classified information, including diary-like notes that he shared with relatives as he wrote a memoir about his time in government.
FBI agents searched Bolton's Maryland home and Washington DC office last August. However, the investigation began before Mr Trump returned to the White House in January 2025.
He had served for more than a year in President Trump's first administration before he was pushed out in 2019.
The following year, he published a book called "The Room Where it Happened" that presented an unflattering portrait of Mr Trump's leadership.
The Trump administration fought unsuccessfully to have the book's release blocked, claiming it contained classified information that could jeopardise national security.
Prosecutors said on Friday that no classified information was published in Bolton's book. Instead, Bolton's indictment focused on notes that he allegedly shared with his wife and daughter rather than the contents of the book.
After sending one document, Bolton wrote in a message to his relatives: "None of which we talk about!" In response, one of his relatives wrote, "Shhhhh," prosecutors said.
He originally pleaded not guilty to 18 criminal charges last year.
Sky News is not naming the woman or her husband as it would identify her.
The man, who is in his 60s and from the Stockport area, has been charged with 48 offences, which allege he drugged his wife to rape and sexually assault her on his own over more than two decades since 2004.
Between 2018 and his arrest last year, he allegedly plotted with other men to sexually assault and rape his wife while she was unconscious and invited them to carry out attacks with him.
He has pleaded guilty to 15 of the charges, including five counts of rape, three counts of sexual assault, six counts of assault by penetration and a charge of sharing intimate images over a three-year period between March 2022 and October last year.
Three of the rape charges and one of the assault by penetration allegations are said to involve other men. He denies the rest of the charges.
The identities of 13 other men, aged between 28 and 73, who face charges relating to the same alleged victim can be reported for the first time after a reporting restrictions order was lifted on Friday.
Keith Fotheringham, 59, from Dundee, has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to rape, conspiracy to commit assault by penetration, conspiracy to administer a substance and assault by penetration.
All of the other dozen men have denied the charges against them and face a 15-week trial at Manchester Minshull Street Crown Court from 1 September, alongside the husband.
They include Jonathan Kirk, 43, a senior paramedic, who denies conspiracy to rape, conspiracy to commit assault by penetration and rape.
Kirk, then 28, was pictured with Prince Harry during a visit to the Salford Ambulance Station in the wake of the 2011 UK riots.
All of the men are charged with various conspiracy offences and all but three are alleged to have also committed contact sexual offences along with the husband.
Karl Lindsay, 55, resigned as the CEO of Taunton Town FC around the time of his arrest in November last year.
He is accused of supplying the drugs used to incapacitate the alleged victim, organising the abuse and receiving photos and videos of the alleged attacks in return.
Lindsay has denied charges of conspiracy to rape, conspiracy to commit assault by penetration and conspiracy to administer a substance with intent to stupefy or overpower to allow sexual activity.
Daniel Rayner, 41, from Whitstable, Kent, and David Graves, 59, from Derbyshire, who are also not accused of any contact offences, have denied the same charges.
The other men are:
Graham Brougham, 73, from Northwich, Cheshire, who denies conspiracy to rape, conspiracy to commit assault by penetration and rape.
Philip Wild, 58, who used to own a taxi service and is from the Stockport area, who denies conspiracy to rape, conspiracy to commit assault by penetration, sexual assault, attempted rape and assault by penetration.
Mohammed Sabir, 28, a recruitment consultant from the Stockport area, who denies conspiracy to rape, conspiracy to commit assault by penetration and three counts of rape.
Sean Peers, 37, from the Stockport area, who denies conspiracy to commit assault by penetration and assault by penetration.
Jordan Wallace, 31, from Manchester, who denies conspiracy to rape, rape and attempted rape.
Alan Keelan, 42, who used to coach an under-16s football team and is from Greater Manchester, who denies conspiracy to rape and two counts of rape.
Richard Townsend, 37, from Greater Manchester, who denies conspiracy to commit assault by penetration and assault by penetration.
Robert Stewart, 70, from the Stockport area, who denies conspiracy to rape and two counts of rape.
Of the 48 charges on the indictment, 23 involve the husband alone, eight are conspiracy counts, and 17 relate to alleged contact offences with the husband and others.
He denies 33 charges, including:
• Four counts of conspiracy to rape.
• Three counts of conspiracy to commit commit sexual assault by penetration.
• One count of conspiracy administer a substance with intent to overpower to allow sexual activity.
• 11 counts of rape.
• Two counts of attempted rape
• Seven counts of sexual assault by penetration.
• Four counts of sexual assault.
• One count of administrating a substance with intent to stupefy or overpower to allow sexual activity.




