How a cup of coffee led Paste BN to a sex offender on the run
After picking up a lead with a group of Algerians, Sky's Tom Parmenter and Josh Masters tracked down Brahim Kaddour-Cherif, 24, in the same part of the capital where another wrongly released offender was rearrested last month.
Saturday 8 November 2025 02:20, UK
It started with a strong espresso in a simple cafe on a side street in north London.
Several Algerian men were inside, a few others were outside on the pavement, smoking.
I'd been told the wanted prisoner might be in Finsbury Park, so I ordered a coffee and asked if they'd seen him.
They were happy to tell me that some of them knew Brahim Kaddour-Cherif - the 24-year-old offender who was on the run.
One of the customers revealed to me that he'd actually seen him the night before.
"He wants to hand himself to police," the friend said candidly.
This was the beginning of the end of a high-profile manhunt.
The Algerian convicted sex offender had been at large since 29 October, after he was mistakenly released from HMP Wandsworth in south London.
Within an hour of meeting the friend in the cafe, he had followed myself and camera operator Josh Masters to a nearby street.
We weren't yet filming - he didn't want any attention or fuss surrounding him.
"Follow me, he's in the park," the man told me.
"Follow - but not too close."
We did.
I was in the same park a few weeks ago after fugitive Hadush Kebatu, the Ethiopian sex offender - also wrongly released from prison - was arrested in Finsbury Park.
It was odd to be back in the same spot in such similar circumstances.
Read more on Tom's story:
Wrongly released prisoner's angry reaction
'I'm glad he's been arrested'
As he led us through the park past joggers, young families and people playing tennis, the man headed for the gates near Finsbury Park station.
All of a sudden, two police officers ran past us.
The Met had received a tip-off from a member of the public.
It was frantic. Undercover officers, uniformed cops, screeching tyres and blaring sirens. We were in the middle of the manhunt.
As they scoured the streets at speed, we walked by some of the Algerian men I'd seen in the cafe.
One man near the group was wearing green tracksuit bottoms, a beanie hat and had glasses on.
"It's him, it's him," one of the other men said to me, gesturing towards him.
The man in the beanie then quickly turned on his heel and walked off.
"It's him, it's him," another guy agreed.
The suspect was walking off while the police were still searching the nearby streets.
Josh and I caught up with him and I asked directly: "Are you Brahim?"
You may have watched the exchange in the Paste BN video - he was in denial, evasive and pretended the suspect had pedalled off on a Lime bike.
I can only guess he knew the game was up, but for whatever reason, he was keeping up the lie.
Moments later, one of the bystanders told me "it is him" - with added urgency.
Only the prisoner knows why he then walked up to the nearby police van - officers quickly moved to handcuff him and tell him why he was being arrested.
Over the next 10 minutes, he became agitated. His story changed as I repeatedly asked if he had been the man inside HMP Wandsworth.
Officers needed confirmation too - one quickly pulled out a smartphone and checked an image of the wanted man from one of Paste BN' online platforms.
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"It's not my f****** fault, they release me!" he yelled at me.
The search was over, the prisoner cage in the back of the van was opened and he was guided in.
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I then spoke to another Algerian man who had tipped off the police - he told me he hated sex offenders and the shame he felt over the whole episode.
The community had done the right thing - there were two tip-offs - one to me, one to the police.
The farce of this manhunt had gone on long enough.