26-Year-Old Man Shot Dead in Car Near London Euston Station
A gunman on a bicycle shot a 26-year-old man dead in his car on Chalton Street, yards from London Euston station, at 11pm Saturday.

The gunman arrived by bicycle and left the same way. Between those two moments, a 26-year-old man was dead inside a white Nissan Juke on Chalton Street, a residential road yards from the entrance to London's Euston station.
Emergency services were called at around 11pm Saturday after gunshots were heard. Paramedics attended but were unable to save the man, who died at the scene. Metropolitan Police CCTV footage showed a suspect cycling to the vehicle, firing several shots at the man sitting inside, and then pedalling away. No description of the suspect, their direction of travel, or the type of bicycle has been released.
By Sunday, a forensic tent stood on Chalton Street as white-suited investigators worked the scene, with a police cordon blocking the end of the road. The victim has not been publicly identified; his next of kin have been informed and are being supported by specialist officers. No arrests have been made.
Detective Chief Inspector Joanna Yorke, who is leading the investigation, acknowledged the alarm the killing would cause near a street that sits at the edge of one of the capital's most heavily trafficked transport interchanges. "We are aware of the concern that this will cause for the local community, and want to reassure them that we are working hard to identify the attacker and bring them to justice," she said.
The shooting lands against a backdrop of sustained improvement in London's gun violence figures. The Metropolitan Police reported in January that firearms discharges across the capital had fallen to less than half the level recorded seven years earlier, with 97 homicides recorded in 2025, the lowest annual total since 2014. Camden, the borough in which Chalton Street sits, was among those cited for significant reductions in violent crime. Saturday night's killing is a direct challenge to that trajectory, and to the surveillance infrastructure underpinning it: Camden Council operates public safety CCTV around the clock in a formal partnership with the Metropolitan Police and Transport for London, with all recorded incidents made available to officers. That network is now central to identifying whoever fired the shots.

The Chalton Street killing is the kind of incident that will sharpen scrutiny of how quickly police and CCTV operators can track a suspect on a bicycle through a dense urban area at night, when pedestrian traffic around Euston's taxi ranks and bus stops is still substantial.
Yorke made a direct appeal for anyone with information to come forward. "If anyone has any information that could help us, it is extremely important that they contact the police – either through 101, online or via independent charity Crimestoppers to remain anonymous," she said. "Our thoughts are with the young man's family at this incredibly difficult time."
Anyone with information should call 101 quoting CAD 8032/28Mar, or contact Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.
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