No reopening for club where Cody Fisher murdered

Alexander Brock
Local Democracy Reporter, Birmingham
Family A man with short blonde hair and wearing dark sporting attire with a blue shirt, smiles as he sits at a table and leans on it with his left arm.Family
Cody Fisher was murdered at Crane nightclub in 2022

A bid to reopen the nightclub where footballer Cody Fisher was murdered has been rejected.

The 23-year-old was fatally stabbed on the dancefloor at the Crane club in Digbeth, Birmingham, on Boxing Day 2022.

Following his death, the venue's licence was revoked but businessman Matthew Boulter, of Kanvas Birmingham Ltd, recently applied for a new one.

The application was rejected by Birmingham City Council due to concerns from West Midlands Police over a link between the new and former operator.

Mr Boulter told a licensing meeting earlier this month that the venue would be "so good for Digbeth" and he wanted to run it "as humanely and safely as possible".

"There's a lot of history with the premises which is going to be bad for a lot of people – I understand that. I really feel for the victims," he said.

The application was opposed by Mr Fisher's family and a representative told the meeting: "One life lost is one too many and no family should ever have to go through what our client and her family have been through."

Mr Fisher, a former Birmingham City FC academy footballer who had also played for Bromsgrove Sporting and Stratford Town, was pronounced dead at the club after suffering stab wounds wounds to the chest and leg.

West Midlands Police A police car parked outside a dark blue building with the word "Crane" in yellow lettering above an entrance.West Midlands Police
Police said there was a link between the new and old operator of the Crane

West Midlands Police said the new application from Kanvas was "linked to the previous owners" and was not a detached operator looking to reopen the venue.

A representative for the police said officers had met with Mr Boulter but were not satisfied that there was "no connection between the old and the new".

The applicant's solicitor claimed it was a "brand new" company and the new team in place would be "well thought-out, resourced and independent of the previous ownership".

The council refused the application with a spokesperson saying it was due to the concerns raised by the police about the "connection between… the previous operator and the instant applicant".

Digital Arts Media Ltd has appealed against the previous decision to revoke the licence but it was "still months away from being resolved", according to police.

This news was gathered by the Local Democracy Reporting Service which covers councils and other public service organisations.

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