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London Bridge hero chef 'Lucasz' 'in hospital with stab wounds' after bravely battling terror maniac

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Videos can use content-based copyright law contains reasonable use Fair Use (https://www.youtube.com/yt/copyright/). THE brave chef who fought off a knife-wielding terrorist with a 5ft narwhal tusk is being treated for stab wounds in hospital, it has been revealed.  The hero, who is believed to be a Polish chef by the name Lukasz, courageously helped bring down convicted terrorist Usman Khan with others on London Bridge on Friday.  Khan, 28, was shot dead by police after he went on a rampage in a fake suicide vest and stabbed a man and a woman to death and putting another three in hospital.  Lukasz, who works in the kitchen at Fishmongers' Hall where Khan's attack started, is believed to be in hospital where he is recovering for stab wounds.  A work-mate told The Sunday Mirror: "The staff have been asked not to say too much, but I have his number and he’s still in hospital.”  It is unclear if he was one of the three people taken to the Royal London Hospital in East London along with two other women. FRIDAY'S HEROES  Cambridge graduate Jack Merritt, a 25-year-old course coordinator, is the first victim to be named after his grieving father paid tribute to his son as a "beautiful spirit".  Three people, one man and two women, were rushed to hospital on Friday night - and one was in critical condition, one was stable and a third had less serious injuries.  NHS Chief Executive Simon Stevens said yesterday that the one patient who was in critical condition has improved and the condition of the other two was the same.  It comes after a woman, who did not give her name,said a woman in her 20s had "slash wounds on her arms and stomach" and a man had to be put in an induced coma.  Lukasz is one of several bystanders who risked their lives to bring down the London Bridge terrorist.  Another hero is a kitchen porter named only as Mohammed who is said to have tackled Khan on his lunch break before going back to wash dishes.  Two other men who helped to catch the attacker were fearless tour guides Thomas Gray, 24, and Stevie Hurst who jumped out of their car to help.  Prisoner James Ford, 42, helped take down Khan while he was on day release.  Ford murdered a 21-year-old disabled girl in 2004 and was at an event about rehabilitating criminals when he stepped in.  A British Transport police officer in plain clothes bravely picked up one of the knives from the floor and carried it away from the attacker.  Khan, from Staffordshire, was freed last December and police said he was "known to authorities" after he was convicted in 2012 for terror offences.  He was banned from entering London but had a one-day exemption to attend an ex-convict event, it emerged last night.  Khan, who was wearing a monitoring tag during the attack, was attending an event on Friday afternoon at Fishmonger’s Hall called ‘Learning Together’.  The killer "hoodwinked" aut
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