logo
Teenage killer of Bhim Kohli keeps seven-year sentence at Court of Appeal

Teenage killer of Bhim Kohli keeps seven-year sentence at Court of Appeal

Independenta day ago
A teenage boy who killed elderly dog walker Bhim Kohli in a Leicestershire park will not have his sentence for manslaughter changed, the Court of Appeal has ruled.
Mr Kohli, 80, was punched and kicked, slapped in the face with a shoe and racially abused in an attack in Franklin Park, Braunstone Town, near Leicester, on September 1 last year, and died the next day.
The 15-year-old, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to seven years' custody in June.
The Solicitor General (SG), Lucy Rigby, referred the sentence to the Court of Appeal under the unduly lenient sentence scheme.
At a hearing on Wednesday, Lady Justice Macur, sitting alongside Mrs Justice Cutts and Mr Justice Murray, ruled that the boy's sentence was neither unduly lenient nor manifestly excessive.
She said: 'We consider that the judge conscientiously executed the necessary sentencing exercise and conveyed his remarks to offender and co-defendant with great skill.
'We do not find that the sentence was unduly lenient.'
Of the attempt to reduce the sentence, she said: 'The sentence was a very significant sentence and necessarily so.
'It is entirely warranted by the seriousness of the offence. It is unarguable that the sentence was manifestly excessive.'
Paul Jarvis KC, for the SG, said that although the sentencing judge did not identify a high risk of death, he did say there was a high risk of very serious harm.
He added: 'We say, if not unduly lenient, most certainly not manifestly excessive.'
Balraj Bhatia KC, for the boy, told the court that Mr Kohli's frailty meant 'little or no force was required' to kill him.
He said: 'Sadly, the vulnerability of the deceased's neck was such that had he spent a day on his beloved allotment and fallen accidentally, the result would have been the same.'
The boy was convicted after a six-week trial in June at Leicester Crown Court, alongside a 13-year-old girl who also cannot be named.
She encouraged the attack by filming parts of it while laughing, with video clips showing the balaclava-clad boy hitting Mr Kohli with a shoe.
Another clip showed Mr Kohli lying on the ground motionless.
The girl took a photograph of Mr Kohli on her phone the week before the alleged incident, but denied she used this to 'target' him, the trial heard.
Police also recovered a video from her phone of a group of children 'confronting' an unknown man on a separate occasion, who was hit to the back of the head and called a 'Paki bastard' while she was heard laughing.
The girl was sentenced to a three-year youth rehabilitation order by Mr Justice Turner, and her sentence was not referred to the Court of Appeal.
Mr Kohli's children found him lying on the ground in agony, and he told his daughter he had been called a 'Paki' during the attack, the court heard during the trial.
Jurors also heard the boy say in his evidence that he had a 'tussle' with Mr Kohli over his slider shoe before he slapped the elderly man with it out of 'instinct', which caused the pensioner to fall to his knees, but he denied kicking or punching him.
In a letter written by the boy to a woman who had worked with him at the residential unit where he was being looked after, he wrote: 'I f****** hate what I did. I regret it so much.
'I have flashbacks of that day and it just upsets me. I kinda just needed anger etc releasing.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Woman in her 80s dies after four-vehicle crash in Redhill
Woman in her 80s dies after four-vehicle crash in Redhill

BBC News

time22 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Woman in her 80s dies after four-vehicle crash in Redhill

A woman in her 80s has died following a crash involving three cars and a lorry in Surrey, police have said. Officers were called to the A23 Horley Road, where it meets Earlswood Road, in Redhill at about 08:30 BST on force said the woman, a passenger in one of the cars, was airlifted to hospital where she later died. Six other people were also hurt and taken to hospital. A 25-year-old man from East Grinstead, West Sussex, was arrested on suspicion of causing serious injury by dangerous driving and causing serious injury by careless have appealed for witnesses and anyone with relevant CCTV or dashcam footage to get in touch.

How kind-hearted locals tried to take care of man accused of gruesome double murder who allegedly killed a mum-to-be and beheaded her lover before going for a burger with his dogs
How kind-hearted locals tried to take care of man accused of gruesome double murder who allegedly killed a mum-to-be and beheaded her lover before going for a burger with his dogs

Daily Mail​

time23 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

How kind-hearted locals tried to take care of man accused of gruesome double murder who allegedly killed a mum-to-be and beheaded her lover before going for a burger with his dogs

Just months before a homeless man allegedly killed a pregnant woman and decapitated her partner, he turned up at a stranger's door with one shoe on and begged for help. Ross Judd, 34, surprised the resident at a home in Oakleigh, in Melbourne 's south-east, when he asked the woman to care for his two dogs while he went into hospital last December. She said at the time that she thought the whole thing was 'very strange' and had contacted police before posting in a local Facebook group. Judd is accused of killing pregnant Athena Georgopoulos, 39, and decapitating her partner Andrew Gunn, 50, before placing his head on a spike at Gunn's home in Melbourne's Mount Waverley. However, her well-meaning post sparked a fierce online debate, with many defending Judd, saying he was deeply devoted to his dogs and needed their support. One woman said she even invited him in for a hot chocolate. 'His dogs are gentle and harmless,' she wrote. 'Is he still in the area? I will look after his dogs.' Others vowed to help in the lead up to Christmas by 'dropping supplies off for him', while a local dog groomer offered to wash and clip both German shepherds for free. 'The gentleman's name is Ross and he has been living rough for about a year and a half,' said one woman, in a now-deleted post. 'He has schizophrenia which is currently trying to be managed, he has a prescription to fill when he gets his payment on Thursday. 'I asked if perhaps we could go together and get it tomorrow instead but he didn't want to. 'He is working with the Salvos trying to find accommodation which is obviously difficult with the two dogs.' She said Judd got the dogs when he had a job and a home, and urged locals to 'be kind and supportive'. She suggested her neighbours should introduce themselves to him 'and have a cuddle with the dogs'. 'It will make them all feel seen,' she added. The bodies of Ms Georgopoulos and Mr Gunn were discovered by a neighbour at the home on Adrienne Crescent just before 10pm on Monday. Judd was arrested on in the early hours of Tuesday morning at Westall train station with his two German shepherds by his side. Just a few hours earlier, shortly after 11pm, diners claimed to have seen a man matching his description walk into a McDonald's on Dandenong Rd in Clayton with the dogs, who waited patiently at the door. Police are investigating if Judd and Mr Gunn had been involved in a dispute over the ownership and sale of the dogs in the lead up to the alleged murders. Friends of Mr Gunn said he was often seen with his own beloved German shepherd, Dragon. A neighbour of the couple, who claimed to have heard arguing and barking dogs on the night of the alleged murders, spoke out on Wednesday. 'No one should have to come across what I saw down there,' said Ben Scott-Sandvik, who lives at the front unit in the block where the alleged double murders took place. He told the Daily Mail: 'I'm doing ok, but I think Athena's family is doing a lot worse. 'Nobody needs to live knowing that this sort of thing has happened to their families.' Judd appeared at Melbourne Magistrates' Court on Wednesday, winking after he tripped as he walked to the dock. He then smiled throughout the brief filing hearing over the two counts of murder. The prosecution asked the court for a ten-week extension because 'it's a complex crime scene with significant amounts of DNA evidence'. The prosecutor also said autopsies were expected to be delayed, as alleged murder victim Ms Georgopoulos was five months pregnant when she died. Daily Mail has previously revealed Ms Georgopoulos was set to face a plea hearing at Ringwood Magistrates' Court on September 1 for car theft and burglary charges. The alleged killer's legal aid lawyer did not oppose the unusually lengthy period to serve the brief, but told the court it was her client's first time in custody. Judd also faces charges regarding previous allegations of making threats. The lawyer also said Judd needed to see the custody nurse for 'follow-up medication and physical health issues'. On Wednesday, Ms Georgopoulos' mother Petty paid tribute to her daughter. 'My little heart, you left life so unfairly that I still cannot believe it,' she said in the touching Facebook post. 'In recent days you were so happy - we made dreams together for our little granddaughter that you were going to bring into your life. 'And suddenly, everything was erased in one night, when an [alleged] murderer cut the thread of your life and of my little granddaughter's life that you were going to bring into the world in four months. 'No matter how much they separated us, I will never stop loving you. Forever. Until we meet again, my little girl, in the light of the angels.' Ms Georgopoulos worked as a customer service representative for several electricity and insurance companies, and had been Mr Gunn's partner for three years. The couple were found dead after police received calls from neighbours on Monday night about yelling coming from the property, and heavily armed police swarmed the Adrienne Crescent home at 9.55pm. Inside the small unit, officers allegedly found Mr Gunn's mutilated body next to the body of Ms Georgopoulos.

Iceland boss dishing out FREE cash to customers for snitching on shoplifters
Iceland boss dishing out FREE cash to customers for snitching on shoplifters

The Sun

time23 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Iceland boss dishing out FREE cash to customers for snitching on shoplifters

ICELAND customers will be paid to snitch on shoplifters, the supermarket's boss has pledged. Richard Walker said the chain would give shoppers £1 on their bonus cards if they point out thieves to store workers. 1 He said this would help the chain to lower its prices, as shoplifting currently costs Iceland over £20million a year. Iceland is believed to be the first major UK supermarket to bring in incentives for shoppers who snitch on the criminals. "I'd actually like to announce that we will give a pound to any customer who points out a shoplifter," He told Channel 5 News on Wednesday. "We will put it on their bonus card if they see any customer in our stores who are undertaking that offence." Asked if he thought the policy would deter thieves, he said: "Well, yeah, because some people see it as a victimless crime. It is not. "It also keeps prices from being lowered because it's a cost to the business, it's a cost to the hours that we pay our colleagues, as well as it obviously being about intimidation and violence." Mr Walker also revealed that shoplifting costs the supermarket chain more than £20million a year. "That's not £20 million of profit. That's just £20 million that we could pay in more hours to our colleagues or in lowering prices," he said. "So we'd like our customers to help us lower our prices even more by pointing out shoplifters and then we'll give them a quid back." It comes after The Sun revealed that Britain's shoplifting epidemic is costing households almost £147 a year, as stores hike prices to recoup their losses and pay for extra security measures. McDonald's Sauce Restriction Sparks Outrage: Fan Reactions & Fast Food Changes Many major high street chains have added alarm tags and stickers, each costing around £50, to protect their goods. Some are even going a step further to deter thieves. A Tesco Express in Brighton, for example, recently locked all of its beer and wine behind tills with spirits and cigarettes. Some retailers, including Ann Summers, are even arming staff with body cameras to combat theft. There were 516,971 shoplifting crimes last year, according to the Office for National Statistics - a 20 per cent increase on 2023 when 429,873 offences were recorded. Mr Walker's comments come just days after Iceland announced it would have to hike food prices following the Rachel Reeves' tax raid on businesses. In recently published accounts, the retailer said National Insurance and minimum wage hikes had led to increased supplier costs. It was a significant U-turn to comments made by Mr Walker in January, when he told The Telegraph that companies should stop "wallowing" and complaining about the measures announced in Labour's Autumn Budget. .

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store