
Fugitive caught at Notting Hill Carnival a month after murdering his ex-girlfriend's bus driver father in 'merciless' knife attack is jailed for 29 years
Kamar Williams repeatedly stabbed bus driver bus Derek Thomas, 55, in Hackney, north-east London, last July 30.
After the bloody attack, Williams, from the Isle of Dogs, east London, went on the run for a month, the court heard.
He was finally detained at Notting Hill Carnival last August 26, having avoided police in a car chase last August 3.
'Merciless' Williams was today sentenced to life imprisonment and will serve a minimum of 29 years behind bars.
Jailing him, Judge Angela Rafferty KC told Williams he had targeted Mr Thomas for 'revenge because of your own fury', adding the attack involved 'savage violence'.
Giving her sentencing remarks, Judge Rafferty said: 'I am sure that you intended to kill Derek Thomas. This was a merciless and determined attack.
'You killed him even though at one time you saw him as a father figure.
'You knew how important he was to his wife and his children as you had lived alongside them for two years.'
Judge Rafferty added: 'On July 30 last year, you were simmering with rage throughout the evening having been arguing with your ex-partner Carron Thomas and her family.
'I am sure that in your frustration and anger, you planned to have a violent confrontation with one of the Thomas family that night.
'Mr Thomas died there on the street minutes from his home with the shopping he had bought strewn around him.'
Jurors had been told the defendant had been looking for the victim's daughter Carron Thomas on the night of the murder.
The jury heard that Ms Thomas had called police twice in the hours before her father was attacked.
Just before 7pm, she reported to police that Williams was at her sister's address, but when police arrived he was not there.
Then just after 10.30pm, she called police again, while she was at her sister's house, believing she could see Williams walking through the estate.
Williams went to Mr Thomas's home looking for him or his daughter, but they were not in.
As he was driving away, he spotted Mr Thomas walking home on Stoke Newington Common at around 11pm.
Mr Thomas, who had been married for 35 years, had finished a late shift as a bus driver and gone into Tesco for some food before heading home.
Williams stopped the van he was driving in the middle of the road, got out and stabbed the grandfather five times.
Ms Thomas said her father was a 'kind, gentle and loving man' who 'did not deserve to have his life taken in such a senseless way'.
In a victim impact statement that was read to the court, Ms Thomas said: 'What makes this loss even more painful is that the person responsible is someone I shared a relationship with.
'My family is broken. We are trying to carry on, but we do so with heavy hearts, we feel our father's absence in every moment.'
Mr Thomas's sister, Blondelle Thomas, said her brother was a 'dedicated bus driver' with Go Ahead London and had been a 'prolific footballer who retired early due to injury'.
Reading her victim impact statement at the sentencing, Ms Thomas added: 'My brother Derek Thomas was cruelly and brutally ripped away from me and all who loved and cared about him on July 30 2024.
'I cannot hold my brother, I'll never hear his words 'I love you sister' again.
'I'm truly grateful to have had Derek's love and trust in my life.'
Earlier this month, a jury at the Old Bailey found Williams unanimously guilty of murder and guilty of having a bladed article.
News of his sentencing came after the Mail exclusively revealed police would be using facial recognition to scan revellers attending this year's Notting Hill Carnival.
Visitors to Europe's biggest street party will be scanned for wanted knife offenders, rapists, robbers and those suspected of serious violent crimes.
Scotland Yard wants to prevent a repeat of the bloodshed of recent years.
Festivities last year saw eight stabbings. One resulted in a murder and a second man was beaten and kicked to death.
Senior officers believe it will make 'Carnival' - behind only Rio de Janeiro's celebration in terms of size - safer, but the plan has proved controversial with organisers and has raised civil liberty concerns.
Police will use mobile live facial recognition, or LFR, cameras around the perimeter of the three-mile parade route as part of a beefed-up security operation involving 7,000 officers every day over the Bank Holiday weekend from August 23-25.
There will also be knife arches and prevention orders to keep known thugs away.

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