
My brother was knifed to death at home by his pal…court ‘loophole' meant we never got justice & killer struck AGAIN
His pal Mark Oldfield had fled the scene, just yards from a police station, but two days later would hand himself in before being charged with murder.
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Beverley Keenan's younger brother Wayne 'Joey Evans' was killed by his friend
Credit: Dave Nelson
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Joey was stabbed to death at his flat in Blackpool
Credit: Dave Nelson
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A Blackpool Gazette report from December 2000
But in the middle of his trial the judge gave the jury the option to try him for the now defunct charge of manslaughter by provocation instead.
They took up the offer and Oldfield, from Leeds, was sentenced to just seven years in prison, and after early release would go on to viciously attack his
next
door neighbour with a pizza cutter - as well as at least one other offence with a bladed article.
Heartbroken sister Beverley Keenan told The Sun: 'I've spent more than two decades fighting this, trying to understand why it suddenly wasn't considered murder. He'd been stabbed in the back.
'There was no justice for my brother. I want an apology from the government, because it was their laws that failed to protect him and others in a similar boat.'
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She added: 'As soon as Mark was released he attacked again.'
Beverley says she's never had a clear answer as to what led to her brother's death - and the weapon used was never found.
Dad-of-three Wayne - known to friends and family as Joey Evans, having adopted his stepdad's surname and his own middle name - had been allowing Oldfield to stay in his flat on and off when the deadly row erupted on June 4 2000.
Joey, 34, had, on a whim, moved to the Lancashire city from Leeds months earlier, after his mum Alison Evans and sisters Beverley and Julie had done the same.
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His relationship with the mother of his youngest son had broken down and he wanted a fresh start.
Beverley explained: 'He turned up on New Years Eve 1999 and it was a right shock, because we weren't expecting to see him.
Man who stabbed woman to death as she slept confesses to her murder
'I'd just moved into a new house, and he came and stayed with us all over New Year.
'We had a lovely time, it was the first time that all the family had been together since we were kids.
'He was gutted because he had three kids in Leeds but needed a fresh start. He planned to move to Blackpool permanently and fight for custody of his youngest, and we were going to help.'
Joey signed up to a local job agency and soon found regular work in factories, often working two jobs at once, days and nights.
'He was earning good money and then his mate from Leeds turned up,' explained Beverley.
Joey and Oldfield, then 36, stayed at Alison's home in Central Drive before her son found himself a flat on Chapel Street just half a mile away.
But by June, Joey and Oldfield's relationship appeared to have soured somewhat, and Beverley believes her brother had not seen his eventual killer much for some time when he arrived suddenly at his flat in the early hours of Sunday, June 4 2000.
'He turned up early Sunday morning, and stabbed Joey at nine o'clock on Sunday night,' she said.
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Tragic Joey with his son Danny
Credit: Dave Nelson
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The proud dad with his daughter Toni
Credit: Dave Nelson
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Joey had relocated to Blackpool from Leeds months before he died
Credit: Dave Nelson
'Joey had had a bath that night, he'd ironed his clothes ready to go to work the next day, before being killed.'
Beverley recalls how half an hour after stabbing her brother, Oldfield 'casually' walked past her and sister Julie as they drove back to their mum's home after bingo.
'He was stood looking at me in the car, and because of my arthritis I couldn't wind the window down to ask him where Joey was.
'He was with a girl. We drove round to the back of my mum's old house, and we suddenly couldn't see him anywhere.'
What exactly happened during the tragedy is unclear. In her campaign to have the conviction upgraded, Beverley says she was told the court transcripts were destroyed after five years.
Reports in the Blackpool Gazette from December 2000, during the trial, say Oldfield alleged his victim had first gone for him with a knife.
He claimed Joey had also punched one of several women who were also in the flat at the time and had stepped in.
However, Julie Taylor, described as Joey's girlfriend, is reported to have told the court she saw Oldfield raise an arm and stab his victim four times.
While giving evidence, Oldfield had told the court how he and Joey had spent the day drinking and watching Formula One on the TV.
One article adds the defendant said he must have later fallen asleep and that on waking he heard screaming and crying.
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Joey had been working at different factories and was looking towards a new chapter in his life when he was killed
Credit: Dave Nelson
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Beverley wants an apology off the Government
Credit: Dave Nelson
It says: 'Oldfield told the court he saw Joey punching someone called Mandy. The defendant said he took hold of him and dragged him into the hallway.'
However, Joey allegedly broke loose and headed back to the living room.
Oldfield said: 'Joey came back into the room. I saw a knife in the right hand. I thought he had run on to the knife [sic].
'From listening to the forensic pathologist I now believe I must have lunged at him and stabbed him in the chest, thinking he was going to stab me.'
In another article, the court is reported to have heard Oldfield claimed he was acting in self defence and had actually grabbed a knife from the coffee table after fearing Joey was going to arm himself, and used it to kill his friend.
In an article from December 23 2000, the day after Oldfield was sentenced for manslaughter by provocation, Beverley was reported as saying: 'Oldfield was known as Rampton in Leeds and butchered my brother.
'I am considering appealing to the Home Secretary about the leniency of the sentence.'
Mum Alison - who passed away in 2010 - had said: 'How in God's name could the judge sentence him to only seven years?
'He could be out walking the streets again in three years.'
Referring to the police, she added: 'We feel so let down by them.'
Early prison release and subsequent attack
Oldfield was released early from prison and in May 2009 was sentenced to eight years in custody for assault occasioning actual bodily harm, having attacked his neighbour with a pizza cutter.
Then in May 2011, while still on licence, Oldfield reportedly committed another offence with a bladed article and was given a 10-month prison term.
Beverley said: 'How many more times will he escape justice? Does he really have to take another life before someone listens?'
She has been campaigning ever since Oldfield was jailed for her brother's killing, for a tougher sentence.
'I started more or less immediately,' she explained. She said she was protesting outside Parliament and several Labour ministers at the time 'all walked past', and she appeared on TV.
'I wrote to everyone in Parliament and got a lot of letters back from a lot of MPs that agreed with me but they said you've got to go through your own.
'My MP tried his best but it's proving it. No solicitor would ever touch it because there'd been a trial. Even though the trial's gone wrong.'
The partial defence of provocation in English law, which could reduce a murder charge to manslaughter, was abolished in October 2010.
In April 2005 the double jeopardy rule came into effect in the UK, allowing for retrials in cases of very serious offences where new and compelling evidence had emerged after an acquittal or conviction.
Beverley said it wasn't until the new law came in that police came to see her, in part because she'd been collecting paperwork from the case, and asked for the court transcripts, which she didn't have.
What is manslaughter by provocation and double jeopardy?
The partial defence of manslaughter by provocation in English law, which could reduce a murder charge to manslaughter, was abolished in October 2010.
In April 2005 the double jeopardy rule came into effect in the UK, allowing for retrials in cases of very serious offences where new and compelling evidence had emerged after an acquittal or conviction.
'They said 'we're going to try him on double jeopardy'.
Beverley continued: 'They knew he'd murdered Joey, they knew it. I tried to get the transcripts but they said we've destroyed them after five years.
'You can find transcripts online from decades ago but Joey's have been destroyed after five years.'
Despite being on benefits at the time, she managed to save up the £5,000 needed to receive the transcripts before finding out they'd been destroyed.
She said police said, in the end, the potential for a new trial fell through on the basis of this.
'Really you'd think they'd do a new inquiry again,' she continued.
'The police said they were underfunded and couldn't keep going back and forth to Leeds. And that was that.'
She went on to say: 'I seem to have missed out every which way but loose. Every which way I go I hit a brick wall.'
She added: 'At the end of the day, it's us who are the victims, us who serve the life sentence, not them who do it.'
Having suffered a number of health setbacks, Beverley said her campaign has now been reinvigorated.
I seem to have missed out every which way but loose. Every which way I go I hit a brick wall. At the end of the day, it's us who are the victims, us who serve the life sentence, not them who do it.
Beverley Keenan
sister of tragic Joey Evans
Mum Alison died from brain cancer in 2010, while Beverley herself has struggled with rheumatoid arthritis since she was a baby.
'In the last 10 years I've had my two new hips and two new knees, I've had a lot going on in my life,' she explained.
'But the other day I just thought I should really get an apology off the government.
'That manslaughter with provocation was a mess, they knew it was a mess, they've admitted it was a mess, and that's the reason they abolished it because they knew murderers were getting away with murder.'
She added: 'I would like other victims in this situation to come forward.
'I'd love to get a group of us together like the Post Office crew, because someone needs holding accountable for this farce. It should never have happened.'
Attorney General
In an email from MP Chris Webb to Beverley in January, seen by The Sun, he told her: 'Provocation law, as it stood, was widely criticised for being outdated and susceptible to misuse.
'While its intent was to address specific circumstances, its application in other cases, including the ones you've described, led to unjust outcomes that failed to reflect the gravity of the crimes committed.
'I agree that the government must not acknowledge the failures of the past without fully examining their consequences and offering both accountability and redress.'
As a result, he wrote to the Attorney General on her behalf to 'highlight the importance of this issue'.
In April, Mr Webb then forwarded his response from Sarah Sackman KC, Minister for Courts and Legal Services, who said the correspondence had been transferred to the Ministry of Justice.
She said: 'You and your constituents may be interested to learn about the 'Unduly Lenient Sentence (ULS) Scheme' where the Attorney General can refer certain serious offences sentenced in the Crown Court to the Court of Appeal if they believe they might be unduly lenient.
'The Court of Appeal will then review the sentence and may decide to dismiss and replace it with a sentence that it considers more appropriate.'
However, she warned: 'The bar to increasing a sentence is a very high one.
'The Court of Appeal will only grant permission to refer a sentence in exceptional circumstances: for example, if the judge has made some gross error, or has passed a sentence that falls outside
the range
of available and reasonably appropriate sentences.'
She added the independent Law Commission are also 'undertaking a review of criminal appeals' and in June launched a public consultation in relation to reforms to the ULS.
Lancashire Police declined to comment when approached by The Sun.
Do you know more? Email ryan.merrifield@thesun.co.uk

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The Irish Sun
15 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
My daughter, 16, was murdered by stalker ex – then cops found out her own FRIENDS helped killer hatch ‘zombie' plot
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Advertisement Describing Hannah as "shy and a little nerdy", Janet says her daughter had never been a typical teen, preferring to play Call of Duty with her stepdad, Wade or her friend Matt. Janet says: 'Around the age of 15, I'd noticed my smart and pretty daughter coming out of her shell. 'Skylar started coming round a couple of times a week, and he and Hannah would see each other at weekends too. 'Skylar was her first boyfriend, but she wasn't your typical infatuated teen girl, and often she and Skylar would hang out with other kids at our house. 'I was always impressed with how considerate Skylar was about keeping the noise down.' Advertisement However, one day, Hannah let something slip that instantly concerned Janet. She says: 'She told me that Skylar's last girlfriend was scared of him." 'She tried to dismiss it as 'stupid', but I told her it was a red flag and that she should keep her eyes open.' Man who stabbed woman to death as she slept confesses to her murder Eight months into Hannah and Prockner's relationship, Janet began to notice her daughter becoming withdrawn, and more worrying signs emerged. Janet told The Sun: 'Skylar had told her that if she ever broke up with him, he'd kill himself. Advertisement 'I recognised his threat as a classic control technique and tried to reassure her that it wouldn't happen and that if it did, he had bigger problems than her.' Eventually, Hannah broke things off, and Janet noticed her return to her usual, happier self and seemed relieved. She added: 'It was sad her first relationship had ended messily, but I was proud of how she'd set a boundary and refused to be controlled by a possessive boy. 'Is Hannah alive?' But Prockner wasn't prepared to let sleeping dogs lie, and in May that year, things took a more sinister turn. The 49-year-old said: 'He was essentially stalking her, pestering Hannah at school, on social media and her phone." 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I just knew it was Skylar Janet Leflar Janet says: 'He told me to come home, and he sounded serious. Advertisement 'He wouldn't tell me why, but I did as he said, but I felt very uneasy. 'The only thing I could come up with was that Hannah was hurt. I texted Wade asking him to reassure me that she was OK, but he didn't respond.' Janet was 30 minutes from home when Wade called again and told her not to go home but to come straight to the police station. She recalls: 'I was really scared, I asked him if Hannah was alive, but he just told me to get there as quickly as I could. 'I couldn't bring myself to ask any more questions; I didn't want to hear the answers.' Advertisement A detective met Janet at the police station. There, he informed her that Hannah had been stabbed to death by her ex, Skylar, inside their home. Janet says: 'I screamed. 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Chilling 'zombie' murder plot In May 2015, the detectives finished their investigation, and the family when then told that Skylar was not the only one who played a part in their daughter's murder. Disturbingly, up to seven schoolmates, most of whom had been in Janet's home and had been friends with Hannah, had known varying details of Prockner's plot. He called it "Project Zombify". Some of the kids, including her daughter's friend, Matt, even spied on Hannah for him. Detectives explained that Prockner had initially plotted to beat up Hannah's new boyfriend. Advertisement He had a backpack stuffed with weapons, including a nail-studded baseball bat. Over time, the plot evolved so that if Hannah protested, she'd get hurt too. Then Prockner escalated the chilling scheme, planning to kill Hannah. Janet says: 'He told some of the kids this and that he wanted to tamper with the brakes in her car. 'Nobody said anything to stop him.' 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Advertisement 'I wrote how lucky I was to be her mum in my eulogy, but was so upset it had to be read out by someone else." 'Skylar is still a danger' At first, Prockner denied the charges but in April 2016, 14 months after killing Hannah, he suddenly changed his plea to guilty of first-degree murder. The following July there was a three-day sentence hearing, where Prockner's lawyer described how he'd been physically and verbally abused by his own mother. Domestic abuse - how to get help DOMESTIC abuse can affect anyone - including men - and does not always involve physical violence. Here are some signs that you could be in an abusive relationship: Emotional abuse - Including being belittled, blamed for the abuse - gaslighting - being isolated from family and friends, having no control over your finances, what you where and who you speak to Threats and intimidation - Some partners might threaten to kill or hurt you, destroy your belongings, stalk or harass you Physical abuse - This can range from slapping or hitting to being shoved over, choked or bitten. Sexual abuse - Being touched in a way you do not want to be touched, hurt during sex, pressured into sex or forced to have sex when you do not consent. If any of the above apply to you or a friend, you can call these numbers: on 0808 2000 247 for free at any time, day or night Men who are being abused can call Respect Men's Advice Line on 0808 8010 327 or on 0182 3334 244 Those who identify as LGBT+ can ring on 0800 999 5428 If you are in immediate danger or fear for your life, always ring 999 Remember, you are not alone. 1 in 4 women and 1 in 7 men will experience domestic abuse over the course of their lifetime. Every 30 seconds the police receive a call for help relating to domestic abuse. Janet says: 'I sobbed in court as he [Prockner] described Hannah 'gargling in her own blood' when he killed her. 'He'd even boasted about it to his brother. Advertisement 'The mother in me pitied Skylar for his abusive background, but I knew people who'd had a tough childhood, and none of them hurt others.' 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Advertisement Police officer Ed Bush said: 'When the levees broke everything changed. 'They were brought to the Superdome because there was nowhere else to go. 'It was desperation - but they were coming to another hell.' By day three 30,000 desperate people were crammed into the stadium - and armed guards were stationed at the doors to prevent people trying to fight their way out. Advertisement 23 Military helicopter rescued stranded residents in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina Credit: John Keller 23 Lucrece Phillips was among the survivors Credit: National Geographic 23 Houses were flattened by the force 5 hurricane Credit: Alamy Critical situation In the surrounding streets, the city descended into lawlessness as starving people gathered on motorway bridges and flyovers, while others resorted to looting shops and supermarkets as they waited for fleets of buses and ships which had been promised to evacuate the city. Advertisement Medical facilities were overloaded, there was no phone signal and the situation was declared critical. 23 An elderly woman is carried from the Superdome after gunshots were heard Credit: AFP 23 Plans to rebuild New Orleans have been slow to take effect Credit: KXAS-NBC 5 Collection/UNT Libraries Special Collections 23 A new levee system is designed to prevent another tragedy Credit: Lightbox Entertainment Inc. Advertisement It appeared that the police had lost control as violence broke out - and when police, helicopter pilots and SWAT teams were shot at, all rescue operations were abandoned. After five days, tens of thousands were still waiting, struggling for survival and sharing what scraps of food they could find until the armed National Guard relief convoy finally rumbled into town in tanks and armoured vehicles. Slowly elderly people and children were evacuated by school buses and sent to the airport, but main roads leading out of the city were blocked, and desperate families trying to leave on foot were stopped. Malik Rahim added: 'I'm not a naive person but nothing prepared me for what happened after Katrina.' Advertisement They were brought to the Superdome because there was nowhere else to go. It was desperation - but they were coming to another hell Police officer Ed Bush Over the following months almost a million displaced refugees were rehoused in 30 different states, in the largest mass migration the US had seen since the 1930s. When the water eventually receded, many attempted to return to New Orleans but were heartbroken to find their homes vandalised and in ruins among the wreckage. In October the search for survivors ended and the official death toll stood at 1,392. Over the following years money was poured into rebuilding the levees and returning people to their communities. Advertisement A government scheme called The Road Home was set up to cover the cost of relocating, repairs and rebuilding the hardest hit areas - but thousands were told they were not eligible for payouts and found themselves caught up in overwhelming red tape. One of the worst affected neighbourhoods, the Lower Ninth Ward is still a ghost town - before the hurricane the population was over 14,000, now it is just 4,630. And, twenty years after the disaster that devastated New Orleans, experts fear that global warming and rising sea levels may mean that another natural disaster could turn into a tragedy again. 23 A baby is carried away from the superdome Credit: Reuters Advertisement 23 Evacuees from the Superdome argue line up for a bus trip to the Houston Astrodome days after Hurricane Katrina Credit: Dallas Morning News


The Irish Sun
21 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Iran planning to execute 30,000 in repeat of horror 1988 ‘massacre' as part of desperate crackdown, insiders fear
IRAN'S merciless regime is plotting to kill tens of thousands of prisoners in a repeat of the 1988 massacre, insiders fear. Rattled supreme leader Ali Khamenei has ordered a surge in executions - turning hangings into public spectacles in a chilling warning to dissidents. 9 Executions are often well-attended public events Credit: AFP 9 Mehdi Hassani has been executed by Iran's regime Credit: NCRI 9 Behrouz Ehsani was also killed by the regime Credit: NCRI It comes as callous mullahs yesterday hanged two political prisoners who had been jailed on trumped-up charges. Mehdi Hassani, 48, and Behrouz Ehsani, 70, were killed in cold blood for daring to oppose the barbaric regime they were forced to live under. Earlier this year, The Sun shared a Ehsani meanwhile bravely More on Iran Iran has repeatedly unleashed lethal force on its own people - especially at times of crisis - in a sickening bid to stamp out rebellion. Glaring vulnerabilities in the regime's grip on power have been exposed after Israel and the US launched a monumental effort to destroy its nuclear threat. Executions and arrests are weaponised to scare dissidents, and it is feared panicked Ayatollah Khamenei is planning a similar plot to the 1988 massacre of 30,000 political prisoners. The regime was also in turmoil that year after accepting a ceasefire with Iraq. Most read in The Sun Now, death sentences against those affiliated with the main democratic opposition, the People's Mojahedin Organisation of Iran (PMOI/MEK), are being expedited as Khamenei scrambles for control. Chillingly, state-run Fars News Agency - a mouthpiece of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps - this month issued a public call to repeat 1998's inhumane massacre as the regime fears for its survival. Dad set to be executed in Iran shares powerful audio message blasting regime from behind bars British politicians and leading human rights lawyers have urged the UK government to intervene to prevent such an atrocity. Alongside the (NCRI), they also criticised the focus on Tehran's nuclear programme, warning that it has overshadowed the worsening human rights crisis. Baroness O'Loan DBE said: "Those threatening our national security are the same individuals planning atrocities in Iran's prisons. So, we must act, now." Dowlat Nowrouzi, the NCRI's UK representative, told The Sun: "The international community's failure to hold the regime accountable for its atrocities, including crimes against humanity and genocide, has allowed the regime to enjoy impunity. "It is long overdue to hold Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader, and others accountable for committing these crimes. It comes as one of Iran's longest-serving political prisoners has laid bare the dire situation in a handwritten letter shared with The Sun. More than 100 armed guards raided the ward Masouri was on, beating prisoners before hauling them across the floor with handcuffs and leg shackles and bags over their heads. Masouri has been exiled to the notorious Zahedan Prison - just days after penning a haunting letter warning a massacre is looming. 9 Saeed Masouri has been in jail for 25 years Credit: NCRI 9 He shared a chilling handwritten letter from inside jail Credit: SUPPLIED 9 Four Iranian convicts hanging after a public execution in 2007 Credit: AFP 9 Pictures show a man named Balal who was led to the gallows by his victim's family He wrote: "Just as it happened in 1988, today we fear that the same path is being repeated, albeit with different language and methods. "Back then, it was called the 'Death Committee'; today, it is 'Fire at discretion'. "But this widespread repression and intensification of executions are not signs of strength—they are admissions of the regime's helplessness in the face of truth and the will of the people. "Likewise, this so-called 'fire at discretion' is nothing but an attempt to conceal the depth of infiltration, decay, and structural collapse within the ruling system—failures they now seek to compensate for by exacting revenge on the people of Iran and their prisoners." All contact between political prisoners and their families has now been cut off. Ms Nowrouzi added: "The assault on Mr. Masouri is not an isolated incident. "It is part of a broader campaign of escalating executions, arbitrary detentions, and systematic repression. "The regime, emboldened by decades of impunity and inaction, is now openly signaling its intent to repeat the horrors of 1988. "As Mr. Masouri warned in his message from prison, 'a crime is in progress,' and the world must not remain silent." Iran's calculating mullahs meanwhile are refusing to hand the bodies of slain Ehsani and Hassani back to their grieving families. How Iran is stifling critics after defeat to Israel by Katie Davis, Chief Foreign Reporter (Digital) TYRANNICAL leaders in Iran have demanded citizens act as undercover informants to turn in anyone who dares oppose the regime, insiders say. Panicked mullahs have also ordered "telecom cages" be installed around prisons as the regime Political prisoners - largely Insiders say their treatment is being weaponised to deter opposition. The fight against repression has loomed large for decades in the rogue state - but the so-called 12-day war last month has made the barbaric Ayatollah more fearful than ever of being toppled. Sources inside Iran told The Sun how a direct alert has been issued to the public, urging them to report any activity linked to resistance groups of the People's Mojahedin Organisation of Iran (PMOI/MEK). Regime loyalists have been implored to act as informants - compiling detailed reports with photos, times, locations, licence plates and facial features of suspected individuals. Orders were publicised in an official government news outlet - marking a distinct shift in the paranoid regime's usual strategy of covert suppression. Insiders noted it points to the regime's growing perceived threat posed by the PMOI's grassroots operations. The PMOI has long fought for a secular, democratic Iran, and is understood to be gaining traction amid frustration with economic hardship, political repression, and international isolation. Insiders say they are instead planning to secretly bury them in a twisted bid to cover up their actions. Hassani's devastated daughter, who bravely campaigned for her dad's release, wept as she told how they had not been informed of his execution. In a harrowing video message shared with The Sun, she said: "They didn't grant him a final visit before the execution. "None of us knew, not even my father, who had told my sister to visit him on Monday. "I don't know what to say. I fought so hard. I had so much hope, so much… I still can't believe what has happened." Maryam Rajavi, president-elect of the NCRI, has called on the United Nations to take "concrete and effective measures against a regime built on executions and torture". Mrs Rajavi said: "They [Ehsani and Hassani] now join the eternal ranks of those who have given their lives in the struggle for freedom and justice. "In what appears to be a desperate act during the twilight of his rule, Khamenei has perpetrated yet another grave crime - an effort to delay the inevitable collapse of his regime. Ayatollah 'on his heels' by Katie Davis, Chief Foreign Reporter (Digital) IRAN'S merciless regime is "fully on its heels" - leaving the Ayatollah's days numbered, a former US ambassador says. But the West will not be able to topple Tehran's brutal dictatorship, Mark D. Wallace, CEO & Founder of United Against Nuclear Iran, warned. The ex-ambassador to the UN said it will be down to the Iranian people - who have suffered outrageous repression for decades - to finally end the regime's rule. Iron-fist fanatics have used violent and ruthless measures, including executions and torture, in a twisted bid to stamp out opposition and silence critics. The regime's future now appears to be hanging by a thread, however, as it sits in a "combustible state" following the obliteration of its nuclear empire by the US and Israel. Several of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's top military brass were wiped out in the 12-day war - leaving the barbaric ruler vulnerable. Power held by Iran's terror proxies - including Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen - has also been severely depleted. Wallace told The Sun: "The regime isn't just wounded, they're fully on their heels." "Far from securing his hold on power, this brutality only intensifies the outrage of the Iranian people and reinforces the determination of Iran's courageous youth to bring an end to this theocratic tyranny. "Honour to these steadfast Mojahedin who, after three years of unwavering resistance under torture, pressure, and threats, fulfilled their solemn pledge to God and the people with pride and dignity." It comes after The Sun reported how Iran's wounded regime As Israeli missiles rained down on a nearby military site on June 16, panicked inmates at Dizel-Abad Prison in Kermanshah begged to be moved to safety. But they were instead met with a hail of bullets from the regime's merciless enforcers in a "deliberate and cold-blooded act", a witness said. Meanwhile, sweeping arrests are also plaguing Iran's population - with around 700 people understood to have been detained last month with reported links to a "spy network". Iran has one of the most horrific human rights records in the world, and according to campaigners also holds the harrowing title for the highest execution rate. Official records show that the number of executions last year reached 1,000 - the highest number in 30 years and 16 percent higher than the previous. Insiders believe this year that distressing toll will be much higher. 9 Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei makes his first public appearance since the war with Israel on July 6 Credit: Getty 9 A demonstrator takes part in a protest against the Iranian government outside the Federal Building in Los Angeles, California on June 23 Credit: Reuters