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Moment police snare killers who fled abroad after murdering DPD driver in broad daylight

Moment police snare killers who fled abroad after murdering DPD driver in broad daylight

Independent01-04-2025

Watch the moment Austrian police caught two men who fled the UK after the brutal murder of a DPD delivery driver.
23-year-old Aurman Singh was making deliveries in Coton Hill, Shrewsbury, when he was fatally assaulted on 21 August 2023. The attackers, Mehakdeep Singh and Sehajpal Singh, fled in a Mercedes before escaping the UK a few days later.
West Mercia Police 's extensive hunt for the pair ended in Austria where they were arrested by local law enforcement.
The men were found guilty at Stafford Crown Court on 31 March 2025, with sentencing due on 11 April.
Four other men involved in the attack were sentenced to 28 years each on 11 August 2024.

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CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews last night's TV: You have to admire the understaffed police solving this brutal gang killing
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Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

CHRISTOPHER STEVENS reviews last night's TV: You have to admire the understaffed police solving this brutal gang killing

Two days into a murder investigation, DCI Mark Bellamy wasn't mincing his words: 'Looking around this room, there ain't enough staff, not for what we've got on. Far from it.' The head of Operation Columbia, the hunt for seven men suspected of the gang-related killing of a 23-year-old delivery worker, Bellamy could call on 45 detectives and forensics specialists. But the sheer speed and scale of the investigation left his team stretched thin. And this wasn't the Met, with immense reserves of manpower and equipment available if required. This was a police station in Shrewsbury, a medieval market town where even muggings are rare — though the local paper, the Shropshire Star, reports they've been having a nasty spate of bicycle thefts recently. Aurman Singh was in a DPD van delivering parcels to a quiet residential street when he was set upon by youths lying in wait. Footage from video doorbells captured the gang piling back into their two cars, some still brandishing weapons. The murder itself occured out of sight of the cameras, but statements from shocked witnesses left us in no doubt of the ferocity of the attack. Mr Singh suffered multiple stabbing and chopping wounds, including catastrophic head injuries from an axe and a golf club. Murder 24/7, a gripping six-part serial filmed by a camera crew shadowing the West Mercia Police force, followed the investigation from the moment a horrified onlooker called 999. One of the cars was found abandoned. The other was spotted an hour away in the West Midlands and, after a tense pursuit involving a helicopter and a dog unit, four suspects were arrested. All of them, like the victim, were named Singh. The police were efficient, calm and so evidently competent from the start that there was little doubt the other assailants would be tracked down. But as the backdrop to the crime was revealed, DCI Bellamy's fears about understaffing proved well-founded. Punjabi interpreters had to be called in before the men could be questioned. That gives suspects an advantage, fretted one detective: 'Sometimes they can understand some English, then they get it clarified through the interpreter. There's no rhythm to it, so you're not going in with quick questions. You're not making them think on their feet.' A possible motive began to emerge — vengeance following an outbreak of violence at a kabaddi match in Derby the previous day. Kabaddi, apparently, is a sort of touch-rugby, popular in India. The difficulties confronting this provincial police force were staggering: a bloodthirsty feud spilling over from a city 70 miles away, beginning with a game whose roots are 7,000 miles away, involving suspects who either can't or won't speak English. The documentary, which continues tonight, leaves me full of admiration for the Shrewsbury murder squad. But it's impossible to know how a town that struggles to prevent cycle thefts is supposed to cope with violence of this kind.

Murder 24/7 review – it feels so iffy watching brutal hour-by-hour death
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The Guardian

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Murder 24/7 review – it feels so iffy watching brutal hour-by-hour death

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Driver who killed two while on immigration centre bail given life term
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South Wales Guardian

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Driver who killed two while on immigration centre bail given life term

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