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Cambridge man jailed for murdering ex-flatmate after passport row
Cambridge man jailed for murdering ex-flatmate after passport row

BBC News

time4 days ago

  • BBC News

Cambridge man jailed for murdering ex-flatmate after passport row

A man who murdered his former flatmate has been jailed for Lakhani, 38, was strangled to death at his home in Greengates Court, Cambridge, in September.A trial at Huntingdon Crown Court was told that he and Jonathon Austin, 23, had argued after Mr Lakhani accused him of stealing his who had moved to a different flat in the complex off Histon Road, was found guilty of murder and was told he must serve a minimum of 16 years before being considered for parole. "You knew exactly what you were doing," said Judge David Farrell."I am sure that you intended to kill him."Judge Farrell said evidence showed that Mr Lakhani had cancer, a history of drug use, and mental health said the victim experienced "mood swings" and could appear pair were living in the same flat when prosecutors said they argued, before Austin attacked showed Mr Lakhani suffered a cardiac arrest after Austin strangled had autism, but Judge Farrell said this did not have a "significant impact" on his "culpability"."You knew how to handle him," the judge told him."You are much bigger, fitter and a younger man."He said Austin had disarmed Mr Lakhani and could have "simply walked out". In a statement read out by a lawyer, Mr Lakhani's mother Chandrika Lakhani said her son's death had a "devastating impact"."No words can truly express the depth of my pain," she said."There is always an empty chair." Austin, who had no previous convictions and is from South Africa, had told police how Mr Lakhani was "often abusive" and behaved said he stopped living with Mr Lakhani a few weeks Nichola Cafferkey, who represented Austin, argued that her client may have thought he had no choice but to defend well as autism he had a background of trauma, she said. A detective who led the investigation said after the hearing said "walking away is always the best option"."There were plenty of opportunities in that flat for Mr Austin to walk away - and he chose not to," said Det Insp Lee Martin."And at one point he said in court that he wanted to stay to be the bigger man." Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

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