logo
'Hitwoman' tells court she is too fat to be the 'shooter' caught on camera

'Hitwoman' tells court she is too fat to be the 'shooter' caught on camera

Daily Mail​4 days ago
An American woman has denied trying to shoot a man at close range saying she was too fat to be the person caught on surveillance foots fleeing the scene of the crime.
Giving evidence in court on Tuesday, Aimee Betro, 45, said she was not the woman dressed in a niqab seen attempting to fire a weapon at Sikander Ali in Birmingham, UK. It jammed and he escaped in his car.
After being shown footage of the incident showing a figure getting out of a Mercedes and approaching Ali with gun drawn, she was asked by defense barrister Paul Lewis KC: 'Is that you?
Betro, in a black top, glasses and with her hair styled in two 'space buns' on the top of her head, replied 'no'.
Lewis said: 'Do you know who it is? She replied again 'no'.
Betro was also asked about separate footage showing a 'slim' figure fleeing after the Mercedes was dumped.
Lewis said: 'I'm now going to ask a question a man should never ask a lady, and bearing in mind my own physique, would you describe yourself as slim?'
Betro said: 'Not as slim as that person in that... I wouldn't say I was slim.'
Betro, who once studied early childhood education, and is originally from Wisconsin, is accused of disguising her appearance with a niqab before trying to shoot Ali before returning and firing three bullets through the windows of his home in Measham Grove, Birmingham in September 2019.
She is said to have traveled from the U.S. to carry out the shooting after being 'recruited' by two co conspirators Mohammed Nazir, 30, who she was 'in love' with, and his father Mohammed Aslam, 56, from Derby, who have already been tried and convicted over the plot.
Both have been convicted of conspiracy to murder and while Nazir was also convicted of possession of a firearm with intent to cause fear of violence.
The motive for the murder was 'revenge' as Nazir and Aslam were involved in a 'vendetta' with a Birmingham clothes shop owner called Aslat Mahumad, whose son was Ali.
Betro denies three charges of conspiracy to murder, possessing a firearm with intent to cause fear of violence, and a charge related to the alleged importation of ammunition into the UK.
She told Birmingham Crown Court she was in love with Nazir, who she met on a dating app.
She had slept with him at an Airbnb during a visit to the UK spanning December 2018 and January 2019.
She said she returned to the UK again in August 2019, arriving at Manchester Airport from Atlanta around two weeks before the shooting, to celebrate her birthday and to attend a boat party in London she had won tickets for.
Describing Nazir she told the court: 'He was charming and I did like him. He was sweet and I did have feelings for him.'
She told the court 'I would guess so' when asked if she thought Nazir had feelings for her, but added that she was not trying to build a relationship with him because they lived in different countries.
On Tuesday, she also denied being a woman with an American accent who arranged for a taxi to take her to Measham Grove and of being the woman who bought the Mercedes, who the buyer described as 'short and fat'.
Asked about why her DNA was found on a black glove in the Mercedes, she said the only explanation she could think of was when she tried one on to put 'gas' in Nazir's car on an earlier occasion.
The court was also told two witnesses described the person seen in Measham Grove after shots were fired through the window as being '6ft' - which Betro said she wasn't.
She said she was in the city centre at the time of the shootings with friends she met through a music streaming service.
Lewis said to her: 'Whatever grievance Mr Nazir and his father may have had against Aslat Mahumad and his family, did you have any problem with them?
Betro said: 'I did not know them.'
Lewis said: 'Did you have any reason or motive to shoot Aslat Mahumad of any members of his family?
She replied: 'No'.
Lewis asked her if anyone had asked her to carry out the shooting, and she said 'no'. He said: 'If they had asked you, what would you answer have been?
Betro said: 'I would have said no'.
The trial continues.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Murder victim named as Ayowale Aledejana
Murder victim named as Ayowale Aledejana

The Independent

time26 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Murder victim named as Ayowale Aledejana

A man stabbed to death in south-east London has been named as 26-year-old Ayowale Aledejana. Police were called to Monson Road, New Cross, at around 7.26pm on Saturday after a man was found with stab wounds. Officers attended alongside paramedics and London Air Ambulance medics but Mr Aledjana, from South Norwood, Croydon, died at the scene. His family are being supported by specially trained officers. A 23-year-old man and a 23-year-old woman have been arrested on suspicion of murder and remain in custody. Detective Chief Inspector Lucie Card, who is leading the investigation, said: 'Our thoughts are with Ayowale's family and friends at this difficult time. 'I understand this incident will be concerning and we are carrying out a fast-paced and thorough investigation to establish the circumstances. 'I would encourage anyone who has not yet spoken to us to do so.' Anyone with information is asked to call police on 101 quoting reference 6271/02AUG.

British farmer's year-long wheat crop destroyed by vandals days before harvest
British farmer's year-long wheat crop destroyed by vandals days before harvest

The Independent

time26 minutes ago

  • The Independent

British farmer's year-long wheat crop destroyed by vandals days before harvest

A British farmer's year-long wheat crop was destroyed by vandals who appear to have driven a vehicle through a field just days before harvest. Footage shared by Heady's Farm in Buckinghamshire on Sunday (3 August) shows hundreds of crops knocked over due to the suspected car ploughing. Bending down to inspect the damage, the farmer said that he won't be able to harvest any of the wheat that's been knocked over, labelling the incident as 'so disappointing". He added: 'You wonder why farmers are angry at people and say 'get off our land'. It's not the normal people, it's the bloody idiots who decide to drive their cars about in fields.'

Ministers must summon the courage to right an ‘obvious injustice'
Ministers must summon the courage to right an ‘obvious injustice'

The Independent

time26 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Ministers must summon the courage to right an ‘obvious injustice'

The very judges who handed out 'unfair' indefinite prison sentences have joined The Independent 's campaign to resentence thousands of offenders who are still trapped by a law that was abolished in 2012. Sir John Saunders, a former High Court judge, tells us that he would apologise to offenders he sentenced to imprisonment for public protection (IPP) terms. 'I should say I'm really sorry this has happened; it's extremely unfair,' he said. 'I didn't want to be party to unfairness. I would feel very bad about it, I would apologise to them.' The sentences, described as an 'obvious injustice' by one former senior judge, were introduced by David Blunkett as home secretary in 2005 in an attempt to deal with a small number of offenders who might continue to be a danger to the public. Such prisoners were given no release date, were subject to stringent assessment before being let out, and were then liable indefinitely for recall to prison if they broke the conditions of their release. However, the sentences were used more often than Lord Blunkett intended, and the psychological effects of indefinite detention caused more problems than it solved. Lord Blunkett now describes the policy as his 'biggest regret'. The law was repealed by the coalition government in 2012, but it continued to apply to the thousands of prisoners still serving IPP sentences. Victims of the scandal, whose tragic cases have been taken up by The Independent, include Leroy Douglas, who has served 19 years for stealing a mobile phone; Thomas White, who set himself alight in his cell and has served 13 years for stealing a phone; and Abdullahi Suleman, who is still inside 19 years after he was jailed for a laptop robbery. The Independent supports a plan put forward by an expert panel convened by the Howard League for Penal Reform, which calls for IPP prisoners to be given a release date within a two-year window at their next parole hearing. They should, in effect, be resentenced and treated henceforth on the same basis as all other offenders. James Timpson, the prisons minister, says: 'We have significantly improved support for these offenders, with greater access to rehabilitation and mental health support. There is more work to do as we reduce the number of IPP offenders in custody, but we will only do so in a way that protects the public.' We understand why ministers in successive governments have been reluctant to go further. They are fearful of the consequences if someone released from an IPP sentence goes on to commit a serious offence. And they are right to make the protection of the public the highest priority. But that will not be achieved by the continued indefinite detention of 2,500 prisoners who were unlucky enough to be sentenced at the wrong time. Especially when a greater risk to the public is probably posed by the early release of prisoners to free up space in our overcrowded prisons. Simon Tonking, the former recorder of Stafford, told The Independent that the Labour government should use its majority to end the injustice by taking up the Howard League's proposals: 'Virtually everybody who has had any professional dealings with IPP knows that it is unjust and now is the time to act.' It is no use for former ministers such as Lord Blunkett and Alex Chalk, the former justice secretary, calling for justice to be done after they have left office. It is up to Lord Timpson, his boss Shabana Mahmood and ultimately Sir Keir Starmer to do the right thing while they can.

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