Latest news with #justice


The Independent
31 minutes ago
- The Independent
Moment man walks away after stabbing wife to death as she pushed baby in pram
This is the moment a husband who stabbed his wife to death as she pushed their baby in a pram was captured on CCTV walking away following the murder. Footage shows Habibur Masum, 26, calmly walking through Bradford and getting on public transport moments after launching a 'ferocious' knife attack on his estranged partner Kulsuma Akter, 27 on 6 April, 2024. The 26-year-old followed Ms Atker to a refuge in Bradford where she had been staying to try and escape him, where he then stabbed her 25 times in front of their infant son, Bradford Crown Court heard. Masum, of Leamington Avenue in Burnley, had admitted manslaughter and possession of a knife but denied murder. On Friday (27 June), the jury convicted him after five hours and 40 minutes of deliberations. He will be sentenced on 22 July.
Yahoo
35 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Two men admit to helping move 8-year-old Edmonton girl's body after 2023 homicide
Two men pleaded guilty Friday for their role in the 2023 disappearance of a child who was later found dead. The pair admitted they were part of a group that participated in moving an eight-year-old girl's body from an Edmonton apartment to Maskwacis, Alta., where police found her in the bed of a truck. The girl can't be identified due to a publication ban. According to court records, separate court-ordered publication bans are also in effect for several of the other people involved in the case, including the two men who entered guilty pleas for indignity to a body. Court of King's Bench Justice Steven Mandziuk gave both men sentences of two years and nine months, agreeing to a joint submission from the Crown and defence for a sentence ranging between two and three years. With enhanced credit for time they've already spent in custody since being arrested in April 2023, each is considered to have already served their sentence. The courtroom was full of the girl's family members on Friday, many wearing shirts with the girl's face. "The victim here was an eight-year-old girl — the very picture of vulnerability. And the word indignity to remains doesn't really capture what happens in these types of crimes," Mandziuk said. "It was barbaric, callous and inhumane, and the product of a very, very poor decision." Two other men were also arrested and charged with accessory to murder and indignity to a dead body in April 2023. A 29-year-old woman is charged with first-degree murder in the case — she has yet to go to trial. Court heard that the woman was looking after the young girl at the time, but she is not a biological relative of hers. 'She had so much joy' Reading a victim impact statement in court on Friday, the girl's grandmother said the loss left the family broken. "I think of what she must have went through and it haunts me every time. I miss my baby girl so much," she said. "She loved her cousins and her family so much. She had so much joy. I'm scared for my other grandchildren." The girl's father said in his victim impact statement that he now struggles with fear that everyone could pose a risk of harming his children. "This horrendous tragedy led me down a dark, cold road — one that stripped me of any trust or faith I ever had in anyone or anything." According to an agreed statement of facts read in court, one of the men who pleaded guilty on Friday is a family member of the woman charged with murder, while the other was a friend of hers. That man, who is 68, came to the woman's apartment on the evening of April 22, 2023, and saw the eight-year-old girl's body, the agreed facts say. The next day, he drove the woman south of the city to Maskwacis, knowing that the girl's body was left behind, and no one had called an ambulance. He then drove three other men from Maskwacis to Edmonton, including the 27-year-old who's now been sentenced alongside him. The younger man told another person in the car after they started driving, "They were going to move a body but not whose body." The court heard that at the apartment, a different man put the girl's body in a hockey bag and loaded it into the trunk of the car. The group then drove back to Maskwacis. The girl's body was discovered during a police search five days later, on April 28, 2023. Mandziuk said the loss of a child, especially in a such traumatic way, has a profound and lasting impact on the people left behind. "On no level is this acceptable — no level. And it's a cold-hearted action."


Daily Mail
44 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
NICK DAWSON: ‘For 16 years, I felt only hatred towards my twin brother's killer, but meeting him changed both our lives forever'
At a prison just outside Milton Keynes, in a silent chapel, in a small circle of chairs, Nick Dawson sat beside his wife and waited to meet the man who had tortured and murdered his identical twin, Simon. This man, along with one other, had kicked and beaten 30-year-old Simon until he was unconscious. They removed his watch, stole his bank card, revived him enough to learn his PIN, then threw him into a pond to drown. For 16 years, Nick had viewed these murderers, Craig Roberts and Carl Harrison, as sub-human – evil monsters. He had fantasised about torturing and killing them. Now he was going to talk calmly, face to face with Roberts, the apparent ringleader of the two, and Nick felt terrified. Was he being disloyal to his twin? 'Deep down, I knew it was the right thing to do,' he says. 'There was something driving me on.'


BBC News
2 hours ago
- Politics
- BBC News
Hampshire Post Office victim 'still at war' as she gets OBE
A victim of the Post Office computer scandal has said she will continue to fight for compensation for colleagues, as she received an OBE at Buckingham Hamilton, 68, was falsely prosecuted in 2006 for a £36,000 shortfall at her branch in South Warnborough, accepted a financial settlement in 2024, but said it was "wicked" that 138 former sub-postmasters were still battling for Department for Business and Trade (DBT) said it had paid more than £1bn so far. Mrs Hamilton, who received her honour for services to justice on Thursday, said: "Personally my claim's been settled but I cannot, cannot stop fighting until the rest of the group get paid. "We fought in the High Court in 2019 and it took years to even get it to court... 138 of those people are still fighting. One hundred are dead."And I just find the whole thing wicked that they cannot be fair with people."On Friday, police said seven suspects had been identified in connection with the criminal trial might be not be held until 2028, detectives Hamilton said the DBT had claimed that there was little money for compensation, although it had employed an "army of lawyers" to "grind us into submission".She added: "Basically the Business Department owned the Post Office and they prosecuted us and destroyed us and they're now in charge of the compensation."It really is the fox in charge of the henhouse."It should go to an independent body to be fair and they'd stop spending hundreds of millions they've spent on lawyers, which is obscene."The Horizon IT system, which began operating in 1999, falsely created shortfalls in Post Office branches for which sub-postmasters were held than 900 people were prosecuted and some went to prison. In a statement, DBT said: "We pay tribute to all the postmasters including Jo who have suffered from the Horizon scandal."We have quadrupled the total amount paid to victims with more than £1bn paid to thousands of postmasters across the UK and anyone unhappy with their offer can have their case reviewed by an independent panel of experts." You can follow BBC Hampshire & Isle of Wight on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Nutley's sentence for having sex with a student wasn't justice. It was a joke
When I saw Emily Nutley's smiling prison intake photo, my heart pounded with a familiar fury. Nutley, a former St. Xavier High School employee convicted of sexually abusing a 17-year-old student, received a three-year sentence. She'll likely serve less than half that time. According to the Enquirer, not only did she groom this child to gain his trust, she messaged him constantly and sent explicit photos, documenting her obsession with him. At least four encounters of child sexual abuse by Nutley were reported. When he tried to escape the abuse, she blackmailed him and even threatened suicide. The abuse was coercive and calculated. More: Documents: Former St. Xavier employee who had sex with student 'groomed other children' And what sentence did she get? Three years. What did the victim get? A life sentence. He will carry the physical, emotional, psychological and spiritual damage for years to come. The utter cowardice and abject failure of Hamilton County Judge Jennifer Branch and the prosecutor's office are indeed sad, but unsurprising. I should know. My abuser, a teacher in the Oak Hills School District, sexually abused me for nearly four years. He received 30 days in jail and wasn't required to register as a sex offender. He walked free while I lived in terror, traumatized for decades. His sentence, like Nutley's, wasn't justice. It was a joke. Read my survivor testimony for Ohio HB 322, which finally criminalized grooming, to understand Cincinnati's many and repeated systemic failures. Until law enforcement, the courts and the press start treating child sexual abuse for what it is − violence against children − victims will keep paying the price. Melissa Childs, Santa Monica, Calif., Oak Hills High School, 1997 This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: St. Xavier employee's sentence for sex with student is a joke | Letter