Ahmed Alid guilty of murdering Terence Carney in Hartlepool
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Published
An Islamic extremist has been found guilty of murdering a passer-by in the street.
Moroccan asylum seeker Ahmed Alid, 45, stabbed 70-year-old Terence Carney multiple times in Hartlepool in October.
He later told police it was in protest against Israel and the Gaza conflict.
Alid was found guilty of murder and the attempted murder of his housemate, whom he had attacked before the fatal stabbing of Mr Carney.
He will be sentenced on 17 May at Teesside Crown Court.
âExtreme interpretationâ
Alid, who spoke through an Arabic translator during the trial, had admitted stabbing the two men but denied he had intended to kill or cause really serious harm.
The court had heard he arrived in the UK illegally in 2020 and lived with three other asylum seekers at a house on Hartlepoolâs Wharton Terrace.
Prosecutors said Alid followed an âextreme interpretation of Islamâ and had issues with his housemate, Iranian-national Javed Nouri, 31, who had converted to Christianity.
At about 05:00 BST on 15 October, Alid forced his way into Mr Nouriâs room and stabbed him multiple times with a kitchen knife while shouting âAllahu Akbarâ, meaning âGod is greatestâ.
After Mr Nouri fought him off, Alid fled into the street and came across Mr Carney, who was out for a regular early morning walk on nearby Raby Road.
Jurors were shown CCTV of Alid confronting Mr Carney, chasing him a short distance and stabbing him six times, while the 70-year-old repeatedly shouted ânoâ.
Prosecutor Jonathan Sandiford KC said it was not a âfrenzied attackâ but âconsideredâ, as Alid circled Mr Carney and stabbed him, with one wound fatally penetrating his heart.
Police responding to a 999 call about the Wharton Terrace attack found Mr Carney lying in the street, where he was pronounced dead.
Alid was arrested by armed police a short distance away.
In his 87-minute long police interview, Alid, who believed he had killed Mr Nouri, said the âwhole issueâ was the âindependence of Palestineâ and âto have two dead victims [was] better than moreâ, adding Israel had âkilled a lot of childrenâ so he âkilled two old peopleâ.
He said Mr Carney was a âpoorâ and âinnocentâ man who had âcommitted no faultsâ, but he was killed because Britain had âcreatedâ Israel and âshould make it leaveâ.
Lunged at police
Alid also told officers he would have killed more people if he had not injured his hand while stabbing Mr Nouri, and would have slain âthousandsâ if he had a machine gun.
When questioned about his interview in court, Alid denied he had made such comments and blamed the Tunisian interpreter helping him in the interview.
At the end of his interview at Middlesbrough Police Station, Alid verbally abused the Tunisian interpreter and then lunged at the two female detectives questioning him.
The court heard a panic button was pressed multiple times but was not working, and Alidâs solicitor who was also in the room called 999 to say they were âstuck in a room with a terror suspectâ.
Other officers, who were monitoring the interview from a different room, ran in and restrained Alid.
Jurors also found him guilty of two counts of assaulting emergency workers.
âFear and distressâ
The trial heard Mr Nouri had complained to housing managers and the police about Alid, who had taken to carrying a knife and was making regular threats.
Two days before the attacks, a Cleveland Police officer said no crime had been committed so no further action was taken.
The court heard Alid was a patisserie chef who ran a coffee and pastry shop in Algeria but left in 2007, moving around Europe before arriving in the UK illegally in 2020 via a ferry from Amsterdam.
His asylum claim had still not been processed at the time of the attack.
Following the verdict, Cleveland Policeâs Deputy Chief Constable Victoria Fuller said the stabbings âshook the local community to its coreâ.
She said: âAlidâs actions not only left a family devastated, but also caused significant fear and distress amongst residents in Hartlepool and beyond.â
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