Jump to content

Saudi prince convicted of murdering servant at London hotel


Recommended Posts

Posted

Saudi prince convicted of murdering servant at London hotel

2010-10-20 00:26:07 GMT+7 (ICT)

LONDON (BNO NEWS) -- A Saudi prince on Tuesday was convicted of killing his servant at a five-star hotel in London, which revealed their possibly homosexual relationship.

Prince Saud Bin Abdulaziz Bin Nasir Bin Abdulaziz al Saud, 34, was found guilty of the murder of fellow Saudi Arabian 32-year-old Bandar Abdullah Abdulaziz at the Landmark Hotel in central London on February 15. He was also found guilty of grievous bodily harm against Bandar.

Saud Abdulaziz had been staying at the luxury hotel with the victim who he described to police as a friend he had funded while they were traveling together. They had arrived at the hotel on January 20, having been on holiday in the Maldives.

At 4.47 p.m. local time on February 15, hotel staff called the London Ambulance Service and stated that Bandar Abdulaziz was bleeding from the ear and appeared to be dead. Paramedics attended the hotel and found the victim in bed in the room he was sharing with Saud Abdulaziz. They pronounced "no signs of life" at 5 p.m. and contacted police.

Police attended the scene and spoke to Saud Abdulaziz, as well as hotel staff. Saud Abdulaziz told officers that he had been drinking with the victim in the hotel bar until the early hours and stated that when he woke at 3.30 p.m. that afternoon he was unable to wake Bandar Abdulaziz.

The defendant then rang a man, who was working for him as chauffeur during his stay in the UK, and told him Bandar was unwell. The man advised him to call reception for assistance and made his way to the hotel. When he arrived at 4.30 p.m., he asked Saud Abdulaziz if he had contacted hotel staff but he had not. The chauffeur then immediately contacted reception and checked Bandar Abdulaziz who appeared to be dead.

After police attended, Saud Abdulaziz told police that Bandar Abdulaziz had been attacked and robbed sometime between the 21st and 23rd of January in the Edgware Road area of London, apparently attributing his death to injuries sustained during this alleged incident.

However, a pathologist who attended the scene said the victim appeared to have suffered from injuries within the last 24 hours, consistent with being punched and kicked. Officers then began examining CCTV from within the hotel.

Footage from around 4 a.m. on January 22 showed Saud Abdulaziz subjecting the victim to a beating for two minutes in one of the hotel's lifts. The victim is seen cowering, trying to cover his head and face, while passively taking the beating during an apparently unprovoked attack.

Further CCTV footage showed another assault by Saud Abdulaziz on the victim in the lift on February 5.

Saud Abdulaziz was arrested and taken to Paddington police station that evening where he was interviewed the following day. During the interview he maintained that the victim had been attacked during an earlier robbery, which had resulted in the injuries and a large quantity of cash being stolen. The alleged robbery had not been reported to police and officers found no evidence that it had occurred.

Inquiries disclosed that the victim had been treated at St Mary's Hospital for an ear injury and was discharged on February 10. Police believe the injury was inflicted by the defendant, along with other injuries over a sustained period of abuse.

A post mortem examination conducted at Westminster mortuary gave the cause of death as compression to the neck and head injury. A series of injuries were found - some historic, some recent and others having occurred within 24 hours. The pathologist stated that the fatal injuries were new and could not be attributed to an earlier incident.

Injuries identified included two broken ribs, damage to internal organs, bleeding on the brain, a severe ear injury, bite marks to the cheeks, bruising up and down legs and arms, a bite mark to his right arm and back, bruising to his neck and a broken larynx consistent with compression to the neck. There was bruising to his face, a split lip and teeth chipped. The pathologist's evidence was that these were typical injuries seen in abuse cases caused by heavy punching and kicking over a period of time.

Further, in the hotel suite there was evidence that attempts had been made to clear up the blood and that the victim's body had been dragged from the bathroom into the hallway, to the bedroom and on to the bed in an attempt to cover his tracks.

Investigating detectives from the Metropolitan Police Service's Homicide Command also believe their relationship was more like an old style "master and servant", with Saud Abdulaziz dominating the victim who appeared submissive in his presence. During the trial, the prosecution also stated that they had a homosexual relationship and argued that there was a sexual element to the murder.

"The defendant used his position of power over the victim to gratuitously inflict violence upon him over a long period of time," said Detective Chief Inspector John McFarlane, who led the investigation. "After the victim's body was discovered he made every effort to evade justice, including misleading police by alleging that the victim had been robbed and then trying to claim diplomatic immunity, which he was not entitled to in the UK."

Saud initially thought he had diplomatic immunity but, although he does have special status in some Middle Eastern countries, he does not have it in Britain.

"This case clearly demonstrates that the MPS will not tolerate violence and will pursue justice for victim's regardless of any complexities arising from an individual's status and cultural backgrounds," McFarlane added.

tvn.png

-- © BNO News All rights reserved 2010-10-20

Posted

Well, he has completely utterly blown it! A life of total privilege straight down the toilet. he deserves life in prison, but is now also under threat of execution should he return to Saudi. The family of the poor man he killed will at least get some sort of justice, not that that can bring their son back. Amusingly, the Prince thought he could claim Diplomatic Immunity and get away with it! Drugs , yes, parking fines, yes, brutal murder, no!

The Prince that was!!

Sentencing is to be done today.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



×
×
  • Create New...