On this date, January 25, 2021, a
Pakistani Couple from Rawalpindi, Pakistan were sentenced for the kidnapping
and sexually assaulting 45 girls. Qasim Jahangir got the death penalty, while his
wife, Kiran Jahangir was sentenced to life. He does not deserve to live and he
should be hanged together with the Pakistani Paedophile, Sohail
Ayaz.
Couple,
identified as Qasim Jahangir and Kiran Mehmood. PHOTO: EXPRESS/FILE
Couple
sentenced to death for sexually assaulting, filming 45 girls
Accused
confess to sexually assaulting 45 girls, making inappropriate videos of at
least 10 victims
A local court
in Rawalpindi has sentenced a couple to life and death for kidnapping, sexually
assaulting, blackmailing and also recording inappropriate videos of dozens of
girls.
Additional
District and Sessions Judge Jahangir Gondal on Monday awarded death sentence to
Qasim Jahangir over rape and recording inappropriate videos while also
announcing three-year imprisonment and a total of Rs2.5 million fine.
Convict’s wife
Kiran Jahangir has been sentenced to life along with a fine of one million
rupees.
The couple
confessed to the sexual assault of 45 girls, taking their photographs and
making inappropriate videos of at least 10 victims.
The case had gripped media attention for weeks in 2019
after a female student, who is also married, was abducted from outside Gordon
College by a woman who pretended to be a fellow student.
The
complainant had alleged that she was offered lift by a woman, who kidnapped
her. The complainant had further alleged that the kidnapper woman and her
husband had assaulted her and filmed the act.
Police had
arrested the suspects and recovered dozens of porn videos of local women from
their mobile phones, laptops and pen drives.
Kiran had told
the victim that her ‘brother’ was coming to pick her in a while. After a few
minutes, a man arrived in a grey car and the woman pushed the victim inside the
vehicle and threatened her with a knife to silence her.
The student
was taken to a house in Gulistan Colony where Qasim, the husband, allegedly
raped her while Kiran, the wife, took pictures and recorded video of the crime.
They threatened and blackmailed the victim by showing her sexually explicit
video. She was dropped on Tipu Road later at night.
According to
the complainant, the accused also admitted to have kidnapped several girls of
ages 8-12 with the help of his wife and subjected them to similar heinous
crime.
Police had also recovered photographs and video clips from the accused’s house.
The police official said that the couple had sold the videos and photos to an
international porn website.
“My heart is broken in pain over the killing of the child Adnane. There
is no word in the dictionary that describes the severity of these heinous acts.
It is astonishing for those who [use] the cover of human rights to try to
defend criminals,”- Sheikh Omar Al
Kazabri argued that the principles of justice in Islam supports the concept
known as “an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth.”
Those
words by the top Imam of Morocco are spot on. I agree with him. On this date,
January 13, 2021, Morocco’s Court of Appeal in Tangier sentenced a 24-year old
man to death penalty for kidnapping, raping, and killing Adnane Bouchouf, a 11-year old boy in
September last year.
The paedophile does not deserve to live.
And Clint Eastwood is absolutely right when he said:
Crimes against children are the most heinous crime.
That, for me, would be a reason for capital punishment because children are
innocent and need the guidance of an adult society. –
Clint Eastwood
I am satisfied that Adnane
Bouchouf’s killer is now on death row with the killers of Louisa
Vesterager Jespersen and Maren Ueland. I also thank
the Moroccans who condemned the murder and also show support to the victim by
launching a petition for the death penalty.
Sheikh Omar Al
Kazabri is the imam at the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca.
Morocco Sentences to Death Killer, Rapist of 11-Year Old
Boy
The
incident caused outrage among Moroccans, the majority of whom asked for the
severe punishment for the perpetrator.
Rabat
– Morocco’s Court of Appeal in Tangier sentenced today a 24-year old man to
death penalty for kidnapping, raping, and killing Adnane Bouchouf, a
11-year old boy in September last year.
Tangier’s
court also sentenced the perpetrator’s
flatmates. The three flatmates received four months prison sentences each. They
will also pay a fine of MAD 1000 each ($80).
Security
services found Adnane’s body on September 11 buried in a garden not far from
where the family of the victim lived.
The
24-year old defendant kidnapped the boy, raped, and killed him in cold blood on
September 7, the day when Adnane disappeared.
The
family’s victim had searched for their boy in vain, disturbing flyers and
posting Adnane photos.
Moroccan
citizens reacted to the incident quickly, sharing the photos of Adnane all over
social networks.
When
the defendant noticed people’s alert, he rushed to the barber in an attempt to
change his look.
A
street camera footage showed a young man talking to Adnane before walking away
with him.
Security
services were l able to identify and find the suspect appearing in the video on
Friday, after he had already committed the crime.
During
his hearings, the perpetrator claimed he did not rape Adnane Bouchouf. He also
claimed that he was not planning to kill him and said he only kidnapped him to
ask for a ransom since he was in need of money.
The
news about the death of Adnane shocked Moroccans across the country and
abroad.
Many asked for the maximum sentence against the suspect, signing a petition on
Facebook urging for execution or death sentence.
The
imam at the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca, sheikh Omar Al Kazabr, defended
Moroccans advocating for the death penalty as punishment for the kidnapping,
rape, and murder.
A
number of activists adopted a firm position against death penalty, however.
They argued that every living person has the right to live, regardless of
their crime.
Published date: 14 January 2021 15:30 UTC | Last update:2 days 19 hours ago
The
main suspect in the case of the kidnap and murder of an 11-year-old boy last
year in Morocco that sent shockwaves through the country has been sentenced to
death.
The
case of Adnane Bouchouf provoked national mourning when the young victim was
kidnapped in Tangiers after being sent by his family to collect medicine
from a pharmacy.
Bouchouf
was declared missing by his family on 7 September and his body was discovered
four days later buried near his family home.
The
Tangier Court of Appeal handed down the death sentence to the perpetrator, who
has not been named in the media, on Wednesday
over charges of rape, premeditated murder, embezzlement of a
minor, sexual abuse and the mutilation of a corpse.
His
three flatmates were handed four-month prison sentences each and fined 1,000
Moroccan dirhams ($80) for failing to report the crime.
Cameras from the neighbourhood captured some of the final moments of Bouchouf,
who was coaxed into following the 24-year-old perpetrator to his apartment,
where he reportedly abused and raped Bouchouf, before taking him to the
location near the victim’s home and murdering him.
According
to Spain's Euro Weekly News, once the killer, from the city of Ksar el-Kebir in
the northwest of Morocco, knew people were looking for the child he went
to a barber to attempt to change his appearance. Despite this he was
identified by the police.
While
on trial, he claimed he did not rape the boy and was not planning to kill him,
but had kidnapped him only for money, Euro Weekly News said. The killer
reportedly sent a message to the victim’s father asking for a ransom.
If a dog can be put to
sleep for attacking children, then so should all paedophiles!
Bouchouf’s
murderer became acquainted with the victim after frequenting the Bouchouf
family restaurant.
According
to Article 474 of Morocco’s penal code, the kidnapping of a minor is punishable
by death if the victim is murdered.
Speaking
to local media, Bouchouf’s father said he was satisfied with the verdict and
described the death penalty as the “right decision”.
“The culprit got what he deserves,”
he said.
Morocco
has not carried out any executions since 1993. However, the North
African state has handed down death sentences since then, with at least 10
individuals sentenced to death in 2018 and more than 93 still on death
row.
In
November, Morocco’s National Council of Human Rights (CNDH) called on Moroccan
authorities to vote against the death penalty at the Third Committee of the
United Nations General Assembly.
The
CNDH has repeatedly called for the removal of the death penalty from the
penal code. Morocco’s latest constitution, passed in 2011, states that the law
protects “the right to life [as] the first right of any human being”.
Between
2000 and 2019, 119 death row prisoners received a royal pardon and their
sentences were commuted to life imprisonment or fixed-term sentences.
King decrys 'heinous crime'
A
few days after Adnane’s body was discovered, Morocco's King Mohammed VI
condemned the "heinous crime" and offered his condolences to the
victim’s family.
“Your innocent son was a victim, and we share with you and all Moroccan
families who have sympathised with you, the magnitude of this cruel loss,” he
said.
A
number of senior officials, including Mohamed Amhidia, the governor of Tangier,
along with Abd al-Rahman, the regional representative of the Ministry of
Endowments and Islamic Affairs, visited the family to offer their
condolences last year.
Shortly
after the details of Adnane’s murder surfaced, a petition, which reached
400,000 signatures in three days, was set up calling for the death penalty
to be imposed on the accused in order to deter others from committing similar
crimes.
At
the time, Omar al-Kazabri, the imam at the Hassan II Mosque in Casablanca,
defended Moroccans calling for the death penalty, saying it was a fitting
punishment for the suspect.
Opposition to death penalty
A
number of NGOs in the country have long denounced sentences against sexual
predators that they consider too lenient.
A
viral social media campaign using the hashtags "justice for Adnane"
and "execution for Adnane's killer" provoked an outpouring of
sympathy for the victim in Morocco and abroad.
"This is heartbreaking. I can’t even begin to imagine what he might have
gone through," one user tweeted. "We demand justice for his family
and parents."
However, not all Moroccans were in support of carrying out the death
penalty.
Activist
Ahmed Assid sparked controversy when he described those calling for the death
penalty as “no less brutal than the monster they want revenge against”.
The
same month of Bouchouf’s murder, a court in Tangier sentenced a couple to death
for their involvement in the murder of a seven-year-old child in Larache in 2019.
The
cases renewed calls for officials to do more to protect children and to
help those reported missing.
Hands
off My Child, a Moroccan NGO, urged authorities to activate an
Alert-Abduction system as part of measures to ensure better child protection and
to “save several children's lives”.
On this date, July
18, 2019, three ISIS Militants are sentenced to death by firing squad for the
murders of two Scandinavian women hiking in the Atlas Mountains.
On
this date, January 13, 2021, Lisa Montgomery became the first female federal
inmate in 67 years to be executed by the US federal government. The victim was
a 23-year-old American woman found murdered in her home in Skidmore, Missouri. Lisa
Marie Montgomery, then aged 36, strangled Stinnett from behind and removed
Stinnett's unborn child, eight months into gestation, from her womb. The child
was safely recovered by authorities and returned to the father.
Lisa Montgomery (left)
murdered Bobbie Jo Stinnett (right) before cutting her child from her womb
Bobbie Jo Stinnett
(December 4, 1981 – December 16, 2004) was a pregnant 23-year-old American
woman found murdered in her home in Skidmore, Missouri. The
perpetrator, Lisa Marie Montgomery, then aged 36, strangled Stinnett
from behind and removed Stinnett's unborn child, eight months into gestation,
from her womb. The child was safely recovered by authorities and returned to
the father.
Montgomery
was tried and found guilty in 2007, and executed by lethal injection on January
13, 2021, after exhausting the appeals process. Montgomery was the first female
federal inmate in 67 years to be executed by the federal government.
Bobbie
Jo Stinnett was eight months pregnant with her first child. She and her husband
ran a dog-breeding business from their residence. Montgomery met Stinnett
online in a Rat Terrierchatroom
called "Ratter Chatter".
It
is known that Stinnett was expecting the arrival in Skidmore, Missouri, of prospective buyers for a
terrier at about the time of her murder. Montgomery told Stinnett that she,
too, was pregnant,
leading to the two women chatting online and exchanging e-mails about
their pregnancies. Additionally, there was no sign of forced entry. Authorities
now believe that Montgomery, posing as customer "Darlene Fischer",
arranged to visit Stinnett's house on that day. On December 16, 2004,
Montgomery entered the house, strangled Stinnett, and cut the premature infant from her womb.
It
was speculated that Montgomery's motivation stemmed from a miscarriage
she may have suffered and subsequently concealed from her family. How or
whether Montgomery had recently become pregnant is unclear. Montgomery's former
husband has since told authorities that she underwent a tubal
ligation in 1990, and that she had a history of falsely telling
acquaintances that she was pregnant.
The
case
Stinnett
was discovered by her mother, Becky Harper, in a pool of blood about an hour
after the assault. Harper immediately called 9-1-1. Harper
described the wounds inflicted upon her daughter as appearing as if her
"stomach had exploded". Attempts by paramedics to revive Stinnett
were unsuccessful, and she was pronounced dead at St. Francis Hospital in Maryville.
The
next day, December 17, 2004, Montgomery was arrested at her farmhouse in Melvern,
Kansas, where
the newborn had been claimed as her own and was recovered. The day-old baby was
placed in the custody of her father. The quick recovery and capture was
attributed to, in part, the use of forensic computer investigation, which tracked
Montgomery and Stinnett's online communication with one another. Both bred rat
terriers and may have attended dog shows together. The later investigation was
also aided by the issuance of an AMBER
alert to enlist the public's help. The alert was initially denied because
it had never been used in an unborn case and thus there was no description of
the victim. Eventually, after intervention by Congressman Sam Graves
it was implemented. When authorities went to speak to Montgomery they found her
in the living room holding the baby and watching television with the AMBER
alert flashing on the screen.[16]DNA
testing was used to confirm the infant's identity.
Lisa Marie Montgomery (February 27, 1968 – January 13, 2021) resided in Melvern,
Kansas, at the time of the murder. She was raised in an abusive home where she
was allegedly raped
by her stepfather for many years. She sought escape mentally by drinking
alcohol. When Montgomery was 14, her mother discovered the abuse, but reacted
by threatening her daughter with a gun. She tried to escape this situation by
marrying at the age of 18, but both the first marriage and a second marriage
resulted in further abuse, although in police interviews Montgomery admitted
she was attracted to the S&M scene and that she "liked taking the
whip".
Montgomery
had four children before she underwent a tubal
ligation in 1990. Montgomery falsely claimed to be pregnant several times
after the procedure, according to both her first and second spouses.
At
a pre-trial hearing, a neuropsychologist testified that head injuries,
which Montgomery had sustained some years before, could have damaged the part
of the brain that controls aggression. During her trial in federal court, her defense
attorneys, led by Frederick Duchardt, asserted that she had pseudocyesis,
a mental condition that causes a woman to falsely believe she is pregnant and
exhibit outward signs of pregnancy. According to The
Guardian, Duchardt attempted to follow this line of defense only one
week before the trial began, after being forced to abandon a contradictory
argument that Stinnett was murdered by Montgomery's brother Tommy, who had an alibi. As a result,
Montgomery's family refused to co-operate with Duchardt and describe her
background to the jury.
On
October 22, 2007, jurors found Montgomery guilty, rejecting the defense claim
Montgomery was delusional. On October 26, the jury recommended a death sentence.
Judge Gary A. Fenner formally sentenced Montgomery to
death. On April 4, 2008, a judge upheld the jury's recommendation for death.
Duchardt's
aforementioned pseudocyesis defense, Montgomery's past trauma and separate
diagnoses of mental illness were not fully revealed to the jury until after her
conviction, by her appeals
team. This led critics, including Guardian journalist David Rose, to argue that Duchardt provided
an incompetent legal defense for Montgomery. Fenner required Duchardt to be cross-examined
in November 2016. Duchardt rejected all criticism and defended his conduct.
Experts
who examined Montgomery after conviction concluded that by the time of her
crime she had long been living with psychosis, bipolar
disorder, and post-traumatic stress disorders. She was said to be often disassociated from reality and to have
permanent brain damage from numerous
beatings at the hands of her parents and spouses.
Montgomery's
scheduled execution on December 8, 2020, by lethal injection at the U.S. Penitentiary in Terre
Haute, Indiana, was delayed following her attorneys' contracting COVID-19. On
December 23, 2020, Montgomery was given a new execution date of January 12,
2021. U.S. District Court Judge Randolph
Moss found that "the director's order setting a new execution date
while the Court's stay was in effect was 'not in accordance with law,'"
prohibiting Montgomery's execution to be rescheduled until January 1, 2021, at
the earliest. On January 1, a three-judge panel on the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit vacated Moss's ruling,
effectively reinstating Montgomery's execution date of January 12. On that
date, federal judge Patrick Hanlon granted a stay of her execution on the
grounds that her mental competence must first be tested as it could be argued
she did not understand the grounds for her excution, per the Eighth Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution. The stay was also vacated by a 6–3 ruling from the Supreme
Court and the execution was ordered to be carried out right after this.
Montgomery
was executed by lethal injection on January 13, 2021, pronounced dead (EST)
1:31 a.m. at the federal prison complex in Terre Haute, Indiana, following a
6–3 ruling from the Supreme Court to deny a stay of execution. When asked if
she had any last words she replied "No". Shortly after her death, her
lawyer released a statement stating that "The craven bloodlust of a failed
administration was on full display tonight. Everyone who participated in the
execution of Lisa Montgomery should feel shame."
Popular
culture
The
case was described in the books Baby Be Mine, by author Diane
Fanning, and Murder in the Heartland by M.
William Phelps. The case was also featured in an episode of the true crime
series Deadly Women titled "Fatal Obsession",
and in the fifth episode of the documentary series No One Saw a Thing that aired on the Sundance
Channel on August 29, 2019.
Jason
Nightengale was shot dead by Evanston Police after he shot dead five people and
wounded two in a shooting rampage.
This 2018 booking photo
from the Chicago Police Department shows Jason Nightengale. Nightengale was
killed Saturday night Jan. 9, 2021, in a shootout with police after killing
multiple people in a series of shootings over roughly four hours that started
on Chicago's South Side.
Jason
Nightengale was a 32-year-old Illinois man who went on a random shooting
rampage in Chicago and Evanston on
January 10, randomly wounding and murdering multiple people in an IHOP,
convenience store, street, and apartment. Altogether seven people were shot, at
least five fatally.
According
to Chicago Police Superintendent David Brown, who spoke in a news conference, Nightengale shot and killed
an apartment security guard, a man sitting in a garage, and a man in a
convenience store. He also shot a teenager in a car, a woman in an IHOP
restaurant, and other people during the shooting spree.
The
shootings were random. Nightengale was then shot and killed by Evanston police.
One of the victims was a student at the University of Chicago, the university
confirmed in a statement on Twitter. The victims’ names were not yet released.
Nightengale’s name has been incorrectly spelled in some outlets and on social
media as Jason Nightingale.
EVANSTON, Ill. (CBS) — A man went on a shooting spree through multiple
South Side neighborhoods and then north all the way to Evanston on Saturday –
leaving three people dead and several others injured – before he was shot dead
by police.
A building security guard in Kenwood
and a University of Chicago student were among those who were shot and killed.
The man also returned to one of the crime scenes and shot at officers, police
said. The suspect, identified as Jason Nightengale, 32, also took a woman
hostage and shot and wounded her in Evanston, according to Chicago Police Supt.
David Brown.
The first
incident happened in the 5000 block of South East End Avenue in the East Hyde Park-Kenwood neighborhood during the 1
p.m. hour, Brown said. He said Nightengale entered a garage and shot a
30-year-old man dead in his car, and the University of Chicago confirmed that
the victim was a student there.
The university
Sunday identified the man as Yiran Fan, a PhD student in a joint program of the
Booth School of Business and the Kenneth C. Griffin Department of Economics.
Fan came from China to study in the United States. Fan was in the fourth year
of his program and hoped to propose his dissertation later this year.
The university
said the building where the shooting happened in the Regents Park apartment
building at 5035 S. East End Ave.
“This is
deeply painful news for the University community and our South Side
neighborhood. The University will provide support for members of our community
affected by this incident,” the university said.
Afterward,
Brown said, Nightengale went to another building on the next block north –
identified as The Barclay condominium complex at 4940 S. East End Ave.
Nightengale entered the vestibule of the building, took out a gun, and began
firing shots – striking two women.
One of the
women, who was working as a security guard at the desk for the building, was
killed in the shooting, Brown said. The other, a 77-year-old woman who was
retrieving her mail, was shot in the head and was left in critical condition,
Brown said.
CBS 2’s Steven
Graves spoke to a resident who remembers the security guard who was shot and
killed as a loving mom.
“I guess the
person wanted to use the phone, and I guess she was explaining to him he
couldn’t use the phone, and he proceeded to walk into the building – I think
she told him, like, he had to leave the building – and then he shot her,” the
resident said.
At 2:45 p.m.,
Nightengale went into a building also in the 5000 block of South East End
Avenue and took the elevator to the 19th floor, Brown said. A relative of
Nightengale’s had apparently once lived in the building.
Nightengale
found a man he knew on the 19th floor and pulled a gun on him, and pushed the
man into his own apartment, Brown said. He made the man give up the keys to his
vehicle and then returned downstairs took off in the vehicle – a red Toyota,
Brown said. That man was not shot or injured.
At 3 p.m.,
Nightengale made his way several miles to the south and west to the 9300 block
of South Halsted Street in the Brainerd neighborhood, Brown said. He announced
a robbery in a store on the block and fired shots, striking a
20-year-old man in the head, Brown said. That man was pronounced dead at
Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn.
Nightengale
also shot an 81-year-old woman in the back and neck in the same store, Brown
said. She was left in critical condition, Brown said.
At 4 p.m.,
Nightengale found his way 1.25 miles south to the 10300 block of South Halsted
Street in the Fernwood neighborhood, where a 15-year-old girl was in the back seat of a car being
driven by her mother, Brown said.
The window
shattered and the girl realized she had been shot, Brown said. She was left in
critical condition.
Nightengale
then returned to the store where he had shot and killed the man and wounded the
81-year-old woman in the 9300 block of South Halsted Street, where police had
set up a crime scene and were investigating, Brown said. He fired at the
officers, but none were struck.
By 4:45 p.m.,
Nightengale had made his way some 25 miles north to Howard Street and Western
Avenue on the cusp of the West Rogers Park neighborhood and north suburban
Evanston.
He walked into
a CVS store at 101 Asbury Ave. – the Evanston extension of Western Avenue – and
announced a robbery, Brown said. Evanston police Chief Demitrous Cook said
Nightengale also “accosted” a woman in the store. Evanston police said while
inside the store Nightengale fired one shot from his gun, but did not strike
anyone and did not take anything.
Afterward,
Nightengale ran across the street to the IHOP at 100 Asbury Ave. and took a
different woman hostage, Cook said. He then shot that woman, who police believe
was a customer, in the neck and left her in critical condition, Cook said.
Nightengale
then ran off east on Howard Street, where he took another hostage, who does not
appear to have been injured.
Officers
caught up to him and tried to apprehend him, but he took off on foot fleeing
south on Howard to the parking lot of a Dollar General at 2341 W. Howard St. on
the Chicago side of the street, where there was an exchange of gunfire. It is
unclear who fired first, Evanston police said.
Evanston
police officers shot and killed Nightengale, Brown and Cook said.
Evanston
police tweeted a photo of a gun they said was recovered from Nightengale.
Cook said late Saturday there was no further threat to the community.
This
year 2021 marks 10 years since Illinois abolish the death penalty, since Illinois
does not have capital punishment anymore, I am personally very extremely satisfied
that Jason Nightengale was shot dead by the police for several reasons:
Assuming
if he was captured alive, the most he will get is more than 20 years in prison.
As LWOP will soon be abolished after the death penalty has ended, he might get
released. There is no doubt about his guilt, not even the Innocence Project can
call him innocent at all.
Even if he was never to
be released. He was a very dangerous person; he might murder an inmate or a prison
guard or even escape. And since there is no death penalty in that state, he has
nothing more to lose.
It was good that he was
taken out from the face of this earth, as Ivan Ilyin said:
“In order to prevent the irremediable consequences of a blunder or
of an evil passion a man who strives after the good must in the first instance seek
mental and spiritual means to overcome evil by good. But if he has no such
means at his disposal, he is bound to use mental or physical compulsion and
prevention. ‘It is right to
push away from the brink of a precipice an absent-minded wayfarer; to snatch
the bottle of poison from an embittered suicide; to strike at the right moment
the hand of a political assassin aiming at his victim; to knock down an
incendiary in the nick of time; to drive out of a church shameless desecrators;
to make an armed attack against a crowd of soldiers raping a child’
(54). ‘Resistance to evil by
force and by the sword is permissible not when it is possible, but when it is
necessary because there are no other means available’; in that case
it is not only a man’s right but his duty to enter that path (195 f.) even
though it may lead to the malefactor’s death.” https://www.filosofiaesoterica.com/ilin-and-tolstoy-on-the-use-of-force/
Five people had already lost their lives and if
Nightengale was allowed to live, it will be a mockery of justice to those
victims and their families.
Evanston police share video of shooting spree that left 4
dead
Police video shows Evanston officers
fatally shooting a man suspected of killing four people and wounding three
others during a shooting spree in Chicago and the north suburb in January. Read
the full story here: https://bit.ly/3ouP10N
'I'm going around giving
blessings': Gunman, 32, brags about his random shooting rampage in Chicago's
South Side as he kills four - including student, 30, sat in his car - before
being shot dead by police