A 15-year-old boy and a girl, aged 13, were accused of killing Bhim Kohli, aged 80, in Franklin Park in Braunstone Town, near Leicester, with the man allegedly kicked and punched
Two teenagers have been found guilty of killing an 80-year-old man who was beaten to death in a park.
A 15-year-old boy and a girl, aged 13, were both standing trial over the death of Bhim Kohli, in Franklin Park in Braunstone Town, near Leicester, on September 1 last year. And now a jury has returned guilty verdicts of manslaughter for the pair at Leicester Crown Court.
The boy denied the murder and manslaughter of Mr Kohli, who he is alleged to have kicked and punched during a “gratuitous” attack which left him with a broken neck and fractured ribs. And the girl denied the manslaughter of Mr Kohli – having allegedly encouraged the fatal assault.
A jury retired to consider it verdicts last Friday after hearing more than a month of evidence, including the accounts of both defendants.
The defendants, who cannot be named because of their ages, appeared upset when the foreman of the jury returned the guilty verdicts.
Addressing jurors last week, prosecutor Harpreet Sandhu KC used his closing speech to accuse the 15-year-old youth of having a desire to cause really serious physical injury to Mr Kohli.
Mr Sandhu told the court that two video clips filmed by the girl showed the boy accused of murder without either of his sliders on his feet, and footage showed him using a slider to slap Mr Kohli. Mr Sandhu told the jury: “It began to be filmed before (the boy) used a slider to slap Bhim Kohli to the face. As that filming started (the girl) zoomed in on the action.
“It is not a coincidence that she began filming before that piece of violence. It is not a coincidence that she zoomed in on what was about to occur before it occurred.”
Alleging that the girl had prior knowledge of what was about to happen, Mr Sandhu said: “She knew there would be violence and she had a desire to capture it – and capturing it provided encouragement for the violence to be meted out.”
The youth had no reason at all to hit Mr Kohli, Mr Sandhu said, adding that the boy’s actions had been “gratuitous violence against a man who was defenceless and a man who, because he was on the ground, was in a vulnerable position.”
He continued: “He was prepared to use violence when it wasn’t needed. His instinct when he first approached Bhim Kohli was to use violence. His instinct when he was angry was to use violence. By the time we get to (video) clip two (the boy) could just have left Franklin Park and done so easily.
“However he did not do that – he chose to stay in Franklin Park, where Bhim Kohli was.” Suggesting to jurors that the boy used further violence between the filming of the second video clip and a third clip, Mr Sandhu alleged that it had involved kicks to the chest and punching.
Racial abuse allegedly aimed at Mr Kohli by the boy was “a sign of hostility” and would tell the jury something about what a person using violence intended, Mr Sandhu said. The defendant told the court he “fell on top of” Mr Kohli after the pensioner walked towards him saying something in an angry voice.
Lawyers acting for the female defendant maintain she did not encourage the boy to attack Mr Kohli, claiming what the prosecution suggested was her laughter during an interaction with the pensioner was “more like a gasp”.