An Afghan asylum seeker today convicted of murdering an aspiring Royal Marine has been unmasked as a killer of two who fled in Serbia to the UK claiming he was a 14-year-old schoolboy.
Lawangeen Abdulrahimzai, 21, murdered Thomas Roberts, 21, during an argument over an e-scooter in Bournemouth town centre in March last year.
Abdulrahimzai had hoodwinked Border Force and the Home Office after arriving in Dorset on a Brittany Ferries service from Cherbourg on Boxing Day 2019, telling authorities he was 14.
At Salisbury Crown Court today the jury found him guilty of killing Mr Roberts — and the murderer’s full life of crime was made public.
Abdulrahimzai had been handed a 20-year prison sentence in his absence after the killings in Serbia. But he fled to the UK — where he became a street fighter who attacked his foster mother and boasted about his love of knives on TikTok.
Officials were unaware of Abdulrahimzai’s previous convictions — carried out under the alias ‘Huan Yasin’ — until police started investigating Mr Roberts’ murder.
They discovered that two people in Serbia had been shot dead by a petrol station and Abdulrahimzai was identified by witnesses as the killer.
He had also been convicted of drug-dealing in Italy and given a non-custodial sentence after pleading guilty.
But Abdulrahimzai, who was born in Afghanistan, was allowed into the UK after telling authorities he was a 14-year-old schoolboy whose parents had been killed by the Taliban.
He had deceived them so comprehensively that he was placed with foster mother Nicola Marchant-Jones.
Dorset Police, which investigated the murder of Thomas Roberts’, today said they had no idea Abdulrahimzai was a convicted double murderer.
A Dorset Police spokesman said: ‘Abdulrahimzai was not marked on any police intelligence systems within the UK as having convictions, nor was he marked as having convictions on the Police National Computer or Police National Database.
‘As a result, no previous convictions would have been raised with any police force within the UK.
‘As part of the investigation process Dorset Police will, where necessary, make enquiries to other agencies to obtain the relevant information, as we did in this this case. More routinely, any enquiries regarding convictions from outside of UK jurisdiction held by foreign nationals entering the UK are a matter for other agencies.’
The force said Abdulrahimzai was never arrested by Dorset Police before this case but admitted they received a report alleging he was carrying a knife – just two days before he stabbed Mr Roberts to death.
An image of the a knife held by Lawangeen Abdulrahimzai in a video posted on his TikTok page
Abdulrahimzai (centre with black hood) was caught on camera headbutting a reveller on a night just minutes before he murdered an aspiring Royal Marine in a row over an e-scooter
She described him as a shy, ‘bright lad’ who suffered ‘night terrors’ but grew to have a ‘Jekyll and Hyde’ personality towards the end of their time together.
However Abdulrahimzai – nicknamed Lo by Ms Marchant-Jones – was caught with a knife but was only given words of advice by Bournemouth police.
He began spiralling out of control and would be paid £100 for ten minutes of street fighting.
When he nearly headbutted Ms Marchant-Jones during an argument he was removed from her care.
Then on March 12 last year, he killed his third murder victim, stabbing Mr Roberts twice in the chest with a ’10cm blade’ after an argument with the aspiring Royal Marine’s friend about an e-scooter outside a Subway sandwich shop.
Months earlier the murderer had shared pictures of himself with a blade on TikTok – despite being warned by his foster parent, police and social workers not to.
The Afghan admitted manslaughter at an earlier hearing, but denied murder and forced a trial. The jury did not believe him.
Asked by prosecutor Nic Lobbenberg KC why he carried the knife, he said: ‘I was fearing for my life, there were people from home who wanted to kill me and people in Bournemouth had threatened to stab me to death.’
Giving evidence in court, Abdulrahimzai had sobbed as he described the abuse he claimed he endured at the hands of the Taliban and how the insurgents killed his parents after ‘bombing’ his home.
When arrested, he told authorities he was 16, but the court has since determined that he is now 21.
Taking to the dock today, self-professed orphan Abdulrahimzai claimed he was one of the thousands of victims of the horrors of the Taliban.
The militant group seized control of Afghanistan in the summer of 2021 when the last remnants of Allied forces withdrew after two decades.
Recalling his experience, Abdulrahimzai told the court: ‘I have seen some explosions not very far away. There was an American base not far from where we lived and the Taliban would come and demand things and there would be fighting and gunshots.
‘They used heavy weapons like rocket launchers. They planted bombs around my house, I was at my uncle’s house at the time, when I came home my parents were dead. I saw their body parts and a lot of blood.’
CCTV footage released yesterday showed the moment Abdulrahimzai (circled in white) flees on foot while being chased by Mr Medway (circled in yellow)
She described him as a shy, ‘bright lad’ who suffered ‘night terrors’ but grew to have a ‘Jekyll and Hyde’ personality towards the end of their time together.
However Abdulrahimzai – nicknamed Lo by Ms Marchant-Jones – was caught with a knife but was only given words of advice by Bournemouth police.
He began spiralling out of control and would be paid £100 for ten minutes of street fighting.
When he nearly headbutted Ms Marchant-Jones during an argument he was removed from her care.
Then on March 12 last year, he killed his third murder victim, stabbing Mr Roberts twice in the chest with a ’10cm blade’ after an argument with the aspiring Royal Marine’s friend about an e-scooter outside a Subway sandwich shop.
Months earlier the murderer had shared pictures of himself with a blade on TikTok – despite being warned by his foster parent, police and social workers not to.
The Afghan admitted manslaughter at an earlier hearing, but denied murder and forced a trial. The jury did not believe him.
Asked by prosecutor Nic Lobbenberg KC why he carried the knife, he said: ‘I was fearing for my life, there were people from home who wanted to kill me and people in Bournemouth had threatened to stab me to death.’
Giving evidence in court, Abdulrahimzai had sobbed as he described the abuse he claimed he endured at the hands of the Taliban and how the insurgents killed his parents after ‘bombing’ his home.
When arrested, he told authorities he was 16, but the court has since determined that he is now 21.
Taking to the dock today, self-professed orphan Abdulrahimzai claimed he was one of the thousands of victims of the horrors of the Taliban.
The militant group seized control of Afghanistan in the summer of 2021 when the last remnants of Allied forces withdrew after two decades.
Recalling his experience, Abdulrahimzai told the court: ‘I have seen some explosions not very far away. There was an American base not far from where we lived and the Taliban would come and demand things and there would be fighting and gunshots.
‘They used heavy weapons like rocket launchers. They planted bombs around my house, I was at my uncle’s house at the time, when I came home my parents were dead. I saw their body parts and a lot of blood.’
CCTV footage released yesterday showed the moment Abdulrahimzai (circled in white) flees on foot while being chased by Mr Medway (circled in yellow)
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CCTV footage released yesterday showed the moment Abdulrahimzai (circled in white) flees on foot while being chased by Mr Medway (circled in yellow)
A police cordon outside the Subway sandwich shop on Old Christchurch Road in Bournemouth
The police cordoned off Horseshoe Common in Bournemouth following the fatal stabbing
After briefly breaking down in tears, Abdulrahimzai said he was then captured and tortured by the Taliban for up to three weeks before being dumped and left for dead on the side of a road.
The jury was shown photographs of scarring all over his body which he says was caused by the torture, during which he was beaten with the butts of rifles and injured with knives.
Abdulrahimzai told the court how he had been hanging around a nightclub in Poole having drunk vodka and missed his bus when he encountered Mr Roberts and Mr Medway.
Opening the case last week, prosecutor Mr Lobbenberg told jurors it was a ‘fatal encounter all about a scooter which has cost this boy his life’.
He added: ‘Thomas was the peacemaker, he came between the two men. For his troubles, he received two stab wounds.’
Abdulrahimzai later ‘buried’ the knife, and burnt some of the clothes he was wearing, the court was told.
‘I’m sorry from the bottom of my heart, I wish I could change it,’ he added.
Armed police are pictured arresting the Afghan national, who is now revealed as a triple killer
The arrest, captured on police bodycam, took place just hours after the killing of Mr Roberts