Five muslim gang members are all sitting in jail for shooting at (using a sawed off shotgun) and the brutal stabbing of Damien Miller. The are: Omar Arbab, aged 20, of Rushton Close, Cobridge, 25-year-old Nasir and 28-year-old Naim Aziz, both of Wulstan Road, Cobridge, and Tasab Hussain, aged 28, and 22-year-old Asrar Sami, both of Waterloo Road, Cobridge.
The assault took place outside of a Cobridge pub where Mr. Miller had gone with friends and family members, after first going to a local restaurant, to celebrate his dead mother's life.
In typical muslim gang thuggery pattern- one man on "lookout" used a cellphoneto call up the gang:
"Mr Haywood told the jury that on entering the pub, Mrs Cliffe's daughter Roxanne and son Jake noticed Sami standing in the upstairs window of a house opposite, holding what looked like a mobile phone. He said: "Within 15 minutes of these people arriving at the pub, that armed, masked gang had gathered outside and you may conclude they had planned sufficiently to be laying in wait for their victims." LINK
The thugs then lured some family members & Mr. Miller outside and then viciously attacked him:
"Naim Aziz, entered the pub and shouted obscenities at the group, in an attempt to goad them outside.Mr Haywood added: "The insults had the desired effect. Damien Miller was chased down and was stabbed. We say while he was under attack, Nasir Aziz approached him and pulled out a sawn-off shotgun and aimed it at him."Evidence you will hear suggests that the gun was fired not once but twice."LINK
"These five men and others were all ready for violence. Some of them wore masks. Many of them were armed. Their real target was Damian Miller. He was shot at and he was stabbed several times – being caused serious injuries.".....He was covered in blood. He was bleeding from his arm and his side."LINK
Contrary to many prior judicial sentencings where judges have frequently 'given a pass' to predatory muslim criminals (particularly those guilty of sex crimes)....- for a few examples see:
WHINING CRYING & DRUNKENESS PAYS OFF FOR MUSLIM CRIMINALS IN THE UK
IT'S NOT MUSLIM RAPE JIHAD -- IT'S JUST BAD CHARACTER
Gang walk free after racist rampage
Parents' disgust as sex pests walk free
ANOTHER Muslim Child Molester Walks Free in Britain
British Judge Refuses to Deport Illegal Immigrant Muslim Pedophile
..This group of muslim criminals are actually going to spend time in jail:
"Judge Robert Trevor-Jones handed Sami, Hussain and the Aziz brothers an indeterminate sentence for the protection of the public. He said if he imposed a fixed sentence it would have been nine years. They cannot apply for parole for four-and-a-half years and will be released only when the parole board is satisfied they are not a threat. Arbab was sentenced to eight years in a young offenders' institution, and will spend a further two years on licence."
Let's hope there continue to be more judges, like Robert Trevor-Jones, who look at the seriousness of the crime and don't listen to the defendant's typical endless excuses and denials of guilt- and sends the guilty to jail -- -rather than exhibiting the politically correct dhimmitude that seems to have infected so many other British judges and magistrates when it comes to muslim lawbreakers.(as shown above.)
Article in full:
Gang jailed for violent attack on grieving son
Tasab Hussain, Asrar Sami, Omar Arbab and brothers Nasir and Naim Aziz were convicted of wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm and carrying a firearm with criminal intent following a trial at Stoke-on-Trent Crown Court.
Victim, Damien Miller, was stabbed and shot at outside the Wedgwood pub in Waterloo Road, Cobridge, on January 18 last year.
He was with friends and family members celebrating his dead mother's life when he visited the pub. The defendants lured Miller outside and attacked him.
The five men were sentenced at Stoke-on-Crown Court yesterday. Father-of-two Nasir Aziz, of Wulstan Road, Cobridge, was in possession of a sawn-off shotgun during the attack, which was fired twice.
Andrew Baker, defending 25-year-old Aziz, said: "There is no clear evidence that there was any ammunition in the gun that could actively be discharged and kill.
"What took place was intended to scare Damien Miller and those associated with him."
Anthony Potter, representing Aziz's 28-year-old brother Naim Aziz, also of Wulstan Road, said his client played no part in the worst of the assault.
He said: "There was no significant evidence that he had a weapon. There was also evidence that by the later stage of the incident, which was the most serious stage, he was an observer."
Joanne Wallbanks, representing 22-year-old Asrar Sami, formerly of Waterloo Road, Cobridge, said: "He was married in March last year and removed himself from the area, but continued at college.
"He has qualified as a plumber and has set up a business in Birmingham."
The court heard Tasab Hussain, aged 28, of Waterloo Road, Cobridge, had a number of previous convictions.
Tariq Mahmood, representing Hussain, said: "Since 2005 there has been a stop in his criminal convictions as a result in having stability in his family life. His father passing away and his religion have given him stability."
Alison Downs, defending Omar Arbab, aged 20, of Rushton Close, Cobridge, said she could offer no mitigation with regard to the assault because her client maintained he had no involvement.
She said: "He has a supportive family, he will have employment when he comes out of prison and he has a young wife in Pakistan."
Judge Robert Trevor-Jones handed Sami, Hussain and the Aziz brothers an indeterminate sentence for the protection of the public. He said if he imposed a fixed sentence it would have been nine years. They cannot apply for parole for four-and-a-half years and will be released only when the parole board is satisfied they are not a threat.
Arbab was sentenced to eight years in a young offenders' institution, and will spend a further two years on licence.
Judge Trevor-Jones said: "Your actions that night, arming yourselves with deadly weapons and your willingness to use those weapons, make it clear to me that you all represent an obvious danger to the public."
Speaking after the hearing, Superintendent Bernie O'Reilly, from Stoke-on-Trent police division, said: "I'm very pleased those involved in this crime have been removed from our community, preventing them from causing further distress to residents."
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