A UK court sentenced him to gambling, when he allegedly tried to kill an undercover police for a painted Rolex model. [Image: Shutterstock.com]
A Life on the Line
A police veteran of the 2017 London Bridge attacks have survived a strangulation, which has now sent a hunter gambling addiction to a life in the UK jail.
The Sun On Thursday, 27-year-old Abdi-Rehman Khalif-Ee’s criminal designs were tried by the anonymous police to steal their Rolex Sky-resident watch around £ 45,000 ($ 61,843).
Vet was working drunk in West End, London
According to a Wednesday report by the Crown Prosiction Services of the Government of UK, VET was working into the West end of London as part of a sting operation investigating a luxury watch -related street dacoit in London in London.
Illing resident Khalif-Ali took fodder, but when the officer revealed himself, instead of running, he allegedly tried to kill him.
close call
According to reports, Khalif-Ali took the police from the neck, covered his nose and mouth with hand.
Feel safe in a terrorist attack “
Later, the experienced of the 2017 London Bridge Attack, in which eight people died in a coordinated van and knife attack, admitted that he “felt safe in a terrorist attack during the incident.”
While the police went out of the 2017 attack, it appears that the intervention of others saved his life while strangling the 2024 Christmas period.
The Sun On Thursday, a homeless man and a female police officer tried to help the police, later a shock on the face before taking the suspect into sanctions.
Desperate criminal
The anonymous experienced officer told the media that when the clock thief became violent, he became violent: “I realized that I was on my own and was fighting for my life.”
A CPS statement, adding, Attack was both Sustained and seriousWith the suspect “somehow has been determined to steal the victim’s clock.”
The report states that Khalif-Ali is a mad schizophrenic gambling habit, which first confessed to the intention of robbing and intentionally strangling. “
“I have no doubt that you are dangerous,” Southworks Crown Court Judge Justin Cole told Khalif-Ali.