Life no longer meaning life.....what is the point?
A bus driver from South-East London was jailed for life for the sexual assaults on two foreign women in London. Saeied Negad sexually assaulted a 23-year old Czech student who advertised a vacancy in a pizza parlour, where he then locked her in a room and assaulted her. That was in 1999 and went unsolved until last year when a Congolese woman applied to a vacancy of a cleaner and cook. Under the promise of accommodation if she cooked and cleaned, he raped the 24-year old three times, informing her no one would hear her screams. She nonetheless had the sense to contact the police and they matched Negad's DNA from both scenes of crime.
On the case itself, it would appear the pizza parlour ad was for premises which Negad had access to. He committed the offences in the premises, the police could not link him to the scene for six years. Trying to establish what happened during the investigation, I assume the police were not aware of Negad though they had his DNA, therefore, despite the news article stating the premises were his, they could not have been otherwise the link would have been established. The DNA is put on the national database. Six years later he commits the rapes on the Congolese woman at his premises and DNA from both crime scenes are checked when similarities between both attacks are suspected. Thus the police came to arrest Negad. He is suspected of taken advantage of other foreign nationals in similar or identical manner, only that no one else has come forward.
Judge Richard Hawkins at the Old Bailey pronounced a life sentence on Negad, yet stated he would be eligible for parole after six years. Not meaning he will get parole then, but he has a chance when he should be afforded none. Life should mean life. This government should balance the prison population with the number of places in prisons and yet here is another example of the failure of our current government. This potentially has reverberations onto our justice system, too many convicted offenders being allowed the possibility of not remaining in length in prison. If Negad is a model prisonser for six years, would the Parole Board refuse him liberty? Or is this another way of teasing the prisoner, giving them hope of an early release which will be constantly refused.
Quite simply, life means life. Otherwise, sentence the convicted appropriately.
On the case itself, it would appear the pizza parlour ad was for premises which Negad had access to. He committed the offences in the premises, the police could not link him to the scene for six years. Trying to establish what happened during the investigation, I assume the police were not aware of Negad though they had his DNA, therefore, despite the news article stating the premises were his, they could not have been otherwise the link would have been established. The DNA is put on the national database. Six years later he commits the rapes on the Congolese woman at his premises and DNA from both crime scenes are checked when similarities between both attacks are suspected. Thus the police came to arrest Negad. He is suspected of taken advantage of other foreign nationals in similar or identical manner, only that no one else has come forward.
Judge Richard Hawkins at the Old Bailey pronounced a life sentence on Negad, yet stated he would be eligible for parole after six years. Not meaning he will get parole then, but he has a chance when he should be afforded none. Life should mean life. This government should balance the prison population with the number of places in prisons and yet here is another example of the failure of our current government. This potentially has reverberations onto our justice system, too many convicted offenders being allowed the possibility of not remaining in length in prison. If Negad is a model prisonser for six years, would the Parole Board refuse him liberty? Or is this another way of teasing the prisoner, giving them hope of an early release which will be constantly refused.
Quite simply, life means life. Otherwise, sentence the convicted appropriately.

