Reading stabbings: Libyan sentenced to life for deadly UK park attack

A woman reacts after placing flowers by a police cordon near the scene of a fatal multiple stabbing attack at the Forbury Gardens park, in Reading, England, June 23, 2020.
A woman reacts after placing flowers by a police cordon near the scene of a fatal multiple stabbing attack at the Forbury Gardens park, in Reading, England, June 23, 2020. Copyright AP Photo/Matt Dunham
Copyright AP Photo/Matt Dunham
By Associated Press
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Khairi Saadallah was sentenced Monday to life in prison with no chance of parole for stabbing three male friends to death in an English park in June.

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A Libyan man who stabbed three friends to death as they sat in an English city park on a summer evening was sentenced Monday to life in prison with no chance of parole.

Judge Nigel Sweeney said Khairi Saadallah should be given a rare whole-life prison term for the “ruthless and brutal” attack. He said it was “a rare and exceptional case in which just punishment requires you must be kept in prison for the rest of your life.”

Saadallah, 26, had pleaded guilty to three counts of murder and three of attempted murder for the June 20 violence in Reading, 40 miles (64 kilometres) west of London.

Friends James Furlong, 36, David Wails, 49, and Joseph Ritchie-Bennett, 39, were enjoying a warm Saturday evening in Reading's Forbury Gardens park when they were stabbed.

Each died from a single stab wound in an attack that lasted barely a minute. Three other men were injured.

Although he admitted the killings, Saadallah denied being motivated by an ideological cause or doing significant planning for the attack. The defendant, who came to Britain in 2012, had convictions for offenses including theft and assault.

But police said the stabbings were terrorism. Prosecutors said Saadallah, an asylum-seeker who was living in Reading, stabbed the victims while shouting “Allahu akbar” - the Arabic phrase for “God is great.”

The judge said the defendant “was seeking to advance a political, religious or ideological cause” and had done substantial planning. He rejected the argument that Saadallah was suffering a mental illness at the time of the attack.

Detective Chief Superintendent Kath Barnes, head of Counter Terrorism Policing South East, said after the sentencing that Saadallah was “a committed jihadist and was intent on killing as many people as he could on that sunny summer’s evening in June.”

“The horrors of this incident took just a single minute to unfold. ... In that tiny time frame, he changed the lives of all those involved forever," she said.

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