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Joint enterprise: Ameen Jogee jailed for manslaughter | Joint enterprise: Ameen Jogee jailed for manslaughter |
(about 3 hours later) | |
A man whose murder conviction was quashed in a landmark ruling on joint enterprise has been jailed for manslaughter instead. | A man whose murder conviction was quashed in a landmark ruling on joint enterprise has been jailed for manslaughter instead. |
Ameen Jogee, 27, had a re-trial after the Supreme Court ruled the joint enterprise law had been wrongly interpreted for 30 years. | |
He was originally given a life sentence for murdering Paul Fyfe, but will now be released in less than a year. | |
The judge gave him a 12-year custodial sentence following the re-trial. | |
However, offenders serve only half of these types of sentences in prison before being released on licence, and the five years Jogee has already served will count towards this. | |
Jogee's mother Rachel Whitehead said: "Obviously it's a lot better than the first sentence for murder and I'm just so happy that he's finally coming home. | |
"I know there's a life that's been lost and I'm really sorry for that but I lost my son." | |
'Difference in evidence' | |
The re-trial at Nottingham Crown Court heard that Mohammed Hirsi stabbed former Leicestershire police officer Paul Fyfe after an argument. | |
The prosecution claimed that Jogee "egged on" his friend to stab him, while the defence argued he was "in the wrong place at the wrong time". | |
Judge Gregory Dickinson said the case had "attracted considerable public and media attention" but he would "caution against reading too much into the final outcome of this case". | |
"The fact that the verdict was different in the re-trial seems to me to have as much to do with the difference in the evidence as it does with the change in the law," he said. | |
Paul Fyfe was killed in Leicester in June 2011 at the home of his girlfriend, Niomi Reid. | |
Jogee, a drug dealer with a criminal record, knew Ms Reid and supplied her with cocaine. | |
Jogee and Hirsi both went to Ms Reid's home on the night of the killing but she asked them to leave before Mr Fyfe came round. | |
Hirsi later returned to the home and had what the judge described as a "hostile verbal exchange" with the ex-policeman. | |
Hirsi left after Jogee returned to the house and collected him, but the pair later went back for a third time. | |
Hirsi then stabbed Mr Fyfe in the the heart after arguing with him. | |
'Influence of drugs' | |
In her original witness statement in June 2011, Ms Reid said Jogee had been "on the doorstep waving a bottle about, like he was egging [Hirsi] on again". | |
But in her evidence to jurors at the re-trial, she said it was not true that Jogee had brandished the bottle, and had been drinking from it instead. | |
She said: "I may have just been saying things to please the police. I was angry and under the influence of drugs." | |
Jailing Jogee, Judge Dickinson said: "On the jury's verdict Jogee did not intend that Hirsi should stab Fyfe with the intent to kill him or to cause him really serious injury. | |
"However, when Hirsi and Jogee returned to the property it was with the intention that Hirsi should attack Fyfe and cause him some injury, albeit not with really serious harm." | |
The jury cleared Jogee of murder but convicted him of manslaughter. | |
Hirsi is still serving his life sentence for murder, of which he must serve at least 22 years in prison before he can be released on licence. |
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