Daily Mail

Pensioner, 87, on mobility scooter killed by thug just out of prison

- By George Odling and Andy Jehring

A CAREER criminal yesterday admitted killing a grandfathe­r riding on a mobility scooter.

Lee Byer, 46, was just five days out of prison when he stabbed Thomas O’Halloran in the neck and chest in a west London underpass.

His 87-year-old victim, who had been busking to raise money for Ukraine, travelled 75 yards on his scooter trying to find help before bleeding to death.

Mr O’Halloran’s family told of their fury yesterday after the prosecutio­n dropped their murder charge and accepted Byer’s plea to the lesser offence of manslaught­er on the grounds of

‘Stabbed to death in an underpass’

diminished responsibi­lity. Mental health reports had found Byer was psychotic, hearing voices, suffering from paranoid delusions and paranoid schizophre­nia.

Speaking with a heavy stutter from the dock at the Old Bailey, he admitted manslaught­er and possession of an offensive weapon – pleas that were accepted by the Crown.

Mr O’Halloran’s daughter Jeanne, 64, told the Times that prosecutor­s made the decision without consulting them.

She added: ‘I am disgusted by this. He will be freed from prison to kill again. We knew he had a previous conviction for robbery but we didn’t know he had just come out of prison when he killed my dad. The family would have preferred for him to have a murder trial so we could see justice being done and let normal people decide if he is guilty or not.’

The Crown Prosecutio­n Service said representa­tives met Mr O’Halloran’s family to explain the decision to accept Byer’s plea.

Spokesman Julius Capon said: ‘We reached this conclusion having carefully reviewed extensive medical evidence from experts who agreed that Byer’s actions were substantia­lly impaired by hallucinat­ions caused by paranoid schizophre­nia. With this detailed expert medical evidence in mind and having thoroughly reviewed all the evidence in this case, we decided that there was no longer a realistic prospect of conviction for murder.

‘Our thoughts remain with Mr O’Halloran’s family.’

Byer, once described as a Fagintype character who recruited young children into crime, has 15 conviction­s for 30 offences.

He was released from HMP Wormwood Scrubs five days before the fatal attack in August 2022, having been recalled to prison after being accused of beating up an ex-girlfriend. He was on probation after receiving 12 years for a violent armed robbery in 2011.

After stabbing Mr O’Halloran, Byer tried to burn his clothes in his mother’s back garden in Southall, west London. When he was arrested two days later he told police he was in prison at the time and was not the bloodsoake­d man seen on CCTV.

Mr O’Halloran was a talented musician who began life in relative poverty in the small Irish town of Ennistymon, Co Clare.

In a bizarre twist of fate, Byer’s prolific offending meant his life may have intersecte­d with Mr O’Halloran’s 23 years before their fatal encounter. Byer was accused in 1999 of leaving two loaded handguns in the Hammersmit­h hotel where Mr O’Halloran worked as a maintenanc­e engineer.

Months earlier Byer was linked to a kidnap plot in which he and three others were said to have hauled Noorundin Saeed out of his car. Mr Saeed was thrown into a van by the gang, who demanded £500,000 and heroin before stabbing him and burning his hand.

Judge Mark Lucraft adjourned sentencing in the latest case until May 10.

 ?? ?? Victim: Thomas O’Halloran
Victim: Thomas O’Halloran
 ?? ?? CCTV evidence: Lee Byer
CCTV evidence: Lee Byer

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