Manchester Evening News

Cabbie ‘beaten to death after taking pair to wrong club’

MURDER TRIAL TOLD UBER DRIVER DIED IN ‘FEROCIOUS’ ATTACK

- By JOHN SCHEERHOUT

TWO drunk revellers battered an Uber driver to death after he had taken them to what they thought was the wrong nightclub, a murder trial was told.

Connor McPartland, 20, and, Martin Treacy, 18, repeatedly punched and kicked Ali Asghar, 38, who died two weeks later in hospital after suffering devastatin­g head injuries in the ‘ferocious, brutal and totally unforgivin­g attack,’ a prosecutor told a jury.

The pair were said to have been left ‘angry’ after Mr Asghar picked them up from Oldham town centre to drop them off at Coco’s in Rochdale. But Mr McPartland had actually wanted to meet some girls at Koko’s nightclub, in Rochdale town centre, but had keyed in the wrong spelling when he used the Uber app, the court was told.

McPartland, of Hollins Road, and Treacy, of Gawsworth Close, both Oldham, deny murder. Mr Treacy has admitted manslaught­er but denies he intended to cause the taxi driver serious harm, the jurors were told. McPartland also denies manslaught­er and two counts of making threats with an offensive weapon.

Opening the case for the prosecutio­n at Manchester Crown Court, Guy Gozem QC said Mr Asghar ‘had the misfortune’ of collecting the two defendants from Oldham town centre on Saturday, October 29, last year.

The two young men were ‘extremely drunk’ when they got into the back of Mr Asghar’s Mercedes at 4.30am, the jurors were told. But the car stopped opposite a Shell garage on Queensway near Coco’s following an argument on board, according to the prosecutor.

The pair had wanted to be taken to Koko’s which was in Rochdale town centre, the court was told.

The jurors were told the argument woke one resident who was said to have heard one of the defendants shouting ‘come on then’ before she heard someone say ‘get the police, phone the police then.’

The resident reported hearing a banging noise and forensic analysis

later matched a dent in Mr Asghar’s car door which left a mark which matched Mr McPartland’s trainers.

The prosecutor told the court: “Tragically, though, what was done to the car pales into insignific­ance, because once all three of them were out of the car, the argument all too soon became a ferocious, brutal and totally unforgivin­g attack by the two drunken young men on the taxi driver.

“They broke bones in his face by punching or kicking him, then by pushing him over so that he fell and cracked his head, fracturing his skull. All because of their unwillingn­ess to accept that they had make a mistake. As a consequenc­e of their attack, he suffered head and brain injuries that led to his death.”

A passing taxi driver tried to stop the attack but ‘his words of advice, his efforts to calm them down and stop their attack was like water off a duck’s back,’ said Mr Gozem.

The defendant McPartland is said to have attempted a martial arts move, a ‘spin kick,’ but when a multitool fell out of his pocket he picked it up and shouted at Mr Asghar ‘I’m going to stab you!’ according to the prosecutor.

CCTV captured Mr Asghar running away but he stumbled and fell and the two defendants resumed their attack ‘kicking him in the head and the face,’ said the QC.

When Mr McPartland then turned his attention to Mr Asghar’s car his alleged victim managed to get to his feet and tried to stop his taxi from being taken, the court was told.

But the attack continued and Mr Asghar fell again, his head striking the alloy wheel of his taxi, said Mr Gozem.

The Uber driver was heard to scream and one of the defendants was heard to say ‘come on, run, run, run’ before they were seen jogging away down Queensway.

Mr Asghar was taken to hospital but died two weeks later. His family wept in the public gallery as upsetting details of his injuries were read out to the court.

 ?? ?? Police at the scene of the attack in October last year
Police at the scene of the attack in October last year

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