Two More Convictions In Aurman Singh Murder Case

Two men join the five already jailed after the murder of the DPD driver in Shrewsbury.
Jurors at Stafford Crown Court have unanimously convicted Mehakdeep Singh, 24, and Sehajpal Singh, 36 for their roles in the brutal murder of 23‐year‐old DPD driver Aurman Singh on August 21, 2023. 5 men have already been jailed for the killing.
The defendants, who had fled the UK and were later apprehended in Austria, now face life imprisonment pending sentencing on April 11.
Aurman Singh was ambushed during his delivery round on Berwick Avenue, Shrewsbury by an armed gang that arrived in two cars – a black Audi and a white Mercedes. According to court testimony, after executing the attack, the vehicles sped off from the scene. The attackers used a range of weapons – including an axe, hockey stick, shovel, wooden stave, and metal bar – to inflict fatal injuries in a savage, almost instantaneous assault. In a harrowing account, it was revealed that Singh’s head was repeatedly hacked with an axe, fracturing his skull and exposing his brain to local residents who rushed to offer aid.
Armed police managed to hunt down the black Audi, arresting the four men inside who, along with an inside man who provided crucial information on how to ambush the victim, received a combined sentence of over 120 years in prison.
However, the men in the white Mercedes initially escaped – with two of them now being convicted in the recent trial.
The trial, building on evidence from previous proceedings that saw four other men convicted for their involvement in Singh’s murder, left jurors grappling with the graphic and distressing details. Judge Simon Hirst acknowledged the toll the testimony had taken on the jury, remarking that they had effectively served a lifetime’s jury service given the severity of the evidence presented and would never be required to sit on a jury again. “The law is a matter for me, the facts are a matter for you,” he said, adding that while the sentence will be one of life imprisonment, he must now decide the minimum period before the Parole Board can consider release.
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