A group of men have been jailed for fatally shooting a young man in broad daylight near a children’s playground in revenge for a robbery they mistakenly thought he had committed.
Demetrios Kyriacou, 35, of Liverpool Road in Islington, was jailed for life at the Old Bailey on Friday, after previously being found guilty of the murder of 22-year-old Imani Allaway-Muir.
Nathaniel Reece, 41, of Southgate Road in Islington - who fired the gun – was also jailed for life after he pleaded guilty to murder.
Reece will serve a minimum sentence of 33 years and two months, while Kyriacou will serve at least 31 years.
Matthew Hardy, 36, of Islington’s Six Acres Estate was jailed for seven-and-a-half years while Darren Dredge, 41, of no fixed address, was sentenced to eight-and-a-half years for the manslaughter of Imani, after being found not guilty of murder.
Hardy was given an additional 18 month sentence for conspiring to supply Class B drugs.
James Nicholson, 36, of no fixed address will be sentenced for manslaughter at a later date.
Prior to the sentencing, Imani’s mother described the “unimaginable” pain she and her family feel following her son’s death, saying: “Even smiling and just to breathe hurts most days.”
The Old Bailey heard how shortly before 1pm on July 4, 2020, Kyriacou was robbed by four unknown men on Carville Street, Finsbury Park.
Kyriacou suffered head injuries, while his Rolex watch, cash and iPhone were stolen. The suspects drove off in a black BMW.
Officers attended the scene and spoke to Kyriacou who was with his blue Range Rover. He said he believed the suspects had a knife and that he did not know them, but he did not wish to speak about it further.
Following the robbery, arrangements were made for the defendants to meet at Hardy’s home address on Six Acres Estate in Islington, where Kyriacou was living at the time.
At the flat, the defendants located Kyriacou’s stolen property using the ‘find my iPhone’ app. Once they had the location, they collected a loaded gun before driving to the area and encircling it.
Kyriacou and Reece were the last to arrive in the area shortly before 3.20pm. They got out of Kyriacou’s blue Range Rover on Faraday Close and went down an alleyway where a group of people, and the stolen property, were located.
Seconds later, Reece shot Imani multiple times on Roman Way.
They then ran back to the Range Rover and the cars that had brought them to the scene from the Six Acres Estate rendezvous, and fled.
Nicholson later collected the gun from Reece and disposed of it. It has not been recovered by the police.
Officers, paramedics and an air ambulance crew rushed to the scene and found Imani lying on the ground in a children’s playground about 20 metres from the scene of the shooting.
He was unconscious but breathing. Despite the best efforts of the emergency services, he was tragically pronounced dead shortly before 3.50pm, about half-an-hour after he had been shot.
A post-mortem examination revealed he had sustained four bullet wounds.
Officers searched the area of the shooting and found 14 bullet casings as well as an iPhone, two Nokia phones and a snapped SIM card. The phones and SIM card belonged to Kyriacou and formed part of the property stolen during the earlier robbery.
A black BMW was also recovered by police at the scene - the same one used by the suspects in the earlier robbery.
However, detectives established that Imani was not involved in robbing Kyriacou.
He had happened to arrive at the location where the stolen property was located moments before Kyriacou and Reece appeared. When Reece opened fire, Imani was simply in the wrong place at the wrong time.
The court heard that while it was Reece who discharged the firearm and took Imani’s life, the other defendants were all jointly responsible for his death, by assisting and encouraging the offence.
Met Police detectives launched a murder investigation. Kyriacou, Reece, Hardy and Dredge were all arrested in July 2020 shortly after the murder, while Nicholson was arrested in February 2021.
Following Friday’s sentencing, Detective Chief Inspector Neil John, from the Met’s Specialist Crime Command, said: “Imani was a young man who had his whole life ahead of him, but by simply being in the wrong place, at the wrong time, he was tragically killed in a horrific act of violence that took place in broad daylight just metres away from a children’s playground and a football pitch which was full of children.
“Kyriacou had refused the police’s help after the robbery and decided to take matters into his own hands, recruiting his friends to take part in his deadly revenge plan. The joint actions of these men resulted in the execution of Imani, who paid with his life for a robbery he had no involvement in.
“We were determined to bring Imani’s killers to justice and my team worked tirelessly behind the scenes gathering overwhelming evidence to convict the five defendants. These men will now each serve a lengthy period behind bars for their cold and callous actions.
“There is never an excuse for violence, especially violence using an illegal firearm, and everyone in the Met remains committed to tackling violence in all its forms and removing dangerous weapons, and those who carry them, from the streets of London.”
In a statement read to the court during the sentencing, Imani’s mother Keetha, said: “The pain we feel is unimaginable and no amount of words in this world could describe it.
“Imani was the ‘glue’ to our family and loved by so many. The whole family are so damaged by Imani’s death. A mother should never have to bury their son.
“I carry so many emotions I didn’t even think was possible to feel, even smiling and just to breathe hurts most days.
“July 4 will haunt me for the rest of my life. I try my hardest not to revisit that day but every time I close my eyes all I see is my son’s lifeless body covered in blood being worked on by the emergency services. I was unable to hold him or comfort him as he took his last breath.
“The worst pain I have ever had to endure was not being able to kiss him, hold his hand or assure him I’m there.
“The nature of my son’s murder feels 100 times worse because he was an innocent young man who went to Westbourne estate with no knowledge of the robbery that had taken place and what was going to happen to him. It kills me to think how scared Imani was when he saw the defendants appear with a gun and then shoot him.
“Imani will forever be missed, loved and remembered and our hearts will be forever broken until we are back with our precious Imani.”
Following the trial, Kyriacou was charged with and pleaded guilty to conspiracy to supply Class A and B drugs and possession of criminal property, and Dredge to conspiracy to supply Class B drugs and possession of criminal property. They were also sentenced for these offence on Friday, with the terms to run concurrently.