Moment mobility scooter murder suspect was caught on CCTV four days before brutal stabbing of beloved 87-year-old busker
Moment mobility scooter murder suspect was caught on CCTV four days before brutal stabbing of beloved 87-year-old busker: Man, 44, bought birthday card and chocolates in shop 300 yards from home where he was arrested
This is the man arrested on suspicion of brutally stabbing beloved busker Thomas O'Halloran to death captured on CCTV in a shop just days before the suspected murder - after neighbours revealed armed police smashed in the door of his west London home during a tense 30-minute standoff today.
CCTV shared exclusively with MailOnline shows the 44-year-old buying a birthday card and a box of chocolates while wearing a blue Covid face mask in a convenience store on Saturday afternoon - four days before the pensioner, 87, was killed in a daylight attack.
Mr O'Halloran was raising money for victims of Putin's savage invasion of Ukraine - which has led to alleged war crimes including the murder of captured soldiers, torture, a massive refugee crisis and fears of a global famine - outside a Tesco store and South Greenford railway station when he was knifed to death in his mobility scooter on Tuesday
The shopkeeper, whose store is less than 300 yards from where police arrested a man early this morning, told MailOnline he immediately recognised the man from the CCTV image released by police after the suspected murder.
He said: 'I've only seen him a couple of times, but I know his mum who always comes in here. As soon as I saw the police photo I remembered the incident and found him on the CCTV. There was something off about him which made me remember him.'
The stabbing has appalled the nation and fuelled anger at Mr Khan and the Metropolitan Police as they struggle to combat a rising tide of crime in London, with six suspected murders committed in the capital in the past four days alone - a phenomenon which the Labour figure astonishingly appeared to suggest was caused by the current heatwave, longer days and school holidays.
Shocked residents described how more than six police officers used a battering ram to smash down the front door of the suspect's semi-detached home on Allenby Road at around 1.30am and shouted for the man to give himself up before he emerged and was pushed to the floor and handcuffed. The house is occupied by a Jamaican couple, they added.
One neighbour said: 'It was 1.30am and I was woken up by shouting a lot so cars arriving. I looked out and could see the police trying to smash down the door. They were using some sort of battering ram.
'Some of them went inside, but there was no sign of anyone. That lasted for about 30 minutes. Then they brought out a man.
'He was resisting and they pushed him to the floor and handcuffed his hands behind his back. Two of the police lifted him off the pavement and took him to a car.'
Another said: 'There was some shouting and when I looked out there seemed to be lots of police. Some were in plain clothes. I immediately thought it must have something to do with the murder in Greenford. I do not know the person who lives there, but we would wave hello. It's all come as a bit of a shock.'
Shocked residents described how more than six police officers used a battering ram to smash down the front door of the suspect's semi-detached home on Allenby Road at around 1.30am and shouted for the man to give himself up before he emerged and was pushed to the floor and handcuffed. The house is occupied by a Jamaican couple, they added.
One neighbour said: 'It was 1.30am and I was woken up by shouting a lot so cars arriving. I looked out and could see the police trying to smash down the door. They were using some sort of battering ram.
'Some of them went inside, but there was no sign of anyone. That lasted for about 30 minutes. Then they brought out a man.
'He was resisting and they pushed him to the floor and handcuffed his hands behind his back. Two of the police lifted him off the pavement and took him to a car.'
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Another said: 'There was some shouting and when I looked out there seemed to be lots of police. Some were in plain clothes. I immediately thought it must have something to do with the murder in Greenford. I do not know the person who lives there, but we would wave hello. It's all come as a bit of a shock.'


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