Hani Khalaf kicked, punched and stamped 62-year-old Jairo Medina to death hours after being bailed for shoplifting

This article is more than 3 years old

This article is more than 3 years old

A homeless man has been jailed for at least 26 years for murdering a “kind and peace-loving” carer in London’s Hyde Park after the authorities failed to deport him on at least six occasions over two years.

Hani Khalaf, 22, an Egyptian national, survived on the streets of Britain by stealing food and clothes after arriving in the back of a lorry posing as a Syrian asylum seeker, the Old Bailey heard.

Khalaf was bailed for shoplifting hours before he kicked, punched and stamped Jairo Medina, 62, to death near Speakers’ Corner on the evening of 11 August last year.

He pocketed Medina’s cash and stole his mobile phone, which he tried to sell on hours later.

Following a retrial, Khalaf was found guilty of murder and jailed for life with a minimum of 26 years.

The judge Wendy Joseph QC said Khalaf had been sent back into the community time and again because of a failure to deport him and Medina had paid for it “with his life”.

She said: “It is clear that Hani Khalaf, having absconded, came to the attention of authorities on at least six occasions. On each, he was rebailed because they could not make arrangements for securing his deportation in a reasonable amount of time.”

The result was that Khalaf, with no way of “lawfully maintaining himself”, was sent out into the community again and again and told to report to authorities, which he never did.

Joseph said he showed “no respect for the law” and became a danger to himself and others. “The extent of that danger is one Mr Medina paid for with his life.”

The court heard that Khalaf is likely to be deported to serve the remainder of his sentence in Egypt once he is no longer a category A prisoner.



Khalaf arrived in Kent in the back of a lorry in August 2014 and survived by stealing sandwiches from Tesco and sleeping rough in a park.

The day before he met Medina, he was arrested for shoplifting at the Superdry clothes shop in Regent Street and gave police the false name he had previously given to immigration officials.



He appeared at Westminster magistrates court and was bailed hours before the killing.



On 11 August, Khalaf met Medina in Hyde Park, where the victim had gone hoping to have sex with a younger man, the court heard. Medina’s body was discovered early the next day by a groundsman on his way to work.



Giving evidence through an Egyptian translator, Khalaf admitted being with Medina before and after the attack, but claimed he was buying food at a convenience store at the time of the killing.



Afterwards, he tried to sell his victim’s mobile phone and gambled away some of his cash in a bookmakers, jurors heard.



He was arrested on 16 August for fare evasion and told police he was Hanni Hassan, later giving the name Khalaf, the prosecutor Oliver Glasgow QC said.



Then on 18 August he was arrested again for shoplifting and taken to Charing Cross police station, where an eagle-eyed officer recognised him from CCTV images as the suspect seen with Medina on the night of his death.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Jairo Medina was described by a former partner as ‘a carefree and very generous person’. Photograph: PA

Medina, from Chelsea, west London, was originally from Colombia and was a single gay man with a preference for young dark-skinned men, the court heard.



He was described by a former partner as “a carefree and very generous person” who would go to the Quebec gay bar in Marble Arch and would sometimes pay male prostitutes for sex, jurors heard.



The prosecution argued the motive for the killing was to steal, although it was suggested on behalf of the defendant that it may have resulted from an unrequited sexual advance.



Joseph agreed it was a “murder for gain” regardless of Medina’s reasons for going into the park and befriending his killer.



She said: “Having seen and heard Mr Khalaf and his description of how he lived, it is beyond credible belief that Mr Khalaf went with Mr Medina into the park thinking all Mr Medina wanted was to offer kindness and consolation to a young man.”



In victim impact statements read to court, Medina’s friends and family spoke of a kind and peaceful man. His brother German Cardona said Medina had been given an award in 2015 for his “service to care in London” and had devoted his life to support his family at home, including his 86-year-old father who died within months of the murder.

Mahmood Khan, a close friend, described the victim as “generous and loving” and said: “If Mr Medina was alive he would probably forgive the person who had committed this crime.”

Giovanni Raimondi, another friend, said: “Jairo may have seemed outwardly happy and content but he was effectively quite lonely and looking for companionship and someone to share his life with.



“He paid a high price that night in his pursuit for companionship with young men. He was known to all who knew him as kind and peace loving. He always believed in living peacefully and did not deserve to die in that way.”