Essayer OR - Gratuit

'You're not planning a murder?' How the killer researched his attack

The Guardian

|

December 19, 2024

Most young people who study criminology at the University of Greenwich in south London do so in the hope of getting a job in the police or perhaps probation or the Prison Service.

- Steven Morris Rachel Hall Jamie Grierson

'You're not planning a murder?' How the killer researched his attack

But when Nasen Saadi suddenly switched courses and began to study the subject in the autumn of 2023, he did so with a different motive.

Over the academic year, Saadi repeatedly asked questions about how a murderer might get away with killing, how crime scenes were examined, and how police forces worked together if an offence was committed far from where the perpetrator lived. He sourced knives, analysed notorious murders and pinpointed a location for his murder.

In May he travelled by train from his home in south London to Bournemouth and tested – in real life – whether it was possible to kill and escape undetected.

The murder plan seems to have begun to take shape when Saadi, then 19, walked late into a session on the UK's political system being led by the criminology lecturer Lisa-Maria Reiss in October 2023. He had just switched from a physical education course.

At the end of the lecture he took off his headphones and asked: "Going back to the point about self-defence for murder… could you plead self-defence if you were attacked first?" He also asked about how long DNA remained and how it was analysed.

Reiss, a Met police special constable as well as an academic, was taken aback as crime had not been the subject of her lecture and asked him: "You're not planning a murder, are you?" He replied that he was doing research for a newspaper but Reiss was so worried she reported his behaviour within the university.

Reiss said Saadi was difficult to deal with, often appearing to ignore her when she answered him, and that he tried to provoke female classmates, saying that women were weaker than men, that they shouldn't work in certain jobs, and that police work was not for them.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Guardian

The Guardian

The Guardian

Check it out How chess has made a move into clubland

One of the liveliest spots on a Tuesday night in Brick Lane, east London, isn't a restaurant or a streetwear pop-up, it's a chess club - or chess club/ nightclub hybrid, to be exact.

time to read

3 mins

November 04, 2025

The Guardian

Image of rare white Iberian lynx captured by amateur photographer

An amateur photographer in southern Spain has captured images of a white Iberian lynx, prompting researchers to investigate whether environmental factors could be at play as wildlife watchers revelled in the rare sighting.

time to read

1 mins

November 04, 2025

The Guardian

'I love Leeds, but the club couldn't afford for me to stay'

Mark Viduka, 25 years on from four goals against Liverpool, on a journey taking in civil war and owning a coffee shop

time to read

5 mins

November 04, 2025

The Guardian

Apec summit Xi shows his lighter side with phone gag

It would take someone with nerves of steel to joke about the security of Chinese smartphones in front of Xi Jinping.

time to read

2 mins

November 04, 2025

The Guardian

'We need a bit of help' Frank urges Spurs fans to hold boos and carry team forwards

Thomas Frank has called for better support from the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium crowd after revealing that Micky van de Ven and Djed Spence had apologised to him for their reaction to the 1-0 home defeat against Chelsea on Saturday.

time to read

3 mins

November 04, 2025

The Guardian

Reeves paves way for tax-raising budget with 'tough choices' talk

Chancellor to give candid speech amid pressure to break manifesto pledge

time to read

3 mins

November 04, 2025

The Guardian

The Guardian

Farage backtracks on promise to cut £9obn of taxes as spotlight falls on Reform's credibility

Nigel Farage yesterday retreated from his party's election manifesto promise to cut £90bn of taxes, accusing Labour and the Tories of \"wrecking the public finances\" and saying Reform UK would need to get public spending under control first.

time to read

3 mins

November 04, 2025

The Guardian

AstraZeneca's Wall Street move drives a coach and horses through stamp duty regime

It was one of those votes where the majority was always going to be huge.

time to read

2 mins

November 04, 2025

The Guardian

The Guardian

Power play Fixation on forward rotation risks rugby clashes turning into damp squibs

There was a time in rugby union when the phrase \"Bomb Squad\" felt novel.

time to read

3 mins

November 04, 2025

The Guardian

The Guardian

Attenborough nature series reels in viewers using tricks of TV dramas like Adolescence

David Attenborough's BBC series Kingdom has broken new ground by using the tricks of TV dramas such as Adolescence to immerse viewers in the action with cliffhangers and moving camera shots.

time to read

3 mins

November 04, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size