News about Sanjay Singh
Hit-and-run Audi driver who killed two young brothers in a 92mph horror crash then casually chatted to a friend in a burger bar less than two hours later is jailed for 13 years
www.dailymail.co.uk,
December 12, 2023
Mohammed Sullaiman Khan (bottom inset), 28, drove his Audi RS3 'competitively' against a Bentley Continental. He lost control of the car and sped through a red light before ploughing into a BMW in Wolverhampton at 8.45 p.m. Arithi Nahar was driving the BMW, and Sanjay Singh, 10, and 23-month-old Pawanveer (left), who were all driving. The boys, who were still in their pyjamas, had just collected their supper from a fish and chip store where their father worked. Khan had already hit 92 mph in a 40-mph zone before the deadly accident that forced the BMW to use metal railings, according to a court. The brothers were killed instantly in the crash on Birmingham New Road on March 14, 2019, but their mother suffered serious injuries. Khan then left the scene and less than two hours later, he was caught on a burger bar's security camera (top inset) waiting for food in Sparkbrook, Birmingham.
In a burger bar less than two hours after killing two young brothers in a 92mph terror crash, a chilling moment hits a friend
www.dailymail.co.uk,
September 15, 2023
When Mohammed Sullaiman Khan went through a red light and ploughed into a BMW on Birmingham New Road in Wolverhampton, he was behind the wheel. Arithi Nahar, who was driving her two sons Sanjay Singh, 10, and Pawanveer, 23, who were 23 years old at dinner, was driving the BMW. The boys, who were already dressed in their pyjamas and ready to sleep, had rushed with their mother to collect their supper from a fish and chip store where their father worked.
After ploughing into their car at 92 mph while returning home with their mother after collecting supper from their father's fish bar, the Audi driver was found guilty
www.dailymail.co.uk,
September 14, 2023
The high-powered Audi crash in Wolverhampton killed Sanjay Singh, 10, and Pawanveer Singh immediately. Mohammed Sullaiman Khan, the Audi's driver, reached 92 mph before he passed through a red light and struck the BMW carrying the boys, who were still in their pyjamas and their mother, who sustained serious injuries. Khan, 27, pleaded guilty to two counts of causing death by dangerous driving on two counts. Hamza Shahid, 36, a Bentley driver who was accused of participating in a high-speed road race, has been found not to blame for the deaths of the two young brothers by unsafe driving.