Monday 26 June 2006

Arresting Dhalla prevented three murders

On 19 February 2012, Jo MacFarlane decribed the plight of trainee GP, Alison Hewitt, thus:

“Cowering under her living room table with a duvet for comfort, Dr Alison Hewitt prepared to spend a sleepless night in her small Brighton flat… The trainee GP clutched her mobile phone ready to dial 999 at the slightest noise… Then, uncertain if she would survive the night, she waited.
Alison was convinced that she was about to be visited by her ex-boyfriend Al Amin Dhalla, who had subjected her and her family to a vicious campaign of harassment over several months. Her terror was heightened knowing that POLICE, WHO KNEW ALL ABOUT DHALLA, HAD FREED HIM ON BAIL AFTER FINDING HIM FIRING A CACHE OF WEAPONS...

Last week, Dhalla… was found guilty of nine charges following a four-week trial at Lewes Crown Court, including two counts of harassment, theft, arson with intent to endanger life, criminal damage and possession of an offensive weapon.

Dhalla was described as a narcissistic psychopath whose outwardly mild-mannered personality and stable career was completely at odds with a violent and obsessive streak, which was only revealed after he was spurned by Alison after a year-long romance…

Speaking at her mother's thatched cottage in the pretty hamlet of Aston Abbotts near Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, she says: 'I've been in major shock and total disbelief all the way through. I'm still in shock. I've also felt humiliated and mortified that I let these things happen, that MY JUDGMENT WAS SO BAD’…

Dhalla, from Toronto, told Alison he was 35, had been in the UK for five years and was orphaned when his parents died in a car crash. All would later turn out to be lies…

He demonstrated an odd determination to move in to her flat by bringing a bag of possessions each time he visited… Friends seemed unenthusiastic, but most agreed he was charming and had a good job, as a financial auditor with insurance company LV.

Alison's suspicions about Dhalla were first aroused when he was introduced to her family at the wedding of Alison's mother Pamela, 66, who married David Gray in June 2010... Alison recalls: 'My gran confided she thought there was something suspicious about Al. She'd asked him about the car crash and decided that he was evasive. She wondered whether he was married or had kids.'

Soon afterwards, Dhalla asked Alison about the kind of rings she liked. 'He meant an engagement ring,' she says. 'I said to him, very clearly, “Don't buy me a ring. I'm not ready for that’…

In July they took a week-long holiday to the Greek island of Skiathos… During the trip Dhalla buried a ring in the sand, inside a sandcastle. Alison says: 'My heart sank. It was such a beautiful beach and such a romantic setting. It was a stunning £5,000 ring – gold, with three diamonds. I said, ‘I told you I wasn't ready for this’…

Dhalla increased the pressure on Alison to commit as the year progressed but by now her parents were concerned and decided to investigate his past… Alison says: 'David's company had carried out some basic screening and some suspicions had been raised. It was vague, but suggested a criminal record. They had also hired this private detective who said Al had lied on his visa to get into the UK’…

When the four of them took a holiday to Alicante in Spain in October 2010, the trip turned sour. 'Al accused my parents of moving his things and looking at his passport. He was deadly serious, furious. I'd never seen him like that'…

Back at home, Dhalla explained to Alison that his parents were alive, but had separated and his mother treated him as dead. He claimed it was easier to lie to avoid questions. He also confessed to a criminal record…

As Dhalla began emailing Alison's parents about potential wedding plans, they continued to examine his past… The family told Alison to leave Dhalla, saying he was dangerous, and she moved out of her flat and into a Premier Inn for some breathing space..

Her family had advised her to look at a website, titled The Memoirs of Al Dhalla (His Legacy and Contributions to Society). Alison recalls: 'There were pictures of me, under a section called Family Achievements. It was all a bit weird. I knew then it was over, but didn't know how to finish it.'

Then Dhalla's employers received an anonymous letter repeating the claim that he had lied on his work visa, and he resigned rather than face an investigation…

On Christmas Eve, just before starting a night shift at the hospital, she suggested they should break up… When Alison came home the following morning, their Christmas decorations, including the Christmas tree, had all gone… 'He said the decorations were in the bin outside, along with a butterfly picture from the wall and my medical degree certificate, which he'd ripped apart. That really upset me’…

On January 11, Alison's mother called her to report that neighbours in their quiet village had received anonymous poison-pen letters, making ludicrous claims about the family. One slur, directed at David, claimed he was in 'illegal possession of a human corpse' and had conducted 'indignity to human remains', while Alison's mother was described as 'obese' and a 'black widow' who dated men very soon after her husband's death…

It was late February before she heard from him again, but the occasional text, email and phone call quickly escalated until he was bombarding her with near-constant contact.

Reluctantly Alison agreed to meet him one Saturday night but arrived home from work to find him waiting and angry that she was late. He jumped into her car and refused to leave until Alison threatened to call the police. She says:

'For the first time, I saw his eyes blazing. His pupils were animated and angry, like he was enjoying the argument. It was suddenly really intimidating. I had to promise to see him on Monday to get him to leave. But I spoke to the police and they agreed to come along and arrest him on Monday night.'

Dhalla was arrested on March 28... He was given a restraining order, banning him from Sussex and forbidding him from contacting Alison or her family. But on April 4 a policeman arrived at Alison's work to tell her about the arrest… and how Dhalla had been shooting at targets in a field… HE WAS RELEASED ON BAIL THE NEXT DAY. Alison says:

'I was really shocked. I had felt relieved that he would be locked up. I just knew he would come and find me’…
At 3am, police arrived at Alison's flat to tell her that HER MOTHER'S HOME HAD BEEN SET ON FIRE… Dhalla was seen on CCTV at the Princess Royal hospital at Haywards Heath, West Sussex, where Alison was working at the time in obstetrics. He had posed as a doctor by stealing a stethoscope…

That night, Dhalla tried to set fire to a police station in Wing, a couple of miles from Alison's mother's home. He returned to the hospital at 5am – when Alison should have been working – and was spotted by staff and locked in a toilet until armed police arrived.

In his hired car, police found a loaded crossbow, a large knife, a claw hammer, pliers, bolt cutters, and a doctor's outfit…

Alison learnt he had rented a flat on a neighbouring street in Brighton in a bid to follow her movements, and police later said that ARRESTING HIM HAD PREVENTED THREE MURDERS.”
A sad, little tale of today.

Inspired one hundred per cent by a PC Crowd that has always sought to damage and demoralise the native, British majority. Machiavellian propaganda from the media and politician alike has, for the last six decades, instructed well-meaning British women and girls to make excuses for behaviours in foreign men that they would not excuse in their own.

“My judgement was so bad”, says Alison. Yes it was. It was ridiculously, air-headedly bad. But you were encouraged to judge things as you did by a remorseless, 60-year campaign of treachery that put the alien first and the indigenous lowly last wherever the northern European man predominated.

Know this, Alison: the global forces who conned you and the many, many other Alisons into behaving as you did could not care less about your welfare and happiness. Their business is destruction. Their business is the destruction of the Western man and those who would put him first in the land that he made.

THEY are at war with our culture, values, traditions, heritage and identity. And the more Alisons they can persuade to favour the foreign man over their own, the closer THEY are to winning that war.

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