Knifemen sentenced to 27 years in prison for stabbing Kensington Palace gardener to death

The encounter began with what the court heard described as "friendly chit-chat"
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A man who fatally stabbed a Kensington Palace gardener over a trivial dispute about a baseball cap has been sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 27 years.
Elyas Moussa, 30, received the sentence at the Old Bailey on Wednesday following his conviction for murder after a two-week trial.
His victim, Recorda Davey-Ann Clarke, known as Ricardo, was a 35-year-old father of two who had secured his prestigious gardening role after beating 500 other applicants for an apprenticeship position.
The fatal confrontation occurred in Linacre Road, Willesden Green, north-west London, just after Christmas last year.

A man who fatally stabbed a Kensington Palace gardener over a trivial dispute about a baseball cap has been sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum term of 27 years.
|Met Police
What started as casual conversation between the two men rapidly deteriorated after Clarke turned Moussa's cap backwards, triggering a chain of events that would prove deadly.
Clarke had been celebrating his girlfriend's birthday when he and his partner came across Moussa and his companions on the street that evening.
The encounter began with what the court heard described as "friendly chit-chat" between the group.
However, tensions emerged when Clarke, who had mentioned he was originally from Chile, was mocked by Moussa for his inability to speak Spanish.
The situation escalated further when Clarke flipped Moussa's baseball cap around on his head.

Recorda Davey-Ann Clarke, known as Ricardo, was a 35-year-old father of two who had secured his prestigious gardening role after beating 500 other applicants for an apprenticeship position.
|Met Police
The two men clashed on two separate occasions before parting ways.
Moussa later returned to Linacre Road, claiming during his trial that he had come back to search for keys he had misplaced.
It was upon his return that the fatal attack took place.
Judge Usha Karu told Moussa during sentencing: "Instead of returning home you walked into Linacre Road... intent upon confronting Ricardo Clarke and attacking him with your knife. The fact is that when you went back to Linacre Road you were armed and you knew it."
The judge stated that Moussa had instigated the violence by pursuing Clarke, drawing his blade only after the victim had fallen to the ground, either from being pushed or tripping.
"He did not really pose any danger to you at that time quite the opposite, it made him vulnerable to attack by you," she said.
The fatal blow was a thrusting wound to the left side of Clarke's chest, penetrating his heart to a depth of at least 6.5 centimetres.
Paramedics attempted open heart surgery in the ambulance, but Clarke was pronounced dead at 5.29am before reaching hospital.
Following the stabbing, Moussa fled but returned to the police cordon at 7am to enquire whether anyone had died. He later telephoned 999 from a phone box several miles from the scene to surrender himself.
More than ten victim impact statements were presented to the court on Wednesday.
Lori-Jane Forrest, mother of Clarke's two children, said: "I was Ricardo's best friend, love of his life and even his enemy at times, but he was my person. He was my support system in many ways, but he is gone now and we will have to fill the emptiness of no longer having our person, our provider, our protector."
She described finding herself "crying uncontrollably throughout the day."
The judge acknowledged that Moussa had not intended to kill Clarke and that the murder was neither premeditated nor planned. He received a concurrent 12-month sentence for knife possession, which he had admitted.
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