A court in Manhattan in the United States has convicted, given life sentence to a heartless killer who beheaded his mentor after stealing nearly $400,000 from him to impress his French lover .
Convicted Tyrese Haspil told judge April Newbauer that he should spend the rest of his life behind bars
Haspil ,according to the New York Post,was slapped with a 40-years-to-life sentence in the 2020 Lower East Side murder and decapitation of tech CEO Fahim Saleh after he bizarrely broke with his attorney in a dramatic moment that shocked the court.
The convict had listened to his lawyer argued in court Tuesday for nearly an hour that the 50-year-life sentence prosecutors wanted for him was way too harsh — then the defendant asked to speak.
“Unlike my counsel, I don’t think anything less than life without parole would be appropriate,” he told Judge April Newbauer, stunning the courtroom.
Haspil’s announcement marked an end to the gruesome case and often strange court proceedings.
The 25- year – old was charged with second-degree murder in the slaying on July 13, 2020, inside Saleh’s $2.2 million East Houston Street apartment, according to police.
“To you, Fahim was just a dollar sign, a ticket to a life you didn’t work for,” Saleh’s sister, Rif Saleh, said in a moving victim impact statement in Manhattan Supreme Court.
“What impact have you made on the world?” she said. “You’re a con man and a murderer. I have no sympathy for you. You deserve to spend your whole life in prison.”
Saleh’s father, Ahmed Saleh, called the killer’s murder defence “sickening.”
“What you paid back to me and my family and to my son is a dead body ripped up to pieces,” he said. “He should spend the rest of his years in prison where he belongs.”
Cops said Haspil worked as Saleh’s “executive assistant” and handled the international entrepreneur’s “finances and personal matters” — and owed his boss “a significant amount of money.”
The debt stemmed from Haspil’s alleged embezzlement of $400,000 from Saleh, who in 2018 founded Gokada, a Nigerian motorcycle ride-sharing company that recently transitioned into a delivery service.
Saleh, described by one pal as “the Elon Musk of the developing world,” even gave Haspil the title of chief of staff at his Adventure Capital investment firm — only to have his protégé rip him off.
Still, Saleh cut Haspil a break when he found out about the betrayal and the stolen funds, deciding to work out a repayment plan rather than turn the thief over to the cops.
That decision cost him his life.
Investigators said Haspil used a Taser to incapacitate Saleh inside the building’s elevator.
In chilling testimony, he later claimed that he then “took out a knife and started aiming for his neck.”
The killer said he used an electrical saw he bought at a local Home Depot with his victim’s credit card to chop up the body and stuffed the remains in plastic bags.
Surveillance video allegedly shows him going in and out of the store.
At a June court hearing, Haspil testified that he started working for Faleh in 2018 after padding his resume with phony work experience — after being canned from a Long Island restaurant for embezzling $20,000.
He testified that he needed the cash to keep his high-maintenance French girlfriend, Marine Chaveuz, immersed in the lavish lifestyle that she was accustomed to.
Haspil was convicted of first- and second-degree murder, grand larceny and burglary in June.
The killer’s Legal Aid lawyer, Jim Roberts, argued that his client didn’t deserve the hefty prison sentence that Manhattan prosecutors had requested.
“This is de facto life without parole,” Roberts said, defending Haspil while citing medical literature that proves that Haspil was an “emerging adult” — someone still developing — at the time of the crimes.
He said the convicted killer was just 19 when he started embezzling funds.
Prosecutors sought a sentence of 50-years to life and a judgement order of $399,614 for the money that Haspil stole.