Source: BBC

A man who fatally stabbed a McDonald’s customer in the back after accusing him of queue jumping, has failed in his effort to overturn a murder conviction.

Dennis Ciantar chased Gavin McGrath into Seven Sisters Road, Holloway, north London, before killing him. He was jailed for life in July 2004.

Ciantar, 34, from Holloway, was arrested six weeks after the stabbing.

Three appeal judges threw out his challenge to the trial judge allowing certain identification evidence.

Ciantar had been caught on CCTV at the fast-food restaurant in September 2003, when the argument broke out with Mr McGrath over who should be served first.

Experts were able to use computer facial mapping techniques to show the killer’s resemblance to Ciantar.

During the two week trial it was proved that the killer in the CCTV had exactly the same style of standing and walking as Ciantar.

The single stab wound sliced through vital arteries and Mr McGrath, 34, died on the street outside a carwash.

At the Court of Appeal in London, Lord Justice Moses, sitting with Mr Justice Gibbs and Mr Justice Treacy, said there had been no forensic evidence at the scene and there was only a single positive identification.

“But in our judgment, looked at overall and bearing in mind that the defendant chose not to give evidence, there was a strong case for the jury to consider,” he said.

He said identification was a “precarious” category of evidence, where risks should not be taken, and added: “The judge took no such risks and this appeal is dismissed.”

After his conviction at the Old Bailey, Ciantar – who had been arrested when the case featured on BBC TV’s Crimewatch – was ordered to serve a minimum of 14 years in prison.

Added: November 10, 2006


Source: BBC

A man caught on CCTV in McDonalds having a row over queue jumping, minutes before stabbing a customer to death, has been jailed for life.

Dennis Ciantar chased Gavin McGrath from the shop in Seven Sisters Road, Holloway, north London, and knifed him in the back, the Old Bailey heard.

Ciantar, 34, from Holloway, was arrested six weeks later after an appeal on the Crimewatch programme.

He was convicted on Monday of murdering Mr McGrath, 34, on 13 September, 2003.

William Boyce QC, prosecuting, said the argument caught on film may have been about “who should have been served first or about jumping the queue.”

But Ciantar was “clearly irritated” as he was seen paying for his food, which he left behind, before “angrily” chasing his victim who had left the restaurant.

Then without warning “he ran behind him, stabbed him in the back and ran away,” Mr Boyce added. Judge Richard Hawkins told Ciantar: “After a trivial incident between you, you set after your victim.

“To see you stalking him was a chilling sight. Having found him, you stabbed him. He came to his end in a sudden and brutal way.”

The single stab wound sliced through vital arteries and Mr McGrath died on the street.

Experts were able to use computer facial mapping techniques to show the killer’s resemblance to Ciantar.

During the two week trial it was proved that the killer in the CCTV had exactly the same style of standing and walking as Ciantar.

He was ordered to serve a minimum of 14 years in prison.

Added: November 10, 2006