Self-confessed ‘psycho’ stabbed neighbour 39 times in 39 seconds with a sword

Self-confessed 'psycho' who stabbed neighbour 39 times in 39 seconds locked up
Abdul Khan, 27, killed father-of-two Bohdan Vandzhura, 49, in July 2023, while in the grip of psychotic hallucinations (Picture: Met Police)

A self-confessed ‘psycho’ who stabbed his neighbour with a sword 39 times in 39 seconds after he was wrongfully released from hospital has been sent to Broadmoor.

Abdul Khan, 27, killed father-of-two Bohdan Vandzhura, 49, in July 2023, while in the grip of psychotic hallucinations just months after a ‘misdiagnosis’ saw him walk free from a psychiatric ward.

The ‘premeditated, ferocious and sustained’ attack was caught on CCTV and shown to jurors at the Old Bailey.

It followed two random attacks on Santa Shrestha around six months apart.

Khan had also repeatedly stamped on Mr Shrestha’s head in an ‘extraordinary and shocking’ attack which was also caught on CCTV on August 20, 2022.

After both incidents, police failed to identify him as a suspect and he remained at large, jurors were told.

All the incidents happened close to Khan’s home in Harrow, north-west London.

Khan admitted the manslaughter of Mr Vandzhura by reason of diminished responsibility and having a sword.

Following a trial, he was found guilty of the attempted murder of Mr Shrestha.

Abdul Khan 24 January 2025 10:45 Man convicted of two violent assaults in Harrow Download as PDF A man has been convicted following two violent assaults that left one of his victims dying from stab wounds. Abdul Khan, 27 (14.08.97), of Durham Road, Harrow, had previously pleaded guilty to the manslaughter through diminished responsibility of Bohdan Vandzhura, possession of an offensive weapon and actual bodily harm. At the Old Bailey on Thursday, 23 January he was found guilty of the attempted murder of a then 43-year-old man. He will be sentenced on Tuesday, 25 March. Detective Chief Inspector Tom Williams, who led the investigation, said: ?Our thoughts today are with Mr Vandzhura?s family and friends. ?This was a truly horrific assault by Khan on his innocent neighbour as he was heading to work one morning to provide for his family. The ferocity of the knife attack has shocked everyone who has seen the CCTV footage. ?Our thoughts are also with his second victim who suffered serious injuries in the attack. ?It?s clear that mental health was a key factor in the events building up to that day but Khan?s pattern of aggression towards two people cannot be ignored.? An investigation was launched after police were called on the morning of 8 July 2023 to reports of a stabbing on Pinner Road in North Harrow. Officers attended along with the London Ambulance Service and London's Air Ambulance. At the scene, they found 49-year-old Bohdan ? a father-of-two who was from Harrow ? with stab wounds. Despite their efforts he died at the scene. A post-mortem examination carried out the following day confirmed he died as a result of multiple stab wounds to the chest and neck. Detectives from the Specialist Crime Command launched an investigation, involving a quick time review of CCTV footage from the area. Officers followed Khan?s movements using CCTV which captured him disposing of the weapon and making his way towards Mr Vandzhura?s home. This led detectives to believe Khan lived in the area and he was quickly identified and arrested. This same footage provided them with evidence of his father ? Khalid Khan ? leaving the home with a carrier bag that contained his son?s bloodied clothing. Abdul Khan was arrested on 8 July and charged within 24 hours. Detectives also established that Abdul Khan was the unidentified suspect in an earlier assault on another man in Harrow. On 20 August 2022, Khan punched the man to the ground before repeatedly stamping on him, leaving him unconscious. Officers carried out an investigation but were unable to identify a suspect at the time. Khalid Khan, 62 (22.04.62) of Durham Road, Harrow was convicted of assisting an offender in relation to the manslaughter.
Khan admitted the manslaughter of Mr Vandzhura by reason of diminished responsibility and having a sword (Picture: Met Police)

Judge Lynn Tayton KC handed him a hospital order with a restriction order for the ‘protection of the public from serious harm’.

His father, Khalid Khan, 62, was jailed for four years having been convicted of assisting an offender by hiding his son’s bloodied tracksuit and trainers in a garage and lying to police about it.

Sentencing, Judge Tayton said Ukrainian Mr Vandzhura had come to England to work to support his wife and two sons, aged 12 and four.

She said: ‘On the day he died he was going to work as usual to fulfil his responsibilities.

‘His loss has left a huge hole in the life of his wife and children and that of his sister and other family members.’

He had ‘no chance to defend himself’ when Abdul Khan subjected him to a ‘frenzied assault’, she added.

The judge said that despite Abdul Khan’s delusional thoughts, there was nothing to suggest that Mr Shrestha had done anything wrong.

Referring to the impact on Mr Shrestha, the judge said: ‘As a result of both attacks he feared for his life in the Harrow area so moved away.

‘When he is out and about, he still fears someone will attack him.’

The court had previously heard how Abdul Khan had attacked Mr Shrestha, in August 2022 as he walked along Pinner Road in Harrow.

CCTV footage captured Mr Shrestha being knocked to the ground and repeatedly punched and stamped on him as shopping spilled across the pavement.

Mr Shrestha spent four days in hospital and was not able to tell police who had attacked him, having suffered from memory loss.

About six months later, Mr Shrestha was inside another shop, metres from the site of the first attack, when Khan punched him in the face in another act of ‘irrational hostility’.

In May 2023, Abdul Khan was sectioned under the Mental Health Act, having been arrested at a pub for grabbing a man by the throat and threatening to firebomb the venue, the court heard.

He was wrongly diagnosed as having an alcohol-related disorder and, just four days later, he walked free after his father applied for his discharge, jurors were told.

Less than two months later, in July 2023, Mr Vandzhura, who lived next-door to Khan and his father, left home for work at 6.18am.

Khan, carrying a holdall, left his own home a minute later and began following him.

24 January 2025 10:45 Bohdan Vandzhura Man convicted of two violent assaults in Harrow A man has been convicted following two violent assaults that left one of his victims dying from stab wounds. Abdul Khan, 27 (14.08.97), of Durham Road, Harrow, had previously pleaded guilty to the manslaughter through diminished responsibility of Bohdan Vandzhura, possession of an offensive weapon and actual bodily harm. At the Old Bailey on Thursday, 23 January he was found guilty of the attempted murder of a then 43-year-old man. He will be sentenced on Tuesday, 25 March. Detective Chief Inspector Tom Williams, who led the investigation, said: ?Our thoughts today are with Mr Vandzhura?s family and friends. ?This was a truly horrific assault by Khan on his innocent neighbour as he was heading to work one morning to provide for his family. The ferocity of the knife attack has shocked everyone who has seen the CCTV footage. ?Our thoughts are also with his second victim who suffered serious injuries in the attack. ?It?s clear that mental health was a key factor in the events building up to that day but Khan?s pattern of aggression towards two people cannot be ignored.? An investigation was launched after police were called on the morning of 8 July 2023 to reports of a stabbing on Pinner Road in North Harrow. Officers attended along with the London Ambulance Service and London's Air Ambulance. At the scene, they found 49-year-old Bohdan ? a father-of-two who was from Harrow ? with stab wounds. Despite their efforts he died at the scene. A post-mortem examination carried out the following day confirmed he died as a result of multiple stab wounds to the chest and neck. Detectives from the Specialist Crime Command launched an investigation, involving a quick time review of CCTV footage from the area. Officers followed Khan?s movements using CCTV which captured him disposing of the weapon and making his way towards Mr Vandzhura?s home. This led detectives to believe Khan lived in the area and he was quickly identified and arrested. This same footage provided them with evidence of his father ? Khalid Khan ? leaving the home with a carrier bag that contained his son?s bloodied clothing. Abdul Khan was arrested on 8 July and charged within 24 hours. Detectives also established that Abdul Khan was the unidentified suspect in an earlier assault on another man in Harrow. On 20 August 2022, Khan punched the man to the ground before repeatedly stamping on him, leaving him unconscious. Officers carried out an investigation but were unable to identify a suspect at the time. Khalid Khan, 62 (22.04.62) of Durham Road, Harrow was convicted of assisting an offender in relation to the manslaughter.
Khan attacked Bohdan Vandzhura from behind (Picture: Met Police)

He caught up with Mr Vandzhura less than three minutes later, pulled a large sword from the bag and attacked him from behind.

Shocked members of the public ‘acted heroically’ by shouting and hooting their horns, but Khan could not be stopped, the court heard.

Having run home, Khan was arrested and taken to Broadmoor Hospital after being assessed as being severely mentally ill.

A psychiatrist who later worked with Khan said he was ‘one of the most mentally unwell men I have treated in my career’.

Khan told the psychiatrist he only failed to kill his first victim because he did not have a weapon on him.

On seeing Mr Shrestha a second time, he was ‘furious’ and thought he would ‘give him a fair shake’, he said.

He added: ‘I was a psycho back then – too aggressive and explosive – when sufficiently provoked it results in outbursts of physical violence.’

In a letter to the judge, Khalid Khan expressed his ‘deepest regret’ for his actions, but insisted: ‘This incident does not define who I am.’

He wrote: ‘I understand that my behaviour was wrong, and I sincerely apologise. I know my choices have not only affected me but those around me and for that I am truly sorry.’

However, prosecutor Hugh Davies KC told the court his offending was at the ‘most serious end of the spectrum’.

Had Khan remained at large without medical help he would have been ‘capable of killing, attempting to kill or committing serious violence against another member of the public’, Mr Davies said.

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