May 22, 2008

Nelson taxi driver accused of abducting fare


vISIT tHE tAXI-mART sHOP

A TAXI driver from Nelson took a woman hostage before dumping her miles from her home, a jury has heard.

Hackney cab driver Mahza Khan faces the abduction charge after a dispute over a taxi fare on September 8 last year in Warrington.

Khan, of Carr Road, is alleged to have punched victim Deborah Mellor after dumping her outside a power station on the Warrington-Widnes border.

The cabbie, 38, denies robbery and kidnap offences and is standing trial at Warrington Crown Court.

Ms Mellor, from Widnes, was on her way home from a night out in Liverpool with her sister, Emma Chadwick, of Penketh, Warrington, when they went to get the taxi from Warrington Central railway station.

When the women prepared to get out of the cab at Widnes, Ms Mellor got into a dispute with Khan after he charged £14.50 - a price that was more expensive than the usual the cost of the journey.

Ms Chadwick told the court how she saw the car reverse and drive off with her sister as hostage just after she left the taxi.

She said: "First it reversed back around the corner then around towards the roundabout. I could hear my sister shouting my name, Emma, Emma'."

Khan was then said to have stopped several minutes later close to the unlit Fiddler's Ferry power station, which is surrounded by fields.

Prosecutor Rhys Rowlands said: "He went to the back (of the car) and dragged Deborah by her hair and threw her to the ground and then followed a short struggle, when he punched her. She gave up and handed her handbag over.

"He took out all of the notes then he got back in his taxi and drove off, leaving her in the middle of nowhere.

"Her former partner came to her assistance and called the police."

He said: "He was guilty firstly of kidnap, leaving her by the power station and then robbing her and then using force against her."

But Ian Metcalf, defending Khan, said: "He said that he asked for the correct fare. He said that as he drove off she attacked him, not the other way around.

"He said that having done so she then handed over £15 and he gave her 50p change. He says there is no question of him using force to steal from her."

In cross-examination, Mr Metcalf questioned whether the two sisters had been drinking more than they had stated.

He asked Ms Chadwick where she was sitting in the taxi and then showed CCTV evidence to show that she was mistaken - she had actually sat on the opposite side of the cab to where she had claimed.

The victim, who suffered from headaches and scratches following the incident, said that she was shocked and too shaken to give a statement following the alleged incident, which took place after 11pm.

Jurors were set to be sent out to consider their verdicts by Judge Nicholas Woodward tomorrow.

http://www.thisislancashire.co.uk/news/headlines/display.var.2287224.0.nelson_taxi_driver_accused_of_abducting_fare.php

 

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