Family of Mohammed Shah ask for help in murder investigation

        Iqra Subhani and her father
      
The family of Mohammed Shah Subhani have   joined detectives investigating his  disappearance and murder to make a   new appeal to the public to come forward with  information that could   help the Met bring those responsible to justice. 
        
        His   family spoke in public this Tuesday for the first time    since it was confirmed that human remains found in a wooded area   adjacent to  Hedgerley Lane, Beaconsfield, belonged to Shah. Specialist   officers continue to  search the large area as part of their extensive   enquiries in the case. 
        
        During a visit to the site to lay   flowers, pray and pay tribute to their  beloved son, brother and   partner, they urged members of the public to come  forward if they had   seen the key suspect vehicle - the black BMW X5 on cloned  plates of   YC67 MFY - or its two occupants when it was seen loitering in  Hedgerley   Lane in the days after Friday, 7 May last year.
        
      The vehicle,    which had been stolen overnight from Reading Road in Farnborough,   Hampshire on  Friday, 8 February, was later recovered by police on   Tuesday, 3 August in  Hounslow. They family also renewed their pleas for   any other pieces of  information that could prove beneficial to   progressing the police investigation.       
      

        Mohammed Shah Subhani
        Quirat, his elder sister, said: 
        
"What   happened to Shah, no one  deserves - the only thing we look forward to   in our lives now is justice for  him. For this reason, we beg you all to   go back and try remember if there was  anything suspicious you saw   around Hedgerley Lane or Hounslow around 7 May  last year. Was there   something that you thought looked odd? Did you hear  something? Did you   find yourself questioning some activities taking place? 
        
"We   appeal to the public to please come forward and help justice to be    served. Shah didn’t deserve this. No one deserves this. It is now up to   you all  to help us unveil the faces of the monsters who did this and   get them behind  bars forever."
        
        Paying tribute to her brother,   she recalled the moment  that the family was forced to hear the   devastating confirmation that the human  remains found did belong to   Shah. 
        
"When this heartbreaking news was  delivered, we felt as   if someone had pulled the ground beneath us and we had  been swallowed   whole. We had waited in hope and prayed that one day, against all  odds,   Shah will walk through the door and all this would be over. Never did   we  think Shah would be discovered seven months later, just 15 miles   away from  home.
        
"It is beyond our imagination that something so   horrific happened  to our loving Shah. These monsters maliciously killed   our brother mercilessly  and disregarded his body in an isolated   woodland. We couldn’t even have fathomed  this in our worst nightmares.   Not only was Shah robbed of life, but also robbed  of a rightful burial. 
        
"Shah was a loving and caring young man who had  his whole life   ahead of him. He always aspired to do well in life and made sure  his   friends and family around him felt loved. His four-month-old baby girl    didn’t even get a chance to experience all the love her Dad had to give   her, he  was such an amazing son, brother and uncle, you can only   imagine how much of an  amazing Dad he would have been. Our hearts are   broken, this pain will never go  away." 
        
        Detective Chief Inspector Noel McHugh, from Specialist Crime,  who is leading the investigation, said: 
        
“When   I met with Shah’s family  and broke this awful news to them, it was   something that I hoped I would never  have to do. It is incredibly brave   of them to decide to speak publically today,  just a few days after   what would have been Shah's birthday.  
        
"I believe that   Shah’s discovery is something that his killer(s)  were confident would   never happen. However, whilst this was the worst possible  news for his   loved ones, I believe it presents potential opportunities for our    ongoing investigation. 
        
“I think that this area is only familiar   to a  small group of people. It is fairly isolated and you would   probably have to know  it existed, as opposed to it being stumbled   across. It is not visible to a  passing motorist. As I mentioned   previously, the wooded area had evidence of  spent shotgun cartridges,   these are not connected to Shah’s death, but I am keen  to speak to   people who use this area for such recreational activities,  particularly   if they were here in early May last year. 
        
        DCI McHugh  continued: "A   car parked up here would possibly appear out of the norm to locals  who   know the area. As already highlighted, the stolen black BMW on cloned    registration plates YC67 MFY was seen on Hedgerley Lane in the days   following 7 May, when Shah was reported missing. This vehicle had two   occupants and  appeared to be loitering in the area. This car was   subsequently recovered in  Hounslow. We are very keen to understand who   was using this vehicle particularly  on 7 May and the following weeks. 
        
“Please   try and recall if you  saw anything you felt was suspicious at this   time, whether the BMW, or any other  vehicle or people, or anything else   that seemed out of place. Last time we  appealed to the public we   received information on an additional sighting of this  car, so every   call really is of the utmost importance to us. Do not discount  anything   as being too insignificant to tell us about - it could prove to be a    significant piece of the jigsaw in establishing what happened to Shah."  
        
        DCI McHugh explained: 
        
“We   have a substantial amount of land  left to search and it is very   challenging terrain, making it a complex and  painstaking undertaking,   but we continue to make progress - and have had a  significant new find   just today [Tuesday 7 January]. We are likely to be here  for several   more weeks while we complete this important task. I am very grateful  to   the local community who have been so understanding and supportive of   the  police operation. I do apologise for the inconvenience that you are    experiencing, as we continue to strive to keep disruption to a   minimum." 
        
        To recap: 
        
        Police know that on the day he   disappeared, Tuesday, 7  May, Shah travelled to Acton police station,   arriving at approximately 13:45hrs.  It is possible that certain people   may have had the impression that he would  have had £3,800 returned to   him during this visit; but this did not happen. It  is believed that he   may though have had a set of number plates restored to him,  along with   two mobile phones. 
        
        Shah travelled from the Acton area at    15:00hrs on a journey to Hounslow. Shah’s Audi Q3, registration LC67   CXS, was  captured on CCTV travelling south on Hanworth Road, towards   Whitton Road, in  Hounslow at around 15:17hrs. 
        
        Shah was due to   collect £5,000 at a  business premises on Derby Road in Hounslow. His   white Audi Q3, arrived at  15:19hrs; police believe that Shah was   driving. His car left at 15:47hrs, but it  is not believed that Shah was   driving the car at that time. He was not seen to  leave the premises. 
        
        The   Q3 entered Park Road and was subsequently moved  to Camden on false   registration plates. DCI McHugh previously confirmed that his  team had   ruled out the possibility that Shah was in his own car at the time it    was shot at - the vehicle was recovered with ballistic damage on   Wednesday, 19  June in Camden. 
        
        One of the other suspicious   vehicles officers also still  need information about is a blue Range   Rover Evoque, using false plates MF13  AOT, which was at the corner of   Derby Road at around 15:20hs on Tuesday, 7 May,  at the same time as   Shah was there. Officers know the car later travelled to  Ilford on   those plates, but has not been seen since. It had a lot of body damage    and might have been passed on.
        
        DCI McHugh concluded: 
        "I   am in no  doubt that there are people out there with information who   have still not come  forward. There is possibly a misguided loyalty to   those responsible for Shah’s  murder or you may be frightened of those   involved; please be reassured that we  will deal with your information   sensitively in complete confidence. 
        
"To  anyone in the know,   just imagine the pain your continuing silence is causing  Shah’s family.   Please reach out to us if you can help, either via 101 or  anonymously   via Crimestoppers. A substantial reward of £20,000 remains on offer  for   information that leads to the arrest and conviction of those    involved."
        
        Anyone with any information about Shah’s disappearance   is  asked to conctact police on 101, or via Twitter @MetCC. Please   quote Operation  Rockton. To give information anonymously contact   Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111  or online.
        
        
            January 7, 2020