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Soldier appeals conviction for racist murder

Black Watch sniper Michael Ross was just 15 when he murdered Orkney waiter Shamsuddin Mahmood.

24 January 2012 14:24 GMT

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Soldier appeals conviction for racist murder

Michael Ross: Fourth attempt to get appeal heard in court. Pic: © STV

A former soldier is appealing against his conviction for the racist murder of an Orkney waiter 16 years ago.

Army sergeant Michael Ross, 36, was found guilty of murdering Shamsuddin Mahmood, who was shot while working at an Indian restaurant in Kirkwall in 1994.

The murder remained unsolved for 12 years until Northern Constabulary re-opened the case in 2007 and brought Black Watch sniper Ross to justice.

Ross, who was only 15 at the time of the murder, has appealed against his conviction and is due to appear in court next month.

The hearing will be his fourth attempt to have his appeal heard.

In 2008, Ross was jailed for a minimum of 25 years for what the judge branded a "vicious, evil, unprovoked murder".

Five years were later added to his sentence for trying to escape at the end of his trial to a car parked nearby that contained an automatic rifle, 500 rounds of ammunition and a hand grenade.

Mr Mahmood was shot in the head by a masked man in front of diners at the Mumutaz restaurant.

The murder trial heard that as a 15-year-old, Ross harboured racist views which drove him to hunt down and kill one of the few Asian residents living on Orkney.

In the years until he was caught, Ross joined the army and was decorated for outstanding service in Iraq. He also acted as a guard for the Queen.

An earlier appeal was abandoned when it transpired that the judge had earlier sentenced Ross' father for attempting to pervert the course of justice, in the aftermath of Mr Mahmood's killing.

Eddie Ross, a police officer at the time, had lied about the possession of ammunition which matched that used in the Mumutaz Restaurant.

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