US woman jailed for 30 years in UK for failed murder plot

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(FILES) An undated recent handout picture released by West Midlands Police on August 12, 2025 shows US woman Aimee Betro posing for a custody photograph in Birmingham. A UK court on August 21, handed Betro, an American woman a 30-year jail sentence after she was found guilty of a failed attempt to murder a British man caught up in a bitter feud between families. (Photo by West Midlands Police / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO /  WEST MIDLANDS POLICE " - HANDOUT - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS

After a years-long police hunt, Aimee Betro, 45, was extradited earlier in 2025 from Armenia.

PHOTO: AFP

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London – An English court on Aug 21 handed an American woman a 30-year jail sentence after she was convicted of trying to murder a British man caught up in a feud between families.

After a years-long police hunt, Aimee Betro, 45,

was extradited earlier in 2025

from Armenia, where she had been living, to face trial in the central English city of Birmingham.

Prosecutors told the court Betro had covered her face with a niqab before climbing out of a car in September 2019 and trying to shoot Mr Sikander Ali at point-blank range in his own car.

But the handgun jammed and Mr Ali drove away at high-speed. Hours later Betro returned to the house, and fired three shots at his family home, the court heard.

Sentencing Betro, Judge Simon Drew told her it was only a “matter of chance” that Mr Ali had not been killed.

“You were engaged in a complex, well-planned conspiracy to murder,” he added. “You were prepared to pull the trigger and did so on two separate occasions.”

Prosecutors said Betro was part of a plot with co-conspirators Mohammed Aslam, 56, and his 31-year-old son Mohammed Nabil Nazir.

Betro had met Nazir on an online dating site, and told the jury she was in love with him.

Both men were jailed in 2024 for their roles in the “violent” feud which erupted after they were injured in a brawl at Mr Ali’s father’s clothing store in July 2018.

Graphic design graduate Betro did not know Mr Ali and denied three charges including conspiracy to murder and possessing a self-loading pistol. She said she had no knowledge of the plot.

Betro, who is originally from Wisconsin, told jurors it was “just a terrible coincidence” that she had been close to the scene of the attack.

She maintained the real shooter was “another American woman” who sounded similar to her and had the same phone and brand of trainers.

Police said they had seen no evidence that Betro was paid for her role in the attack. AFP

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