Court upholds doomsday prepper Daniel Beckwitt’s manslaughter conviction

Maryland’s high court docket upheld a conviction of involuntary manslaughter in opposition to the Maryland millionaire who employed a person to construct him a doomsday bunker that turned his tomb.

Daniel Beckwitt — a inventory dealer in his late 20s who feared a North Korean nuclear strike, employed Askia Khafra, then 21, to dig him a 200-ft. community of tunnels beneath his dwelling. When a hearth broke out as he was working, Khafra died from smoke inhalation and burns.

He was unable to flee, partially as a result of Beckwitt blindfolded him every day.

Beckwitt was charged and convicted with second-degree homicide and involuntary manslaughter.

Daniel Beckwitt
Daniel Beckwitt was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and second-degree homicide for Askia Khafra’s loss of life.
EPA
Askia Khafra died while working for Daniel Beckwitt.
Askia Khafra died whereas working for Daniel Beckwitt.
Fb

The Maryland Courtroom of Appeals on Friday tossed the extra severe cost, discovering that whereas Beckwitt’s actions confirmed “a wanton and reckless disregard for human life,” they didn't display “an excessive indifference to the worth of human life.”

He’s been behind bars since 2019 — when he acquired 9 years. Now he can be re-sentenced.

“We at all times felt that this case was overcharged from the start,” Megan Coleman, a lawyer representing Beckwitt, stated in response to NBC.

Dia Khafra displays a photo of his son, Askia.
Dia Khafra shows a photograph of his son, Askia.
AP

With Submit wires

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