Pakistani-origin cab driver in UK admits harassing Jemima

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Socialite Jemima Khan was bombarded with more than 1,000 phone calls and messages from Pakistani-origin cab driver after she posed for a ‘selfie’ with him, the Isleworth Crown Court in the UK has heard.

Hassan Mahhmood, 27, is said to have obtained the 43-year-old journalist’s phone number when she booked a ride through a ride-hailing service, reported Sky News.

His barrister, Umar Ali, said Mahhmood was a “big fan” of Khan because of her marriage to his hero, Pakistan cricket legend Imran Khan.

Khan, who is the daughter of late billionaire entrepreneur Sir James Goldsmith and the sister of MP Zac Goldsmith, agreed to a photograph with Mahhmood after he picked up her and friends from a jazz club on June 16, 2016, Isleworth Crown Court heard.

Mahhmood then began a year-long campaign of harassment, using 18 different mobile phones to send 203 text messages, make 1,182 phone calls and send “loads of” WhatsApp messages.

Prosecutor Ruxana Nasser said the taxi driver told Khan, who is also known by her maiden name, Goldsmith, that he “loved her”, “wanted to know her” and asked her “why he could not be friends with her”.

The prosecutor said: “He was totally obsessed with her and wanted to meet her to the extent the last two text messages in July 2017 consist of him wanting to come and visit her.

“The fear of that prompted her to go to police after several months of enduring the stress he put her through.

“It was her sheer kindness of not reporting him in the first instance.”

Mahhmood, from Waltham Forest, northeast London, pleaded guilty to a charge of harassment without violence between 16 June last year and 18 July this year.

However, he denied the more serious charge of stalking Khan which was allowed to lie on file.

Khan said in a victim statement: “The incident has made me incredibly anxious at times. I would be home alone and he would call me several times and text repeatedly late at night.

“Sometimes he would send texts saying he would come to my house. That really frightened me.”

In a further statement, she added: “I feel extremely vulnerable and scared as a single woman. As a result, I’m planning to move house.

“He seems to have become increasingly unstable and unpredictable. I’m worried about what he will do.”

The court heard Mahhmood had no previous convictions but the prosecutor said he should be sentenced on the basis of his “persistent pestering behaviour”.

His defence barrister said none of the messages had been of a threatening nature.

Mahhmood’s marriage broke down during the harassment campaign and he has been stripped of his Hackney Carriage licence, his barrister said.

Judge Martin Edmunds QC adjourned sentencing to October 26th and told Mahhmood he would require pre-sentence reports to find out what was behind his “obsessive behaviour” and that he could face jail.