US hitwoman Aimee Betro who dressed in niqab for botched assassination guilty of murder plot

US hitwoman who dressed in niqab for botched assassination guilty of murder plot
Aimee Betro, 45, was flown to the UK from Wisconsin as part of the plot orchestrated by Mohammed Aslam, 59, and Mohammed Nabil Nazir, 31 (Picture: PA/SWNS)

An American woman who wore a niqab disguise and tried to shoot a stranger dead in the street only for the gun to jam is facing a life sentence.

Aimee Betro, 45, was flown to the UK from Wisconsin by Mohammed Aslam, 59, and Mohammed Nabil Nazir, 31, who orchestrated the murder plot to settle a ‘vendetta’ with a rival family in Birmingham in September 2019.

The city’s crown court heard the father and son wanted ‘revenge’ against Aslat Mahumad after they were beaten up at his clothing boutique a year earlier.

Betro donned the disguise and lay in wait outside Mr Mahumad’s home on September 7 before approaching his son Sikander Ali, with CCTV showing her raising her arm and pulling the trigger at point-blank range.

Fortunately, Mr Ali managed to flee when the gun jammed and jurors heard Betro returned hours later and fired three shots into the family home, which was empty at the time.

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It took jurors 21 hours to convict Betro of conspiracy to murder, possessing a self-loading pistol with intent to cause fear of violence, and a charge of illegally importing ammunition.

Aimee Betro
Betro was found guilty of conspiracy to murder, possessing a self-loading pistol and a charge of fraudulently evading the prohibition on importing ammunition
CCTV footage shown to the jury this afternoon, captures a person brandishing a pistol, attempting to shoot Sikander Ali as he attempts to get out of his car. This is the moment an American 'assassin? disguised in a burka allegedly tried to shoot dead a shopkeeper during a botched hit job. Aimee Betro, 45, has gone on trial accused of conspiring to murder Sikander Ali after being hired to kill him by a father and son as part of a 'revenge' plot. A court heard she disguised herself in a niqab and burka while posing as a car buyer - but the gun jammed as she attempted to gun down Mr Ali on September 7, 2019. She later returned to the property on Measham Grove, Acocks Green, in a taxi and fired three times at the house smashing several windows, jurors were told. She is also said to have text Mr Ali's father taunting messages saying "where are you hiding?", "stop paying hide and seek" and "Come and meet me, I?m at Asda." Betro, originally from Wisconsin, in the USA, was arrested in Armenia in June last year after fleeing the country. Today (Mon) she went on trial at Birmingham Crown Court accused of conspiracy to murder, possession of a firearm with intent to cause fear or violence and smuggling of ammunition into the UK Photo released 21/07/2025
CCTV footage of the would-be assassin attempting to shoot Sikander Ali (Picture: West Midlands Police/SWNS)

Betro, who was wearing a purple T-shirt and with her hair in space buns, stared towards the jury bench as the verdicts were returned.

She was found guilty by a majority 11-1 verdict on the conspiracy to murder and firearm charges, and by a unanimous verdict on the ammunition charge.

Nazir and Aslam were jailed at the same court in November last year for their part in the plot, with the younger man given 32 years and his dad 10.

Betro flew back to the US days after the bungled assassination attempt and was later extradited to the UK.

A 45-year-old American woman has been found guilty of taking part in a botched assassination attempt on a shop owner in a street in Birmingham. Aimee Betro has been convicted at Birmingham Crown Court of conspiracy to murder in relation to a failed assassination plot in the city in September 2019. The 45-year-old, originally from Wisconsin, was accused of being involved in a conspiracy which saw a man threatened with a firearm in the South Yardley area of Birmingham. Jurors deliberated for almost 21 hours before convicting Betro of conspiracy to murder, possessing a self-loading pistol with intent to cause fear of violence, and a charge of illegally importing ammunition. Betro, wearing a purple T-shirt and with her hair in space buns, showed no obvious reaction and stared towards the jury bench as the verdicts were returned. She was found guilty by majority 11-1 verdicts on the conspiracy to murder and firearm charges, and by a unanimous verdict on the ammunition charge. Prosecutors alleged Betro, who was living in Armenia until earlier this year, flew to Britain in August 2019 to take part in a plot orchestrated by co-conspirators Mohammed Aslam, 56, and his son Mohammed Nabil Nazir, 31, to attack a family they had been feuding with.
It took jurors 21 hours to convict Betro (Credits: Zhivko Mironov)
Undated handout file photo issued by West Midlands Police photo of Aimee Betro checking into a Birmingham hotel, before she is alleged to have taken part in a failed assassination plot on September 7 2019. The American woman has denied any involvement in a failed assassination plot, telling jurors at Birmingham Crown Court she never had a gun in her possession at any time during her visit to the UK. Issue date: Tuesday July 29, 2025. PA Photo. Betro is alleged to have flown into Britain and taken part in a plot orchestrated by co-conspirators Mohammed Aslam, 56, and his son Mohammed Nabil Nazir, 31, to attack a rival family in September 2019. The 45-year-old, from West Allis in Wisconsin, told jurors on Tuesday that she did not know there had been an attempted shooting when she left the UK two days afterwards. Photo credit should read: West Midlands Police/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
Betro checking into a Birmingham hotel before the failed assassination plot on September 7, 2019 (Picture: West Midlands Police/PA Wire)

The court was told she was involved in another of Nazir’s plots when she sent three parcels of gun parts and ammunition to the UK a month later.

They were addressed to a man named Faris Quayum, whom Nazir was hoping to frame by tipping police off to the delivery.

Prosecutor Tom Walkling KC told jurors: ‘The prosecution say that the evidence in this case is compelling and strong.

‘Aimee Betro was the would-be assassin on September 7, 2019.

‘She was the shooter on Measham Grove in the early hours of the next day, and she was the person who furthered another of Nazir’s vendettas when she sent ammunition to the UK in October 2019.’

Three shots were fired into the two upstairs bedrooms of the property. This is the moment an American 'assassin? disguised in a burka allegedly tried to shoot dead a shopkeeper during a botched hit job. Aimee Betro, 45, has gone on trial accused of conspiring to murder Sikander Ali after being hired to kill him by a father and son as part of a 'revenge' plot. A court heard she disguised herself in a niqab and burka while posing as a car buyer - but the gun jammed as she attempted to gun down Mr Ali on September 7, 2019. She later returned to the property on Measham Grove, Acocks Green, in a taxi and fired three times at the house smashing several windows, jurors were told. She is also said to have text Mr Ali's father taunting messages saying "where are you hiding?", "stop paying hide and seek" and "Come and meet me, I?m at Asda." Betro, originally from Wisconsin, in the USA, was arrested in Armenia in June last year after fleeing the country. Today (Mon) she went on trial at Birmingham Crown Court accused of conspiracy to murder, possession of a firearm with intent to cause fear or violence and smuggling of ammunition into the UK Photo released 21/07/2025
Betro later fired shots into the victims’ home (Picture: West Midlands Police/SWNS)

Betro denied any involvement in the failed hit, telling the court she flew to the UK to celebrate her birthday and go to a boat party.

She also maintained that a woman described as having an American accent and being small and fat, who bought a BMW linked to the plot, was not her.

Betro suggested it must have been ‘another American woman’ who sounded like her, used her phone, and had almost identical trainers on.

The fact that she happened to be around the corner from the shooting minutes later was ‘all just a terrible coincidence’, she added.

Cross-examining Betro, Mr Walkling said: ‘So there must be, on your case, another American woman in Birmingham at the same time as you, who knew Mr Nazir, who sounded similar to you, who used the cheap phone that you bought, who called (a taxi firm) on your own telephone, and who wore at the very least the same sort of Converse trainers you had.’

Betro answered: ‘Yes.’

Following the guilty verdict, Hannah Sidaway from the CPS, said the prosecution came after they ‘doggedly’ pursued her across borders as she fled justice.

‘Betro tried to kill a man in a Birmingham street at point-blank range. It is sheer luck that he managed to get away unscathed.

‘The prosecution case included incriminating CCTV footage from the scene of the crime, digital forensics, mobile phone data and evidence collated from cooperation and collaboration across multiple countries and criminal justice agencies.

‘Only Betro knows what truly motivated her or what she sought to gain from becoming embroiled in a crime that meant she travelled hundreds of miles from Wisconsin to Birmingham to execute an attack on a man she did not know.’

Betro will be sentenced later.

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