Pictured left is 25-year-old Nicholas Salvadore who allegedly beheaded a defenceless great-grandmother Palmira Silva in her north London garden yesterday Sept 4. Nicholas Salvadore is currently under armed guard in hospital where he is receiving treatment for injuries sustained during yesterday's lunchtime rampage. Her neighbours are saying the killer was a Nigerian who had been sleeping at the home of a friend in recent weeks. I edited part of the story from Dailymail Online…
Neighbours said the killer was a Nigerian who had been sleeping at the home of a friend in recent weeks. Others said the heavily tattooed killer was well-known in the neighbourhood, where he has the nickname ‘Fat Nick’.





















"The horror began shortly after 1pm yesterday when a member of the public called 999 to report a man with a knife attacking a cat. Witnesses said the 25-year-old man, dressed all in black, was carrying a foot-long machete, which was stained with blood.
One heard him shout 'The cats have stolen my lighter' as he hacked one animal to pieces.Another local resident said they knew the suspect well as his mother lived nearby.
They said they looked out of their window and saw the man shouting that he was looking for a cat.
They told the Mirror: 'He then went into my back garden and started chopping at my roses with the machete.
'He was going crazy because he couldn’t find it. Then he saw it in another garden and chopped its head off with the machete.'
The resident said they saw blood splattered 'everywhere' and so ran to call police. They discovered the body of Mrs Silva, whose family own a nearby cafe, in the back garden of her £500,000 semi-detached home.
Neighbours said the killer was a Nigerian who had been sleeping at the home of a friend in recent weeks. Others said the heavily tattooed killer was well-known in the neighbourhood, where he has the nickname ‘Fat Nick’.
One said: ‘He’s a crazy guy. He’s got a big belly and tattoos and he walks the streets sticking his fingers up at people like Somalis.’
A neighbour who knew Mrs Silva, whose husband Domenico died several years ago, said she was ‘such a sweet lady’ who still worked every day in Silva's Cafe on Church Street, Edmonton."
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