Ravinder Heer, aged 37, of Walsall, was convicted by a jury of manslaughter of 32-year-old Dale Grice in Cooksey Lane, Kingstanding

THE DRAMATIC MOMENT DALE GRICE KILLER, RAVINDER HEER IS ARRESTED BY ARMED POLICE
This is the dramatic moment armed police swooped on Dale Grice’s drunken killer after he had fatally stabbed him and fled the scene to buy beer.
Bellowing officers can be seen and heard ordering Ravinder Heer to ‘get to the floor’ on Valley Road, Hamstead.
The bleary-eyed killer, who has now been convicted of the manslaughter of Mr Grice, seemingly fails to register the initial command prompting them to sharply raise the volume as they repeat the instruction several times.

The armed officers had also spotted the glint of something shining in Heer’s hand, which turned out to be his car keys. Just a few hours earlier, the 37-year-old from Walsall had sped away from Cooksey Lane, Kingstanding, leaving Mr Grice for dead.
He had struck down the much-loved father-of-two in the street with a single swing of a kitchen knife, during an alcohol-fuelled fight between the pair of them.

Heer was bundled into his car and told to ‘get lost’. Having kerbed it and blown a tyre when initially arriving at the scene, he only got as far as Queslett Road upon his escape before being forced to abandon it.
The footage, released by West Midlands Police after a jury found Heer guilty of manslaughter but not guilty of murder, shows his movements immediately after the killing.
Dressed all in black with a sleeveless, hooded bomber jacket over a T-shirt and jeans, he can be seen stumbling into one shop and grabbing two cans of Stella Artois from the fridge.

Having sank those, Heer is captured on camera again trying to buy more booze from another shop, where he remonstrated with someone inside jabbing a finger at the person’s chest.
From there he headed to his parent’s home on Valley Road where he was snared. Heer was put on trial for more than a week at Birmingham Crown Court.
Evidence included further footage from the police car driving him to custody.
Ravinder Heer, aged 37, of Walsall, was convicted by a jury of manslaughter of 32-year-old Dale Grice in Cooksey Lane, Kingstanding

THE DRAMATIC MOMENT DALE GRICE KILLER, RAVINDER HEER IS ARRESTED BY ARMED POLICE
This is the dramatic moment armed police swooped on Dale Grice’s drunken killer after he had fatally stabbed him and fled the scene to buy beer.
Bellowing officers can be seen and heard ordering Ravinder Heer to ‘get to the floor’ on Valley Road, Hamstead.
The bleary-eyed killer, who has now been convicted of the manslaughter of Mr Grice, seemingly fails to register the initial command prompting them to sharply raise the volume as they repeat the instruction several times.

The armed officers had also spotted the glint of something shining in Heer’s hand, which turned out to be his car keys. Just a few hours earlier, the 37-year-old from Walsall had sped away from Cooksey Lane, Kingstanding, leaving Mr Grice for dead.
He had struck down the much-loved father-of-two in the street with a single swing of a kitchen knife, during an alcohol-fuelled fight between the pair of them.

Heer was bundled into his car and told to ‘get lost’. Having kerbed it and blown a tyre when initially arriving at the scene, he only got as far as Queslett Road upon his escape before being forced to abandon it.
The footage, released by West Midlands Police after a jury found Heer guilty of manslaughter but not guilty of murder, shows his movements immediately after the killing.
Dressed all in black with a sleeveless, hooded bomber jacket over a T-shirt and jeans, he can be seen stumbling into one shop and grabbing two cans of Stella Artois from the fridge.

Having sank those, Heer is captured on camera again trying to buy more booze from another shop, where he remonstrated with someone inside jabbing a finger at the person’s chest.
From there he headed to his parent’s home on Valley Road where he was snared. Heer was put on trial for more than a week at Birmingham Crown Court.
Evidence included further footage from the police car driving him to custody.