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UK rapper Ghetts jailed for killing Nepali student in hit-and-run

By Thomson Reuters Mar 3, 2026 | 8:49 AM

LONDON, March 3 (Reuters) – British rapper Ghetts was jailed for 12 years on Tuesday for killing a Nepali student in a hit-and-run while driving dangerously and over the drink-drive ​limit.

The award-winning artist, whose real name is Justin Clarke-Samuel, ‌pleaded guilty in December to causing the death of 20-year-old Yubin Tamang in north London last year.

Clarke-Samuel, 41, also admitted an additional charge of driving his BMW M5 dangerously before the fatal incident.

Ghetts was nominated for the 2024 Mercury ‌Prize ​for his fourth studio album “On Purpose, with ⁠Purpose” and won best ⁠male act at Britain’s MOBO Awards in 2021. The rapper has also collaborated with high-profile artists, including Ed Sheeran.

Clarke-Samuel sat in the dock at London’s Old Bailey as prosecutor Philip McGhee said ​he had been drinking before driving home dangerously, running red lights and driving on the wrong side of the road.

He was ⁠driving at nearly 70 miles per ⁠hour (112.7 km per hour) when he hit Tamang, causing ​catastrophic injuries and severe damage to the windscreen, but Clarke-Samuel did ​not stop and drove eight miles home, McGhee added.

Tamang’s mother ‌Sharmila Tamang tearfully read a statement to the court through a translator, which said: “My son had come to this place to study. But because of someone else’s fault, he was killed at such ⁠a young age.”

Clarke-Samuel’s lawyer Benjamin Aina said Clarke-Samuel had believed he was being followed, having previously been robbed at gunpoint, and was remorseful for ⁠his actions.

Aina read ‌out a letter written by Clarke-Samuel, which read: “I ⁠am fully aware that there are no number of ​apologies ‌that I can say which will stop the ​pain that ⁠the family and friends of Mr Tamang must feel.

“This young man and his family are in my thoughts daily. I cannot express the enormous feeling of guilt and shame I feel for the suffering I have caused.”

(Reporting by Sam Tobin; editing by Sarah Young, William James ​and Sharon Singleton)