The Fugitive Father: Nine Years, Two Massacres, and the Death Row Killer Who Vanished and Returned
The case of the man infamously dubbed the “Butcher of Shorouk” is one of the most chilling examples of repeated brutality in Egypt’s modern criminal history. Known by several aliases, including Karam Mohamed Abdel Rady and Ahmed Abu Gabal, he first came to notoriety in 2009, when he murdered and dismembered a business partner over a financial dispute. The savagery of the crime earned him a death sentence, but fate intervened when he escaped prison during the 2011 uprisings, vanishing under a new identity. For years, he lived undetected, remarrying and starting a new family, until history repeated itself in a far more horrific way. On September 9, 2018, he brutally murdered his wife and four children, using the same gruesome methods as before—decapitation and dismemberment—in what seemed like a haunting echo of his earlier crime. The breakthrough came when a journalist, recalling the eerily similar details of the 2009 case, alerted authorities. Investigators soon confirmed that the Shorouk killer and the long-missing fugitive were one and the same. His arrest and subsequent second death sentence closed the circle on a criminal career marked by shocking violence, deception, and a macabre repetition of dates and methods that left the public horrified.