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Sentenced to Life: Last of Criminal Brothers Faces Justice

The tragic saga of Regent Park’s Nirmalendran siblings concludes with two brothers meeting their demise through gunfire, while the youngest sibling is now serving a life sentence for a brutal and senseless murder.

Koshin Yusuf, aged 26, fell victim to a fatal shooting near the vicinity of McCowan Rd. and Trudelle Ct. in Scarborough on December 29, 2019. The evil deeds of the Nirmalendran brothers, who once resided in Regent Park, were marked by a history of violence and tragedy.

Nixon Nirmalendran, at 22, met his end in the infamous Eaton Centre mass shooting of 2012, while a year later, Nisan, aged 21, lost his life in a seniors’ complex on Bleeker St. during a harrowing incident as he sought refuge behind an elderly woman. The youngest brother, Nirusan Nirmalendran, now 29, has been sentenced to life imprisonment for the first-degree murder of an innocent individual.

Despite his claims of innocence before Superior Court Justice Anne Molloy, Nirmalendran was found guilty during the judge-alone trial. The fatal encounter occurred in the early hours of December 29, 2019, when Nirmalendran and his accomplice Oday Bazuhair launched a deadly ambush on Yusuf outside his family’s residence on McCowan Rd. as he cared for his autistic sibling in his family’s absence on a pilgrimage to Mecca.

Yusuf, a diligent truck driver and a graduate in computer science from Wuhan University, harbored aspirations of entrepreneurship and a settled life with his partner. The Crown attorney, Matt Shumka, described the incident as another tragic episode of gun violence in the city, emphasizing the cowardly and motiveless nature of the attack.

Despite extensive investigations, the motive behind the murder remains elusive, leaving Molloy perplexed even after meticulous examination of the case. The emotional impact of Yusuf’s untimely death was evident in the heart-wrenching victim impact statements presented in court, reflecting the profound grief and loss experienced by his family.

The Nirmalendran brothers’ history of violence and crime, culminating in tragic deaths and a life sentence, paints a grim picture of their tumultuous lives. Despite experiencing the pain of losing two siblings to gun violence, Nirusan callously inflicted a similar fate on Yusuf’s family, displaying a lack of remorse or empathy.

The narrative of the Nirmalendran family, marred by violence and tragedy, serves as a stark reminder of the devastating consequences of a life entwined with crime and brutality. As justice is served and society grapples with the aftermath of such senseless acts, the echoes of grief and loss linger, leaving scars that may never fully heal.