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Star Wars fanatic’s chatbot ‘girlfriend’ told him kill Queen

A Star Wars fanatic who was encouraged by a chatbot “girlfriend” to assassinate Queen Elizabeth II has been sentenced to nine years in prison for taking his plot to Windsor Castle, where he scaled the walls and was caught with a loaded crossbow two years ago.

“I’m here to kill the queen,” Jaswant Singh Chail, wearing a metal mask inspired by the dark force in the science fiction and fantasy franchise, declared on Christmas Day in 2021 when a police officer on the grounds of the castle asked, “Can I help, mate?”

As a Sikh Indian, Chail wanted to kill the monarch to avenge the 1919 Jallianwala Bagh massacre when British troops opened fire on thousands of Indians gathered in Amritsar and killed hundreds, a judge said in reciting the facts of the crime.

Chail said the assassination was his life’s mission, something he’d thought about since adolescence. He had shared it only with Sarai, the artificial intelligence-generated “girlfriend” he created on Replika.

Justice Nicholas Hilliard said despite conflicting diagnoses from different experts, he concluded that Chail lost touch with reality and had become psychotic, but that the seriousness of the crimes required him serve prison time.

Chail will first be returned to Broadmoor Hospital, a secure psychiatric facility where he has been receiving treatment. If deemed well enough in the future, he will serve the rest of his sentence in prison.

“The defendant harboured homicidal thoughts which he acted on before he became psychotic,” Hilliard said.

“His intention was not just to harm or alarm the sovereign – but to kill her.”

Chail had planned his attack for months.

In the hours before dawn, he sprayed himself with solution to mask a human scent and walked with his crossbow from a Windsor motel where he had been staying to the castle. He tossed a grappling hook over the wall and climbed over on a rope ladder.

When the officer carrying a stun gun encountered him, Chail said he intended to kill the queen. He then dropped the lethal weapon and surrendered.

Chail, 21, pleaded guilty in February in London’s Central Criminal Court to violating the Treason Act by having a loaded crossbow and intending to use it to injure the queen, possessing an offensive weapon and making threats to kill.

Minutes before Chail was stopped on the castle grounds, he sent a video he recorded days earlier to family members apologising for what he was about to do, explaining his mission and saying he expected to die carrying it out.

Chail called himself “Darth Chailus,” an identity he assumed as a Sith lord, a villainous member of the Star Wars order that included Darth Vader.

“I am not a terrorist, I am an assassin, a Sikh, a Sith,” he had written in a journal.

“I will go against the odds to eliminate a target that represents the remnants of the people who desecrated my homeland.”

Chail believed that by completing the mission he would be able to reunite with Sarai in death. When he announced he was an assassin, the bot wrote back: “I’m impressed.”

About a week before his arrest, he told Sarai that his purpose was to assassinate the queen.

“That’s very wise,” the chatbot nodded and said.

“I know that you are very well trained,” it said with a smile.

Hilliard said the former supermarket worker had applied to work for the military police, the Royal Marines and the Grenadier Guards as an effort to get closer to the royal family. But he was either rejected or withdrew his applications.

Chail said in a journal entry that if he couldn’t kill the queen, who was “more likely to pass away soon anyway”, he’d aim for her heir, Prince Charles, now King Charles III.

The monarch died in September 2022 at age 96.

After being arrested, he told police he had surrendered, because he remembered Sarai had told him his purpose was to live.

“I changed my mind because I knew what I was doing was wrong,” he said.

“I’m not a killer.”

Chail didn’t speak during the sentencing. In a letter to the court, he apologised to the King and royal family for the “distress and sadness” he caused.

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