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    What the Shafia jury didn't hear: relatives have run-in with Shafia and a knife

    KINGSTON, Ont. - A jury considering the case of three people accused of killing half of their family over honour absorbed mountains of evidence over about 10 weeks, but they weren't privy to all the details of the trial.

    Deliberations have started in the Shafia family murder trial and what took place in court outside the presence of the jury can now be reported.

    The Crown decided not to call evidence that patriarch Mohammad Shafia brought out a knife in a fight with two of his wife's brothers at the time of the funerals for the alleged victims in this case.

    Shafia, 58, his wife Tooba Yahya, 42, and their son Hamed, 21, are charged with four counts each of first-degree murder. They're accused of killing three of Shafia and Yahya's daughters — Hamed's sisters — and Shafia's first wife in a polygamous marriage.

    Zainab, 19, Sahar, 17, Geeti, 13, and Rona Amir Mohammad, 52, were found dead June 30, 2009, in a car submerged at the bottom of a canal in Kingston, Ont.

    During the trial, some of the family's relatives testified for the Crown, alleging they heard threats from Shafia that he would kill Zainab, and some testified for the defence, saying the family is innocent. Both accused parents took the stand, and during Yahya's testimony, she started talking about a time when her brother "jumped on" Shafia and tried to hit him.

    Crown attorney Gerard Laarhuis cut her off and suggested the jury leave the courtroom. After they were gone, he explained Yahya had been veering into evidence they had to agreed to exclude.

    There was an incident at the time of the funerals that saw Shafia bringing out a knife in a scuffle with two of Yahya's brothers, Laarhuis told Judge Robert Maranger.

    "We agree that that's really not relevant to these proceedings and its prejudicial (nature) outweighed its probitive value," Laarhuis said.

    The jury was also unaware that there had been an order banning Shafia, Yahya and Hamed, who sat in the prisoners' box side by side each day, from communicating with each other. Maranger vacated that order Jan. 17 after the jury was excused, once Shafia and Yahya's testimony was over and it was clear Hamed would not take the stand.

    But on Dec. 14, just before court took a break for the holidays, it seemed all but certain that Hamed would testify. His lawyer Patrick McCann told Maranger after the jury was sent home that he would be calling his client to the stand. It's not clear at what point between then and the end of Yahya's five days of brutal cross-examination that a different decision was made.

    The jury was similarly unaware of an order preventing the accused Shafias from communicating with their surviving children. Until a surviving son testified on their behalf in court, he had not seen his parents and brother since July 21, 2009.

    Maranger lifted that order on Dec. 14, after the son's testimony and after the Crown conceded the risk of influencing witnesses had passed.

    At one point, Shafia's lawyer Peter Kemp indicated, without the jury present, that he would be calling both the son and another surviving sibling to testify. But at some point between when he said that on Dec. 9 and the next week, following a withering two-day cross-examination of the son, it became clear the sister would not take the stand.

    She did appear in court, though, on the last day of her mother's cross-examination. On Jan. 16, the young woman rushed into the courtroom just as the jury was exiting for a break, cried out and pressed her lips to the glass of the prisoner's box. The jury saw this, and saw Shafia put his lips to hers through the glass, but they were not made aware of who she was.

    After the jury left, a court security officer warned her not to approach the prisoners' box again, especially with the jury still in the room, and she sat down on a court bench and made loud weeping sounds, though when she stood up a few minutes later her eyes were dry.

    The accused family members had also been prevented from speaking with Moosa Hadi, an engineering student-turned interpreter-turned private investigator, court heard before the jury was in one day.

    Studying at Queen's University in Kingston, Hadi read about the case after the arrests and offered to be an interpreter between the lawyers and their clients, as he too was originally from Afghanistan. Shafia hired him on the side, court heard, to conduct a parallel investigation, and he developed a fervent belief in the family's innocence.

    He received the same disclosure from police as the lawyers and made an audio recording of a jailhouse conversation with Hamed, in which Hadi claims Hamed reveals the truth of what happened four months after his arrest.

    Hamed said he was at the canal and witnessed his four relatives plunging into the water in a car. He said he honked the horn of his car once then dangled a rope in the water, but seeing no signs of life, he drove away and told no one. The Crown suggested the story was a "complete fabrication."

    During Hadi's testimony — he was called as a Crown witness — the judge excused the jury while the lawyers argued about asking Hadi about intercepted communications of the Shafias in their native language of Dari. Maranger ruled he would not allow the defence to pursue the area, saying Hadi was biased.

    "He's clearly an agent of the accused," Maranger said. "He worked for the accused and continues to do so in his own mind. That makes him wholly unqualified to give unbiased testimony."

    During the trial Hadi sent emails addressed to the lead investigator in the case and copied to reporters and the lawyers.

    In one he stated that he wished to report a "criminal activity" committed by Laarhuis in his cross-examination of Yahya.

    "He was trying to obstruct the justice by diverting the attention of the judge and public from his own criminal activities including unlawful imprisonment of innocent people for 2.5 years," Hadi wrote. "Under the so-called 'cross-examination' he was playing with dates and distances only to find a discrepancy in Mrs. Yahya's testimony by confusing her."

    Hadi wrote that he expected when he first reported his findings to police in 2009 that Shafia and Yahya would be released, after investigators realized their "obvious errors."

    Shafia and Yahya were dragged "to the verge of committing suicide" by being subjected to this prosecution and the fact that they are still breathing today, "there is no exaggeration if I claim it is because of my efforts," Hadi wrote.

    "As a result of these criminal activities, ignorances, bias and stupidities dominated in this case I have suffered from PTSD."

    What do you feel about this article?

     
    • Fil  •  Chatham-Kent, Ontario  •  29 days ago
      This brain-washed sick man came to Canada but hates our culture, doesn't respect our law and doesn't want to integrate to the society. His only target is to make money from the people here. Now he even murders his family simply because of his twisted, backward belief. This piece of garbage shouldn't have been here in the first place.
    • Gerry  •  Burlington, Ontario  •  29 days ago
      If they are fount "not guilty" it will give licence for all these kooks to commit honour murder.
    • Sgt. Pepper  •  29 days ago
      Hadi sounds like a grrrrrrrreat guy! He should pursue a career as a fiction writer.
    • redbird  •  Burlington, Ontario  •  29 days ago
      shafias lawyers love this trial,they will milk him and his wife and son for hundreds of thousands,I pray the government is not paying,They are as guilty as hell ,they will all rot in jail,
    • Silent Majority  •  Victoria, British Columbia  •  29 days ago
      It is a complete traversty that the word "honour" is associated with the death of these poor victims.
    • Serpico  •  29 days ago
      If they walk it will be a shame for Canada.
    • Psycho Tanker  •  Mississauga, Ontario  •  29 days ago
      Jury is deciding what will happen to bunch of cold blooded murderers yet we are NOT telling the jury everything about the murderers? WHAT THE HELL?????
    • Sue  •  29 days ago
      Those 4 women should never be forgotten. Their names should be tattooed on their parents' and brother's foreheads. That would be the honourable thing to do....in my opinion.
    • Gerry  •  Oshawa, Ontario  •  29 days ago
      the fact is that if any one of us where in a car about to go into a river we would struggle to try to get out even underwater we would still stuggle as far as i can tell from the story there was no metion of any of the occupents having struggled to try to get out from the evidence presented it seem that all of them where in a restfull position inside the car and appeared to be asleep when all this transpired even the driver, anyone who belives other wise that this was not murder for whatever reason is delusional
      my two cents
    • Joanne  •  Vancouver, British Columbia  •  29 days ago
      I will be a good day when these lying, unprincipled, cold blooded murderers are sent to jail.
    • the zingaer  •  Blackfalds, Alberta  •  29 days ago
      The jury is still out, and the trial is over, so under Canadian Law is it fair comment to address this case and express opinions based upon the evidence the jury has or has not heard. They are guilty as hell. It will be a travesty of justice if they are acquitted. Unfortunately the Crown would not have been permitted to introduce "expert" evidence on their culture values which accept multiple murders as part of their society when the "family has been shamed." Their religious and cultural beliefs in that area can be best described as "of a psychopathic behaviour" which voids them of all feelings of guilt, and thinking "murder" under these circumstances is totally acceptable. I am sorry, but this is not acceptable in Canada's society. For the most part, Canadians are tolerant to the beliefs of its diversified cultures. But this should not be tolerated, and it must be condemned in the most harshest of terms. This kind of garbage immigrating to Canada from other countries is not acceptable. Yes, there are certain cultural traditions Canadians should be open in accepting. But a line must be drawn when it comes to tolerance. And this is the case where the Canadian government must seriously consider who takes precedence with their cultures in a country that was built on the foundations of the blood and sweat of our past generations who arrived here as dirt-poor farmers at the turn of the century. We did not build this country to accommodate the "late arrivals" demanding, under slack immigration policies, equal rights in their beliefs and traditions. This is not a matter of racism. This is a matter of common sense. Canadians are quickly tiring of the demands made by immigrants, and asking for protection under our Charter of Rights and Freedoms - a precedent based upon the formative years of this country, and the protection of our ancestors who drew sweat to settle this proud country. Our immigration policies are courting intolerance. If one parent from another country takes offence to Christian Bibles being handed out in schools because the Book contravenes their beliefs, the Bibles are yanked. The "politically correct" defend such actions. But in the wake of such ludicrous actions, the "rights" to those parents who believe Christianity is their foundations of belief, are being seriously and unquestionably eroded. In fact, we are seeing a government that condones intolerance to our traditional beliefs to accommodate tolerance of others' beliefs and traditions which were basically non-existent until the government opened the flood gates on slack immigration policies. The government has overruled common sense in this regard, giving the mouse that squeaks the power of a lion. And be damned with our traditions, which, in all fairness, must also be respected by those demanding we respect their traditions. If that family of killers walks at the conclusion of this horrific trial of events, it will court further erosion of Canada's criminal justice system by those who know how to play justice as a "Village Idiot."
    • firefly  •  29 days ago
      This Hadi guy should be sent back where he came from . Do not let this pice of garbage stay in Canada .He offered his services to be an interpeter and he became friends with the accused he too is just another afgan who cannot be trusted to live by our laws.
    • Rubberm8n  •  29 days ago
      If these were Christians living in a muslim country - they would have been buried a long time ago... I hope they get more than what the jury gives them as a message to all other immigrants this sort of evil will not be tolerated here in Canada!
    • John  •  Mississauga, Ontario  •  29 days ago
      Tax payers are hooked for 3 life sentences. Too bad this is not their country where death is the punishment.
    • spawatson  •  Woodstock, Ontario  •  28 days ago
      I wish they would stop calling it a honour killing, it is murder plain and simple. It's to bad we don't have the death penalty, they don't deserve to be breathing
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Toronto, Ontario  •  29 days ago
      way to go leave out evidence so they can walk
    • Joan  •  Collingwood, Ontario  •  29 days ago
      ooooooooooh ppppplease!
      Hadi = another afgan who can't be trusted!
      go figure!
    • Liz  •  Chilliwack, British Columbia  •  29 days ago
      DON'T WORRY PEOPLE......THESE THREE #$%$ OF THE EARTH ARE GOING DOWN!!!!!!
    • Giles the 3rd  •  29 days ago
      Our legal system needs to be nuked.
    • Observer  •  29 days ago
      Send these people back to Afghanistan; there's no need to waste another Canadian dollar on them!!!
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