Shafia son asks for hug after grilling in court
Kingston canal death trial adjourned until Jan. 9
The Canadian Press
Posted: Dec 14, 2011 10:34 AM ET
Last Updated: Dec 14, 2011 7:29 PM ET
Mohammad Shafia and his eldest son, Hamed Shafia, walk on their way to the Kingston, Ont., courthouse on Wednesday. (Lorian Bélanger/Radio-Canada)
Need to Know
- Trial adjourned until Jan. 9 2012
After a lengthy and withering cross-examination during which he was accused of conspiring with his family to fabricate alibis, a surviving son of a couple accused of killing three of their daughters finished his court testimony by asking for a hug.
The son of the Montreal couple testified this week for the defence at the Shafia family murder trial in Kingston, Ont. and was subject to more than a full day of cross-examination.
Crown attorney Gerard Laarhuis accused him of having a highly selective memory, and recited a long list of “new information” offered during his testimony.
The sibling, who can’t be identified because of a publication ban, was re-examined by the defence Wednesday morning after being grilled by the Crown.
Tooba Yahya, 42, and her husband Mohammad Shafia, 58, are charged alongside their eldest son, Hamed, 20, with four counts each of first-degree murder. They have all pleaded not guilty.
They're accused of killing Shafia sisters, Zainab, 19, Sahar, 17, and Geeti, 13, along with Rona Amir Mohammad, 52, Shafia's other wife in a polygamous marriage, over family honour.
Defence lawyer Peter Kemp called the son back to the witness box to question him about his cross-examination testimony.
"You've been cross-examined quite extensively by Mr. Laarhuis with respect to a conspiracy or an agreement to fabricate evidence or make up evidence ... to help your parents and your brother," Kemp said. "What do you have to say about that?"
"That we helped in the murders, is that right?" the son said.
He and the rest of his family maintain the deaths were an accident, a late-night joy ride turned tragic.
Moments later, after the judge told him he could step down, the son turned to Judge Robert Maranger and asked if he could have permission to hug his parents goodbye.
Laarhuis referenced ongoing discussions about the matter, and said, "Now's not the time," causing the mother to burst into tears in the prisoner's box.
The court adjourned for the holidays just after 3 p.m. on Wednesday,with the trial scheduled to resume Jan. 9, 2012.
Crown argues testimony inconsistencies hiding truth
The prosecutor said the witness conveniently remembered details that aided his accused family members, but failed to recall anything that might hinder their defence, reported the CBC’s Dan Halton from the courthouse.
Laarhuis quoted the witness as saying his father was an 8.5 out of 10 on liberal values, and did not care what his children wore or insist that his daughters wear the hijab.
But the prosecutor showed the court the girls’ passport photos, health cards and Canadian residency cards, in which they were all pictured wearing the hijab. The witness maintained he had never seen them wearing the hijab.
Unreliable witness, prosecutor alleges
On Tuesday, the prosecutor suggested the young man had lied to and manipulated authority figures in the past and may not be telling the truth in court.
On Monday, the son testified he might have been responsible for one of the more apparently damning pieces of evidence against his family members. On June 20, 2009, just 10 days before the drowning deaths of his sisters and father's first wife, someone used the family computer to search "where to commit a murder."
The son said he was suicidal at the time, and though he doesn't remember entering that specific search, it might have been him because he didn't know the word for suicide.
He said he was suicidal because his eldest sister, Zainab, had run away to a shelter. But that was on April 17, 2009, and she returned home two weeks later, court has heard.
The computer search came on June 20, three days before the family left on a trip to Niagara Falls, Ont., that would end in the deaths on June 30. At that time, the witness testified he was happy and so was everyone else in the family. Life was good, he said.
Confusion about dates
The son appeared to get confused about the dates Tuesday and in an exchange of escalating tension with the Crown attorney, the son abruptly turned to the judge.
"Your honour, may I be excused to go to the washroom, please?" he said.
The court took a break and when Laarhuis returned to the topic later in the afternoon he started questioning the witness about how he could not know the word for suicide. The son suggested the search was a result of Google's auto-complete function, but Laarhuis noted those precise words were typed.
"It was after April 17th, right?" the son asked.
"No, you're wrong," Laarhuis replied. "It was during your happy period, the 20th [of June]. Do you want to change your testimony about that now?"
"No, not at all," the son said.
The witness has admitted manipulating teachers in the past by telling them lies and has admitted manipulating police in the past by telling them lies, Laarhuis said.
"So where do you draw the line on manipulating people and telling lies?" he asked. The son responded, "When it goes too far, I guess."
Crown alleges so-called honour killings
Crown prosecutors allege the Shafia couple and their son Hamed killed the three sisters and older wife over family honour.
The bodies of Zainab, Sahar, Geeti, and Rona Amir Mohammad, were found in a car submerged in a canal near Kingston, Ont., on June 30, 2009.
Shafia, Yahya and Hamed have told police that the night of the deaths Zainab came into their motel room to borrow the car keys. The Crown alleges the now deceased children were killed before the family checked into the motel, and that they made up the story about the car keys to place the girls at the motel alive, which would fit with their assertion that the deaths were a joyride gone wrong.
The son, and brother to the girls, was hammered by Laarhuis at another point about his statement to police that Zainab came to the motel room that night to borrow his cellphone.
Laarhuis suggested that never happened, and further, that inconsistent statements to police that it might have been his mother who wanted to borrow his phone point to a mistake on his part.
"I'm putting to you, that's where you're getting confused, because the story was supposed to be Zainab came and asked for keys, but you got confused," Laarhuis said. "You got mixed up and you said she came and asked for a cellphone."
The brother denied the suggestion.
He also denied that one of his roles in the family was to report back to his parents and Hamed on the behaviour of Sahar and Geeti at school.
But many of his answers during his cross-examination were unclear, which sometimes elicited chuckles from members of the public watching the trial.
At one point, he said he went to visit the site of the deaths once afterward, to see where his sisters had died. Laarhuis suggested he visited a second time, and the brother responded: "Uh, yes. I'm not sure. I don't recall. I don't remember it."
"You said yes ... What's that about?" Laarhuis asked.
"Maybe I was back there in Kingston, but not on the [specific] site," the brother said.
Laarhuis also suggested the family had stopped at the site of the deaths to use the washroom at the beginning of their trip, which the father had testified to last week, but the brother said he wasn't sure. He said he remembers stopping in a park, but wasn't clear if there was water at that park, saying, "Uh, yes. I don't know. I'm not sure."
He also denied several incidents involving his family that the court has heard other witnesses testify to, including his own father.
With files from the Canadian PressShare Tools
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