Sunday, October 06, 2019

We May Never Know Their Motives

Or - to put it another way - we know their motives but won't talk about them:

Evidence that the Paris police department missed warning signs about an employee who slashed four colleagues to death at its headquarters on Thursday is prompting demands for a leadership shake-up. ...

The killer, shot to death during the rampage, was identified by the prosecutor only as Mickaël H., but the French news media said he was Mickaël Harpon, born in the French West Indies department of Martinique.

He was a longtime convert to Islam, not a recent one as officials had said in the aftermath of the killings, and was an assiduous attendee of his local mosque, going to morning and evening prayers. A radical imam who was nearly expelled from France officiated there, a police union official said Friday.

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Elizabeth Wheaton delivered an opening statement Wednesday to a Court of Queen's Bench jury at the start of a trial in Edmonton for Abdulahi Hasan Sharif.

Sharif, 32, has pleaded not guilty to 11 charges, which include five courts of attempted murder. He is also charged with aggravated assault against the police officer and dangerous driving.

Sharif, who now has dreadlocks, sat in the prisoner's box wearing an orange jumpsuit.

"Once you have heard the evidence, it's the Crown position that you will be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that Abdulahi Sharif wanted to kill people," Wheaton told the jury.

"He tried first to murder Const. (Mike) Chernyk and then, during an extremely dangerous driving pattern, he fled from police causing bodily harm to four strangers. It is the Crown's position that he intentionally tried to kill these people by hitting them."

Chernyk was on duty outside a Canadian Football League game when he was struck by a vehicle around 8 p.m. on Sept. 30, 2017.

"He noticed headlights coming toward him," said Wheaton. "He heard the sound of a vehicle accelerating. He tried to move out of the way, but it was too late. The vehicle plowed into him."
A number of bystanders came to his aid.

"Suddenly the driver of that vehicle was there — a black male in dark clothing with a knife," said Wheaton. "He was trying to stab Const. Chernyk in the head with that knife. The bystanders saw the knife and they fled, fearing for their lives."

The officer was left alone and fought for his life, she said. With the man on top of him, Chernyk knew he was being stabbed and tried to grab the attacker's hand.

"But suddenly he could feel the attacker's other hand trying to get to his gun in his holster.
"With one hand still holding off the attack with the knife, he used his other hand and he pushed as hard as he could on that (gun) to keep it safe," she said. "Eventually he was able to roll over and get the other hand.

"His attacker lost the knife and the two got up. Const. Chernyk's attacker then fled into the night."

Wheaton said evidence will show that Sharif was the registered owner of the white Chevrolet Malibu than ran into Chernyk.


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