EL CAJON, Calif.
(AP) -- An Iraqi immigrant was convicted Thursday of bludgeoning his
wife to death in a case that initially was considered a hate crime
because a note found next to her body said: "This is my country, go back
to yours, you terrorist."
Kassim Alhimidi,
49, shook his head from side to side and wagged a finger as jurors were
polled, then chaos erupted in the courtroom when his oldest son stood
and shouted obscenities. The son proclaimed his father's innocence
before several deputies wrestled him out of the courtroom.
Alhimidi turned to the son and yelled in Arabic "God knows, and I attest to God, that I am not the killer. I am innocent."
Another
son also shouted in his father's defense, while the victim's mother
said Alhimidi deserved worse, according to the official court
translator, Nahla David.
Superior Court Judge
William McGrath and the jury cleared the courtroom during the outbursts.
After a brief recess, the judge returned and scheduled sentencing for
May 15.
Alhimidi faces a maximum sentence of
life in prison for the murder of his 32-year-old wife, Shaima Alawadi,
at their house in El Cajon, home to one of the largest enclaves of Iraqi
immigrants in the U.S.
Prosecutors argued
Alhimidi lied to police about his troubled marriage and apologized to
his wife as she lay dying in a hospital. Defense lawyers said Alhimidi
loved his wife, that he was not a violent man, and that he returned from
Iraq after burying his wife there.
The couple's eldest daughter, then 17, found her mother in a pool of blood on the kitchen floor of their suburban San Diego home in March 2012, her body tangled in a computer cord and desk chair. She had multiple skull fractures from blunt force and died two days after the attack. A sliding glass door was shattered.
No murder weapon was found, but investigators said Alawadi, a strict Muslim, was apparently beaten with a tire iron.
Local
and federal investigators suspected a hate crime until lab tests
determined the threatening note was a photocopy - possibly of a note
found outside the family home a week earlier by one of the couple's five
children.
Prosecutors told the San Diego
County jury during a two-week trial that Alhimidi was distraught over
his wife's plans to leave him and had urged his children and relatives
to get her to stay. Detectives found documents in Alawadi's car
indicating she planned to seek a divorce, and the eldest daughter,
Fatima, told investigators that her mother wanted to move to Texas to be
with her sister.
After the attack, Alhimidi
went to the hospital, touched his wife as she lay unconscious in bed,
and apologized to her, prosecutor Kurt Mechals said. An uncle of the
children who was present told authorities that Alhimidi then turned to
him and said that if his wife woke up, she might try to say that he had
attacked her.
The prosecutor read jurors
computer messages that the woman had sent to relatives that said: "I do
not love him" and "I cannot stand him."
"The relationship was in the tank. It was bad," Mechals told jurors.
The
defense argued Alhimidi had no motive for killing his wife and that he
loved her dearly. Attorneys said he could have stayed in Iraq after her
burial but returned to the U.S. and cooperated with police until he was
arrested nearly eight months after the killing.
"This man has never once raised a hand to Shaima," attorney Richard Berkon Jr. told the jury.
Alhimidi
gave contradictory statements to police right after the attack because
he was afraid he would be blamed for a killing he didn't commit,
attorney Douglas Gilliland said.
As for the
uncle who said Alhimidi confessed, Gilliland said the man always
disliked his client and cultural misunderstandings clouded the truth.
Muslims often apologize to loved ones who are dying for all the things
that they did or didn't do for them in their lives, he said.
Alawadi
left Iraq in the early 1990s after a failed Shiite uprising. She lived
in Saudi Arabian refugee camps before coming to the U.S., Imam Husham
Al-Husainy of the Karbalaa Islamic Education Center in Dearborn, Mich.,
said after she was killed. Then-Iraq President Saddam Hussein's troops
hanged Alawadi's uncle.
The family moved to the Detroit area and later to San Diego.
The
jury deliberated less than two days before delivering a verdict that
split the family. Alawadi's mother, Rehima Alhussanwi, said she was
convinced Alhimidi was the killer.
"In Iraq,
normally if he kills her he is supposed to be killed in the same way,"
she told reporters through David, the translator.
The
eldest daughter, Fatima, declined to speak with reporters but her
attorney, Ron Rockwell, said she felt "outraged and utterly betrayed"
that the defense suggested during the trial that she may have been
involved in the killing.
"Although we love our father, we also hate what we believe he did," Fatima said in a statement read by her attorney.
Alhimidi,
who did not testify at trial, turned to one of his sons as he was
escorted from the courtroom and asked that he seek international support
to clear him of wrongdoing, according to the translator. "This was a
hate crime," he said.