Murder of Ariel Sellouk

Last updated

Ariel Sellouk was an American Jewish man murdered in 2003. [1] His murder has been described as "a classic hate crime". [2]

Contents

Victim

Ariel Sellouk was the son of a Jewish family from Morocco that had moved to Houston, Texas in 1992. [3]

Murder

Sellouk and Mohammed Ali Alayed met at college. Neither was religious during their friendship, and they are said to have enjoyed going out together to drink, play darts, and meet girls. [2] The two stopped socializing together over a year before the crime, during a period when Alayed was reportedly becoming more committed to Islam. [2] [3]

In early August 2003, over a year since they had last seen one another, Alayed, now a religiously strict Muslim, contacted Sellouk and the two went out for drinks. They left the bar and, according to Alayed's roommate, returned to Alayed's flat at about 1 in the morning. According to The Forward , Alayed's roommate reported that Alayed pulled out a knife and began, "slitting (Sellouk's) throat with such force and precision that, as the gruesome autopsy photos would later show, the young man's head was nearly severed." [2]

Alayed's defense attorney, George Parnham, told a journalist that Ayaled's motive was unknown, but stated that Sellouk was "nearly decapitated" and that "religious differences were likely a factor." [4] According to The Forward, the victim was, "slaughtered in a Houston apartment, his throat slit so deftly with a 6-inch butterfly knife that he was nearly decapitated." [2] Alayed told his roommate that he intended to flee to Saudi Arabia. [2] He remained at large for nearly a week before being discovered by police in a vacant apartment in the building where he lived. [2]

Murderer

At the time of the murder Alayed was a Saudi national who had come to Texas to study at Houston Community College, but who had dropped out of school at the time of the murder. [3] According to court documents, he received an allowance of $60,000.00 from his parents. [3] Alayed was described by The Forward as, "the son of a millionaire Saudi businessman (who had) been bailed out of trouble by the Saudi consulate after previous scrapes with the law. [2] According to the Houston prosecutor, the consulate of Saudi Arabia had previously posted bail for Alayed on minor charges, and had forfeited $15,000 on one occasion when Alayed failed to appear in court after being charged with driving with a revoked license. [2]

Disposition

Alayed pleaded guilty. [4] [5] On April 19, 2004, Alayed was sentenced to serve 60 years in prison. [6] According to Stephen St. Martin, an ADA (Assistant District Attorney) of Harris County, he was not charged with committing a hate crime because, "It didn't help me ... The hate crime statute would only enhance [the sentence] one penalty level, and murder is already at the highest level,... So I would just be stating something else that I would have to prove.… Why make my job harder?" He told a reporter, "I'm not saying it was not a hate crime ... I'm just saying that it would have been extremely difficult to prove that to a jury." [2] [6]

Legacy

The case attracted ongoing attention in subsequent years, sometimes sparked by incidents with apparent parallels. [7] [8]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Matthew Shepard</span> Gay American murder victim (1976–1998)

Matthew Wayne Shepard was an American student at the University of Wyoming who was beaten, tortured, and left to die near Laramie on the night of October 6, 1998. He was taken by rescuers to Poudre Valley Hospital in Fort Collins, Colorado, where he died six days later from severe head injuries received during the attack.

The Mahmudiyah rape and killings were a series of war crimes committed by five U.S. Army soldiers during the U.S. occupation of Iraq, involving the gang-rape and murder of 14-year-old Iraqi girl Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi and the murder of her family on March 12, 2006. It occurred in the family's house to the southwest of Yusufiyah, a village to the west of the town of Al-Mahmudiyah, Iraq. Other members of al-Janabi's family murdered by American soldiers included her 34-year-old mother Fakhriyah Taha Muhasen, 45-year-old father Qassim Hamza Raheem, and 6-year-old sister Hadeel Qassim Hamza al-Janabi. The two remaining survivors of the family, 9-year-old brother Ahmed and 11-year-old brother Mohammed, were at school during the massacre and orphaned by the event.

On August 10, 1999, at around 10:50 a.m. PT, American white supremacist Buford O. Furrow Jr. walked into the lobby of the North Valley Jewish Community Center in Granada Hills and opened fire with an Uzi sub machine gun, firing 70 bullets into the complex. The gunfire wounded five people: three children, a teenage counselor, and an office worker. Shortly thereafter, Furrow murdered a mail carrier, fled the state, and finally surrendered to the authorities.

Mark Valera is an Australian murderer who was convicted in 2000 of the murders of David O'Hearn and Frank Arkell in Wollongong, New South Wales. Valera handed himself into police after the murders, and in court accused his father of violent and sexual abuse, citing this as the reason he himself turned violent. His sister, Belinda van Krevel, later organised for their father to be murdered by a family friend. Valera is currently incarcerated at the Goulburn Correctional Centre, where he is serving a life sentence with no possibility of parole.

Ryan Keith Skipper was an American man from Polk County, Florida, who was murdered on March 14, 2007, in what authorities declared a hate crime. Skipper's body was discovered on March 15 along a roadside in Wahneta, Florida. Two men were arrested in connection with the crime: William David Brown Jr., and Joseph Bearden, 20 and 21 years old at the time of the incident, respectively. The men were charged with first-degree murder and robbery.

The murder of Arthur Warren was the killing of 26-year-old American Arthur Carl ("J.R.") Warren Jr. on July 4, 2000, by two male teens. According to Liz Seaton of the Human Rights Campaign, it had all the earmarks of a hate crime.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Scotty Joe Weaver</span> 2004 homophobic murder in Alabama, United States

Scotty Joe Weaver was an 18-year-old murder victim from Bay Minette, Alabama, whose burned and partially decomposed body was discovered on July 22, 2004, approximately eight miles from the mobile home in which he lived. He had been beaten, strangled and stabbed numerous times, and his body doused in gasoline and set on fire. It was one of only two murders in which the victim's sexual orientation was part of the motive reported in Alabama in the period from February 1999 – when Billy Jack Gaither was kidnapped, beaten to death, and then the body set on fire – and July 22, 2004.

Richard T. "Dick" Antoun was a professor of anthropology at Binghamton University who specialized in Islamic and Middle Eastern studies.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of violence against LGBTQ people in the United States</span>

The history of violence against LGBTQ people in the United States is made up of assaults on gay men, lesbians, bisexuals, and transgender individuals, legal responses to such violence, and hate crime statistics in the United States of America. The people who are the targets of such violence are believed to violate heteronormative standards and they are also believed to contravene perceived protocols of gender and sexual roles. People who are perceived to be LGBTQ may also be targeted for violence. Violence can also occur between couples who are of the same sex, with statistics showing that violence among female same-sex couples is more common than it is among couples of the opposite sex, but male same-sex violence is less common.

Susan Lucille Wright is an American convicted murderer from Houston, Texas, who made headlines in 2003 for stabbing her husband, Jeff Wright, 193 times in an act of mariticide and then burying his body in their backyard. She was convicted of murder in 2004, and was given a 20-year sentence at the Crain Unit in Gatesville, Texas. She was denied parole on June 12, 2014, and July 24, 2017. She was granted parole in July 2020 and released from prison on December 30, 2020.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of James Craig Anderson</span> 2011 hate crime murder

James Craig Anderson was a 47-year-old American man who was murdered in a hate crime in Jackson, Mississippi, on June 26, 2011, by 18-year-old Deryl Dedmon of Brandon. At the time of his death, Anderson was working on the assembly line at the Nissan plant in Canton, and raising an adopted son with his partner.

A triple homicide was committed in Waltham, Massachusetts, in the United States, on or very near to the evening of September 11, 2011. Brendan Mess, Erik Weissman, and Raphael Teken were murdered in Mess's apartment. All had their throats slit with such great force that they were nearly decapitated. Thousands of dollars' worth of marijuana and money were left covering their mutilated bodies; in all, $5,000 was left in the apartment. The local district attorney said that it appeared that the killer and the victims knew each other, and that the murders were not random.

Hussain Saeed Alnahdi was a 24-year-old University of Wisconsin–Stout student from Sharurah, Saudi Arabia, majoring in Business Administration, who was murdered in Menomonie, in Dunn County, Wisconsin, United States, in 2016.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Blaze Bernstein</span> Antisemitic and anti-LGBTQ hate crime

On January 2, 2018, 19-year-old University of Pennsylvania sophomore Blaze Bernstein was killed after leaving home to meet an acquaintance at a park in California. Authorities later charged his former high school classmate Samuel Woodward with the murder, declaring that the incident was a hate crime.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ali Irsan</span> Jordanian-American convicted murderer

Ali Mahmood Awad Irsan is a Jordanian-American convicted murderer held on Texas death row. He was sentenced for the murders of Iranian-American activist Gelareh Bagherzadeh, a friend of one of his daughters; and his son-in-law, Coty Beavers, in Greater Houston.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Rania Alayed</span> Honour killing of a Syrian woman in Greater Manchester, England

Rania Alayed was a 25-year-old mother-of-three murdered by her husband in June 2013, in Salford, Greater Manchester, England. Greater Manchester Police (GMP) Chief Detective Inspector Bill Reade described this as an honour killing, and the prosecutors stated she was murdered for trying to achieve independence from her husband and undergoing westernisation. Alayed's remains have never been found.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">White Boy Posse</span> Canadian neo-Nazi criminal organization

White Boy Posse (WBP), sometimes spelled as the Whiteboy Posse, is a Canadian white supremacist neo-Nazi organized crime group founded in 2003 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, the organization is primarily active in Western Canada.

References

  1. Olsen, Dean (2009). Perfect Enemy: The Law Enforcement Manual of Islamist Terrorism. Pennsylvania State University Press. p. 52. ISBN   9780398078867 . Retrieved September 28, 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 McGraw, Seamus (January 23, 2004). "Religious Overtones Color a Murder in Texas". The Jewish Daily Forward . Retrieved September 28, 2014.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Tilghman, Andrew (January 12, 2004). "Saudi pleads guilty to killing Jewish friend here". Houston Chronicle . Retrieved September 28, 2014.
  4. 1 2 "Muslim pleads guilty to killing Jewish friend". CNN. Reuters. January 13, 2004. Retrieved September 28, 2014.
  5. Ferguson, Barbara (January 15, 2004). "Saudi Pleads Guilty in Houston to Killing Jewish Friend". Arab News. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
  6. 1 2 Tilghman, Andrew (April 20, 2004). "Saudi gets 60 years for killing Jewish friend here". Houston Chronicle . Retrieved September 29, 2014.
  7. Jacobs, Steven (2009). Maven in Blue Jeans: A Festschrift in Honor of Zev Garber. Purdue University Press. p. 357. ISBN   978-1557535214.
  8. West, Diana (2008). The Death of the Grown-Up: How America's Arrested Development Is Bringing Down Western Civilization. Macmillan. p. 233. ISBN   9781466840751 . Retrieved November 13, 2014.