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“Rafay lawyer challenges evidence.”
Sara Jean
Green, Seattle Times
Biased police detectives ignored physical evidence, witness
statements and anything else that did not support their hastily
drawn conclusion that Atif Rafay and Sebastian Burns were
responsible for the 1994 killings of Rafay's parents and
sister in Bellevue, a defense attorney told jurors yesterday.
After a deputy prosecutor spent more
than six hours over two days addressing the jury during
closing statements, Rafay's attorney, Marc Stenchever,
said yesterday the state has dragged out the aggravated
first-degree triple-murder trial for nearly six months
by dissecting "meaningless evidence."
He pointed out inconsistencies between
the physical evidence found at the Rafays' Somerset neighborhood
home and "the
story" Burns and Rafay told undercover Canadian police
officers whom the two defendants believed were big-money
criminals.
He said Burns and Rafay falsely confessed
because they believed Bellevue police were fabricating
evidence against them and needed the criminals' help to
destroy it. Stenchever told the jury the two Canadian citizens
were aware Canadian police could do things such as break
into a home or steal a car in order to plant microphones — things
Canadian officials did as part of a five-month sting operation
that ultimately led to the defendants' arrests in July
1995.
Stenchever reminded jurors that two neighbors
told police they heard hammering sounds from the Rafay
home on the night of July 12, 1994, between approximately
9:45 p.m. and 10:15 p.m. The two neighbors said the noises
stopped "25 to
30 minutes before Mr. Rafay could have been in that house," Stenchever
said, pointing to other witnesses who had placed Rafay and
Burns inside a Factoria movie theater from at least 9:50
p.m. to 10:05 p.m.
"Don't presume they're guilty just because (Bellevue
police Detective) Bob Thompson did ... and don't ignore the
evidence that Atif Rafay is innocent and was somewhere else
when his family was slaughtered," Stenchever said.
The state contends Burns and Rafay, now
28, slipped out of the theater early, killed the family,
staged a burglary and then went to a Seattle diner before
returning to Bellevue to "discover" the bloody crime scene and call police.
Prosecutors say the two confessed a year later during a Canadian
undercover police operation dubbed "Project Estate."
Stenchever challenged an assertion made a day earlier by
deputy prosecutor James Konat, who said no one could say
for certain that what the neighbors heard were indeed the
sounds of murder.
"Neighbors clearly heard the sounds of the murder because
what else could those sounds have been?" Stenchever
asked.
He also mentioned fingerprints found
inside the house and a single hair found in the bedsheets
of Rafay's father, Tariq Rafay, that didn't match Burns,
Rafay or any of the victims. Though the state contends
21 hairs found in a shower belonged to Burns — and therefore indicated Burns showered after
bludgeoning Tariq, Sultana and Basma Rafay with a baseball
bat — Stenchever told the jury no DNA analysis was
done and that a scientist could conclude only that the hairs
weren't inconsistent with Burns' hair.
Stenchever also said the story Burns
and Rafay told undercover operators with the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police just doesn't add up. For instance, Rafay
said in a videotaped "confession" that
he witnessed only his mother's death. But the forensic evidence
indicates at least two people, possibly three, were in Tariq
Rafay's room when he was attacked in his sleep, Stenchever
said.
Burns' attorney, Jeff Robinson, is to make his closing statements
today, which will be followed by the state's rebuttal. The
case then will be handed over to the jury.
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