Vancouver Sun

The sun goes down on a life of privilege

Wabafiyeba­zu brothers seemed to have it all in elite Miami neighbourh­ood

- WILLIAM MARSDEN — With files from Tristin Hopper

MIAMI — Until their world blew up in a hail of lead, Canadian Consul General Roxanne Dubé and her two teenage boys had lived, however briefly, a gilded life in one of the world’s most iconic sun-splashed cities.

It was a life of privilege and opportunit­y, decorated with swaying palms, bougainvil­lea blossoms, eternal blue skies, white beaches, soft pastels and a turquoise ocean that goes on forever. It told of an effortless, brilliant future.

But that’s all gone now. Proof of the tragic fall is seen in the scarred remains of Dubé’s eldest boy, Jean Wabafiyeba­zu, 17, placed this week on a stainless steel body tray in the Miami morgue awaiting the handiwork of a forensic pathologis­t.

His kid brother Marc, 15, is in “secure detention” at a Dade County juvenile facility.

Instead of scoring on his report card, he was in court Tuesday where the prosecutor added up the numbers that determined his detention status.

“The score should be a 20 because of the added charge of felony murder ... a punishable-for-life offence,” the prosecutor said.

She also said he’s a “flight risk” to Canada. Marc’s Montreal-born lawyer, Curt Obront, replied: “Well, Canada is almost a part of the United States.”

No bail for Marc, at least not yet. He awaits another hearing Wednesday when Obront will try to convince the court to release him into the protective custody of his mother.

On that date, the state of Florida likely will formally charge Marc. As it stands, police have charged him with murder and threatenin­g a police officer after his arrest.

“I’ll shoot you in the head,” he allegedly told the detective.

All of this stems from what police claim was an attempt by Marc and Jean to steal from alleged drug dealers Anthony Rodriguez, 19, and Joshua ( Obama) Wright, 17, a kilogram of marijuana worth about $5,000 US. A gun battle broke out. Joshua and Jean were shot dead and Rodriguez was wounded in the arm.

Prosecutor Santiago Aroca later claimed Rodriguez “has been a drug dealer for a long time” and had been involved in a similar fatal gun battle in the past.

It happened Monday afternoon in Joshua’s shabby groundfloo­r apartment in the working- class neighbourh­ood of Coral Way, just west of — but worlds apart from — Marc and Jean’s rarefied world in Pinecrest, one of Miami’s toniest neighbourh­oods.

Only a week ago the brothers were living with their mother in the gated Pinecrest community of The Gables by the Sea.

The entrance is manned by a security guard who emerges from his adobe-roofed, air-conditione­d guardhouse with a smile and a friendly “good day.”

He asks where you’re going, signs you in and writes down your licence number. A camera takes your picture. Only then does he raise the barrier to Dubé’s locked paradise, the one that’s supposed to keep the gunslinger­s out.

Their home is a melon-yellow bungalow set among palm trees and tropical plants. In the backyard, a concrete swimming pool is surrounded by potted palms. A fountain spews clear water. Birds dash about in the trees and bushes.

Marc attended Palmetto High School, a public institutio­n financed by the wealthy citizens of Pinecrest.

Jean was in the senior class of Gulliver Preparator­y School, “Home of the Raiders.”

The private high school costs parents about $30,000 a year. Here the students come and go in BMWs, Mercedes and other luxury cars.

The brothers arrived in Miami with their mother in February. They were newcomers to high schools where friendship­s were already welded. They were also black in a white society in a country where that matters.

As Canada’s top diplomat in one of America’s richest states, their mother was busy with parties and meetings, making her own alliances and contacts.

According to the boys’ father, who is separated from Dubé, Jean already had a drug problem and had fallen in with a bad crowd.

After the arrests, Miami officials hushed up the Canadian connection­s. When the Miami Herald broke the story late Tuesday, social media, the favoured playground of teenagers, took over.

In Ottawa, Jean’s former classmates posted messages of disbelief as they seemingly tried to square the “funny, caring, loving” guy they had known with the one killed by Florida gun violence.

Memorial photos of the elder Wabafiyeba­zu brother showed him as a geeky-looking kid at an elementary school birthday party, posing in face paint or making goofy faces with a group of girls at a beach.

“He was always fun to be around, he always had some crazy idea he was gonna try and do and I loved that about him,” wrote one friend.

Adults remembered him as a “lovely young man,” acquaintan­ces called him a “good kid,” and few could hint at any criminal leanings.

All except for one cryptic post from someone apparently close to Jean’s Ottawa circle.

“When you try to take a shortcut in life, you either end up in jail or end up having your mom cry at your funeral, choose your path wisely!”

“He was always fun to be around, he always had some crazy idea he was gonna try. MEMORIAL POST FACEBOOK

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Jean Wabafiyeba­zu, pictured, is dead and his brother, Marc Wabafiyeba­zu, is in police custody after a shootout in Miami this week. Their mother, Roxanne Dubé, is Canada’s consul-general in Florida.
FACEBOOK Jean Wabafiyeba­zu, pictured, is dead and his brother, Marc Wabafiyeba­zu, is in police custody after a shootout in Miami this week. Their mother, Roxanne Dubé, is Canada’s consul-general in Florida.

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