The Borneo Post

Cradle Fund CEO murder: Acquittal of three accused maintained

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PUTRAJAYA: The Court of Appeal here yesterday upheld the acquittal of Samirah Muzaffar and two teenagers on a charge of murdering Cradle Fund chief executive officer Nazrin Hassan six years ago.

A three-member panel led by Justice Datuk Vazeer Alam Mydin Meera, in a unanimous decision, dismissed the prosecutio­n’s appeal to set aside a High Court verdict in acquitting and dischargin­g the three of them on the murder charge.

The other two judges presiding on the bench were Datuk Ahmad Zaidi Ibrahim and Datuk Azhahari Kamal Ramli.

On June 21, 2022, the Shah Alam High Court freed Samirah, 49, who is also Nazrin’s widow, and the two teenagers, now aged 18 and 21, of murdering Nazrin after finding that the prosecutio­n had failed to establish a prima facie case against the three of them at the end of its case. The three of them and Indonesian woman Eka Wahyu Lestari, who is still at large, were charged with killing Nazrin, 45, at his house in Mutiara Damansara between 11.30pm on June 13, 2018, and 4am the following day.

Justice Vazeer Alam, when reading out the decision, said the prosecutio­n failed to prove the murder case as the evidence was circumstan­tial, and there was evidence by witnesses that the relationsh­ip between the deceased and the respondent­s (Samirah and two teenagers) was good.

He said the ‘last seen theory’ raised by the prosecutio­n was to show some connection between the respondent­s to the death of the deceased.

“In this regard, the learned trial judge quite correctly found that the failure to prove the time of the deceased death and ‘the last seen theory’ cannot be applied to prove the connection between the respondent­s with the deceased’s death.

“Further, we found that the prosecutio­n did not tender any cogent evidence of motive on the part of any of the respondent­s to kill the deceased,” he said.

Justice Vazeer Alam also said the allegation raised by the prosecutio­n on financial motive, the intention by the deceased to divorce Samirah and the bad relationsh­ip between the deceased with the second and third respondent­s was also unclear.

“It is well settled that when relying on motive, it must be satisfacto­rily proven on clear evidence. Motive evidence must be clear and not vague. In fact, contrary to the assertion by the prosecutio­n, there was evidence by the driver and personal assistant of the deceased on the good relations between the deceased and Samirah,” the judge said.

Justice Vazeer Alam also pointed out that the evidence of text messages in Samirah’s phone a few days before the deceased’s death showed a normal and intimate relationsh­ip between husband and wife.

The court found there was no common intention between the three respondent­s, as well as their former maid, to murder Nazrin, he said.

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