The Maui News

Afghan refugee stands trial in first of three killings that shocked Albuquerqu­e’s Muslim community

- By SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M.—Fear coursed through the Muslim community in New Mexico’s largest city over several days in the summer of 2022 as authoritie­s scrambled to determine if race or religion might have been behind the ambush-style killings of three men from the community.

It was not long before the investigat­ion shifted away from possible hate crimes to what prosecutor­s on Tuesday described as the “willful and very deliberate” actions of another member of the Muslim community – Muhammad Syed, an Afghan refugee.

Prosecutor­s delivered opening statements in what is the first trial for Syed, 53, who settled in the U.S. several years ago with his family.

Syed, who speaks Pashto and no English, has remained in custody without bond since his arrest. He is charged with three counts of murder and four charges of tampering with evidence. Police also have identified him as the suspect in the killing of a fourth Muslim man, but no charges have been filed in that case.

Syed faces separate trials for each victim, the first being 41-year-old Aftab Hussein. The other trials will happen over the course of the coming months.

Syed denied involvemen­t in the killings after being detained just days after police put out a public plea for help with the unsolved killings that had rocked Albuquerqu­e’s Muslim community. Authoritie­s had shared photograph­s of a vehicle believed to be involved in the crimes, resulting in tips that led to Syed.

Police stopped him in his vehicle in August 2022 more than 100 miles from Albuquerqu­e. He told authoritie­s he was on his way to Texas to find a new home for his family, saying he was concerned about the killings in Albuquerqu­e.

Prosecutor­s painted a picture for jurors of the night Hussein was killed, saying it was around 10 p.m. when he pulled up to his apartment complex and parked. Hussein had just stepped out of his car, still holding his keys in his hand, when gunfire erupted and he was struck multiple times.

Deputy District Attorney David Waymire showed jurors the rifle he said Syed used, telling them it was found during a subsequent search of his home. He also told jurors that forensic examinatio­n determined that casings found at the scene had been fired from that weapon.

Cellphone records indicated that Syed was at the scene before and during the shooting and that Syed

had saved a note in his phone—12 minutes before the shooting—that talked about killing Hussein, Waymire said.

“The evidence will show this was a willful and very deliberate killing,” he said. “And the evidence will show Muhammad Syed is guilty.”

While some court documents remain sealed, others shed no light on a possible motive, leaving the community struggling to understand why Hussein and the other men were targeted. Prosecutor­s offered no further insight during their opening statements and didn’t discuss any interactio­ns that Syed might have had with the victim.

Defense attorney Thomas Clark told jurors that prosecutor­s have no evidence that Syed was the one who pulled the trigger and that there were others living in his home who also had access to the rifle, his car and his phone. Clark said the forensic evidence that will be presented by prosecutor­s does not include any fingerprin­ts or DNA that would implicate his client.

“I ask you during the course of this trial to pay very close attention to what you hear and pay an equal amount of attention to what you don’t hear,” Clark said. “A determinat­ion can’t be based on speculatio­n or conjecture.”

Prosecutor­s during previous court hearings described Syed as having a violent history. His public defenders have argued that previous allegation­s of domestic violence never resulted in conviction­s.

Syed also is accused of killing Muhammad Afzaal Hussain, a 27-year-old urban planner who was gunned down Aug. 1 while taking his evening walk, and Naeem Hussain, who was shot four days later as he sat in his vehicle outside a refugee resettleme­nt agency on the city’s south side.

The judge is prohibitin­g prosecutor­s from directly introducin­g as evidence statements Syed made to a detective while being questioned. Defense attorneys argued that Syed’s rights were violated because the detective, through an interprete­r, did not adequately inform Syed of his right to a court-appointed attorney.

Police officers and detectives testified Tuesday about arriving at the scene after Hussein had been killed. They found him lying next to his car with multiple gunshot wounds—from his ear and neck down to his legs with exit wounds in his feet.

Prosecutor­s showed photos of Hussein’s bullet-riddled car and said the victim was killed nearly instantly. They also said that one of the projectile­s recovered from his body and casings found at the scene had been fired from the rifle seized from Syed’s home.

 ?? Chancey Bush / The Albuquerqu­e Journal pool photo via AP ?? Muhammad Syed enters the court room before opening statements at the Bernalillo County Courthouse in Downtown Albuquerqu­e, N.M,, on Tuesday. Syed, an Afghan refugee, is accused in the slayings of three Muslim men in Albuquerqu­e.
Chancey Bush / The Albuquerqu­e Journal pool photo via AP Muhammad Syed enters the court room before opening statements at the Bernalillo County Courthouse in Downtown Albuquerqu­e, N.M,, on Tuesday. Syed, an Afghan refugee, is accused in the slayings of three Muslim men in Albuquerqu­e.

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