Calgary Herald

New Year killers targeted one man, jury told

Trial starts for third suspect

- DARYL SLADE

The New Year’s Day 2009 shooting i n which three people were gunned down at a southeast Calgary restaurant was the culminatio­n of an elaborate plan to target one of the victims, Sanjeev Mann, a jury was told on Monday.

In her opening address, co-crown prosecutor Susan Karpa said the accused, Real Christian Honorio, 28, was part of the plan and one of the shooters inside the Bolsa Vietnamese eatery that afternoon.

“Sanjeev Mann was the target. Mann was in the restaurant and was killed,” Karpa told the eight men and four women of the jury.

“Aaron Bendle was an associate of Mann who was also in the Bolsa and was also shot and killed.”

Karpa said the third victim, Keni S’ua, 43, was a regular customer who had sat down at a table to enjoy a meal that day and was likely mistaken for Mann, who looks similar. S’ua was shot three times as he fled across the parking lot.

“Mr. S’ua did not get to have his meal that day,” said Karpa. “Instead, he was shot and killed as he ran for his life. Mr. S’ua, when he went there that day, did not know he would get caught in the midst of a planned execution.”

The prosecutor said the theory of the Crown is that Honorio, on trial for three counts of f irst-degree murder, played an important role in the planning and execution of the triple homicide.

Karpa said Mann, 22, was associated with the FK street gang and was hated by rival groups FOB and 403 Soldiers.

She said Bendle, 21, was kidnapped with the intention of getting at Mann through Bendle, then to kill him.

Karpa said the three men went to the restaurant, with two of them going inside and one remaining outside. All of them, she said, had semiautoma­tic handguns.

City police Det. Jim Hands showed to the jury video and still pictures he took of the grisly scene.

Mann and Bendle are seen laying dead in pools of blood on the restaurant floor, surrounded by numerous shell casings, metal fragments and bullet holes in the furniture and walls.

He said S’ua’s bullet-riddled body was found outside in the snow, where he fell after being gunned down.

Karpa said she and co-crown counsel Rajbir Dhillon will call about 30 witnesses regarding their theory why the murders took place, as well as what happened before and after the shootings.

She said witnesses were not able to recognize the alleged killers because they were masked.

They fired about 20 rounds using three guns, she said.

Mann, Karpa said, was sitting with his girlfriend and a male friend at a table at the back of the restaurant when the gunmen burst inside.

Before they could be served, Karpa said, Bendle walked into the restaurant and immediatel­y a hail of gunshots rang out.

“Mr. Mann was left bleeding on the floor,” she said. “His girlfriend called 911, but he died as she cradled him in her arms. Mann was wearing a bulletproo­f vest and three bullets were stopped by the vest. One bullet bypassed the vest and killed Mann.

“Another person, Bendle, also lay bleeding on the floor. He was shot twice in the head.”

Karpa said S’ua was shot three times, once in the face and twice in the back.

“The three killers got into their rented getaway car and drove away, leaving three bleeding bodies behind. Police arrived shortly afterward.”

A key witness will be a man who is expected to testify how he helped plan the kidnapping and murders. M.M., who cannot be identified to protect him, has been given immunity from charges for his testimony.

“He will tell you about the kidnapping of Mr. Bendle to get to Mr. Mann and the role he played,” said Karpa, “that there were three gunmen, the accused, Nathan Zuccherato and Michael Roberto.”

Zuccherato, 25, and Roberto, 28, were convicted in October, by a different jury, of three counts of firstdegre­e murder and were handed life sentences with no chance of parole for 25 years.

The prosecutor said M.M. did not initially tell police everything that occurred that day, but eventually told all in a plea deal.

M.M. admitted he was a former friend of the accused, a member of the 403 Soldiers at the time, and was a former gang member and drug dealer.

Karpa told the jury that as part of the Crown’s case, they will also hear what the accused said. She said that two months after the shootings, Honorio met a man named Ray who claimed he was part of a criminal organizati­on and asked him to join the group. It was a targeted undercover police operation.

Over the next three months, she said, they took part in criminal activity and their friendship grew.

“The accused dropped hints about the New Year’s Day shootings and before the end of their associatio­n he told them about his role,” Karpa alleged. “The accused admitted to being one of the shooters in the restaurant and needed help.”

Thes cheduled five-weektrialb­efore Court of Queen’s Bench Justice Glen Poelman continues.

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Sanjeev Mann

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