Windsor Star

Pedestrian­s struck amid chaos of police chase

-

“Individual and community fear, indeed terror, fester when residents have no basis on which to assess their level of risk or to take appropriat­e precaution­s,” she said.

On Oct. 25, a jury convicted Sharif of all 11 charges including five counts of attempted murder.

Throughout the threeweek trial, they heard harrowing testimony from nearly 40 witnesses, including Chernyk and the four pedestrian­s.

The investigat­ion into Sharif involved 367 police officers, making it one of the largest police investigat­ions in Edmonton’s history.

Sharif kept almost totally silent during the trial. He fired his defence lawyers during pretrial proceeding­s, opting instead to represent himself. Despite that, he never mounted any kind of defence. After each witness, Belzil asked Sharif a painstakin­g list of questions and offered topics on which he might cross-examine.

Sharif’s response to every question was the same: “maya” — the Somali word for “no.”

The story begins near Edmonton’s Commonweal­th Stadium, where the Eskimos were playing the Winnipeg Blue Bombers. Chernyk was working at a game-day traffic stop.

Just after 8 p.m., Chernyk heard a revving sound and tried to dive out of the way but was struck by a speeding Chevy Malibu. Video cameras on a nearby liquor store captured Chernyk flying through the air as the car crashed.

A few seconds later, a man, later revealed to be Sharif, emerged and began attacking Chernyk before fleeing. Somehow, Sharif made his way to a U-haul truck which he’d rented earlier.

A few hours later, a rookie officer spotted the truck in a line at a traffic checkpoint. Sharif handed over his licence but sped off before the officers could arrest him. He was soon pursued by half-a-dozen police cars, hitting pedestrian­s along the way. Eventually, a police car nudged the U-haul and flipped it. Officers broke the windshield and extricated Sharif.

Greg Lazin, an amicus lawyer appointed to assist the court in the absence of a defence attorney, provided some basic details about Sharif’s life during a sentencing hearing.

Sharif was born in Mogadishu in 1987 and grew up in Somalia during a time of war and instabilit­y.

Sharif fled to neighbouri­ng Kenya in October 2008. Sharif spent the next few years there and appears to have made an unsuccessf­ul refugee claim.

In early 2011, Sharif left for South America, arriving at the U.s.-mexico border near San Diego on July 11, 2011. After spending several months in Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t (ICE) custody, an immigratio­n judge ordered Sharif deported to Somalia. However, ICE was forced to release Sharif after it became clear he couldn’t be deported in the near future.

Sharif claimed refugee status in Canada on Jan. 1, 2012. He’ll likely face deportatio­n on the completion of his sentence.

He’s accrued about three years credit for time served in pre-trial custody.

Sgt. Nedo Mirjanic, the lead investigat­or, said during trial that Sharif’s motives may remain a mystery.

“As a police officer, we always try to get what happened, and we’re always conscious in attempting to determine why it happened,” Mirjanic said during trial. “We don’t always get (the) why.”

 ??  ?? Abdulahi Hasan Sharif
Abdulahi Hasan Sharif

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada