Imperial Valley Press

Distinctiv­e accent on torture video leads police to suspect

- BY MARK THIESSEN

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The suspect in a torture killing in Alaska’s biggest city ended up leading police right to him, first by losing a digital memory card labeled “Homicide at midtown Marriott” that contained video of the dying woman.

Then came an even more innocuous blunder: He spoke on the tape in his distinctiv­e, very un-Alaska accent.

When a woman found the memory card on the street and turned it over to police, what detectives saw was horrific. At one point, the suspect complained to the victim, whose face was swollen and bloodied: “My hand’s getting tired.” He then stomped her throat with his right foot. Amid the footage, a clue: The man spoke in an “English sounding accent,” and detectives recalled Brian Steven Smith, a 48-year-old South African, from another investigat­ion, the details of which they have not disclosed.

They arrested Smith, who has pleaded not guilty to the September killing of 30-year-old Kathleen Henry, an Alaska Native woman. During his interrogat­ion, police say he confessed to shooting another Alaska Native woman. Police won’t say if there may be other victims.

Anchorage has a diverse population — more than 200 languages are spoken in the school system — and it’s not uncommon to hear people speaking with Russian, Yupik or Hmong accents.

But South African accents aren’t common, certainly not after the summer tourist season. Just a fraction of the city’s foreign-born population comes from Africa, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Authoritie­s identified the second victim as Veronica Abouchuk, who was 52 when her family reported her missing in February. The family last saw her in July 2018, police said.

Smith told police where he left Abouchuk’s body. It was in an area near where State Troopers recovered a skull with a bullet wound earlier this year.

He pleaded not guilty to a second set of charges in court Monday, and bail was set at $2 million.

Several family members of the slain woman were sobbing and had to leave the courtroom when Smith was brought in.

After the hearing, Abouchuk’s niece, Tatauq Ruma, said she has questions for Smith. “Why did he do it?” she said.

Her “Auntie Veronica,” a Yupik, grew up in the small community of Saint Michael, on the state’s western Bering Sea coast. She eventually moved to Anchorage, where she taught her niece how to make breaded chicken by using crumbled up corn flakes.

Veronica Abouchuk had four children before she became homeless, a lifestyle she embraced. The last time they spoke, Abouchuk told her niece she liked being homeless.

“She didn’t say why. She was just happy that she was homeless and that she was OK with that,” Ruma said.

She was full of life, she said. “She’s just a very sweet lady. She loved her kids. She loved everyone. I really miss her.”

After both women were killed, their bodies were dumped along roads outside of Anchorage “like unwanted trash,” the state says in a memorandum seeking $2 million bail on the more than a dozen counts he faces, including first-degree murder, second-degree murder and evidence tampering. If convicted and found to have committed substantia­l torture in the Henry case, he will be sentenced to a mandatory 99 years. Alaska doesn’t have the death penalty.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MARK THIESSEN ?? Brian Steven Smith (second from left) is escorted out of a courtroom in Anchorage, Alaska, on Monday.
AP PHOTO/MARK THIESSEN Brian Steven Smith (second from left) is escorted out of a courtroom in Anchorage, Alaska, on Monday.

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