Santa Fe New Mexican

Afghan refugee found guilty in murder case

Syed faces life in prison for ’22 shooting of 41-year-old man, will also stand trial in coming months for two other slayings

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

ALBUQUERQU­E — An Afghan refugee was found guilty Monday of first-degree murder in one of three fatal shootings that shook Albuquerqu­e’s Muslim community during the summer of 2022.

Muhammad Syed faces life in prison for killing 41-year-old Aftab Hussein on July 26, 2022. He also will stand trial in the coming months in the other two slayings.

During the trial, prosecutor­s presented cellphone data that showed his phone was in the area when the shooting occurred, and a ballistics expert testified that casings and projectile­s recovered from the scene had been fired from a rifle that was found hidden under Syed’s bed.

Defense attorneys argued prosecutor­s had no evidence Syed was the one who pulled the trigger. They said others who lived in his home could also access his phone, the vehicle and the rifle.

The defense called no witnesses; Syed tearfully declined to testify in his own defense.

Prosecutor­s on Monday said they were pleased that jurors agreed it was a deliberate killing. However, they acknowledg­ed no testimony during the weeklong trial nor any court filings addressed a possible motive or detailed any interactio­ns that Syed might have had with Hussein before the killing.

“We were not able to uncover anything that we would indicate would be a motive that would explain this,” Deputy District Attorney David Waymire said outside the courthouse. “As best we can tell, this could be a case of a serial killer where there’s a motive known only to them and not something that we can really understand.”

Defense attorneys said the conviction would be appealed once the other two trials are complete. They, too, said a

motive has yet to be uncovered.

The three ambush-style killings happened over the course of several days, leaving authoritie­s scrambling to determine if race or religion might have been behind the crimes. It was not long before the investigat­ion shifted away from possible hate crimes to what prosecutor­s described to jurors as the “willful and very deliberate” actions of another member of the Muslim community.

Syed, who speaks Pashto and required the help of translator­s throughout the trial, settled in the U.S. with his family several years before the killings. Prosecutor­s described him during previous court hearings as having a violent history. His public defenders 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, 2022, 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.

Muhammad Afzaal Hussain’s older brother, Muhammad Imtiaz Hussain, was there Monday to hear the verdict. He has been following the cases closely and like others in the community is troubled that there’s still no answer as to why his brother and the others were targeted.

A student leader at the University of New Mexico who was active in politics and later worked for the city of Española, Muhammad Afzaal Hussain had a bright future, his brother said. They had come to the United States from Pakistan for educationa­l and economic opportunit­ies.

He said the life they had planned was just starting to come to fruition when his brother was killed.

“It was a big loss,” he said. Police also identified Syed as the suspect in the killing of another Muslim man in 2021, but no charges have been filed in that case.

Authoritie­s issued a public plea for help following the third killing in the summer of 2022.

They shared photograph­s of a vehicle believed to be involved in the crimes, resulting in tips that led to Syed.

Syed denied involvemen­t in the killings after being stopped 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.

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

During the trial, prosecutor­s gave jurors a rundown of what happened the night of the first killing: Hussein parked at his apartment complex at around 10 p.m. and had just stepped out of his vehicle with his keys still in his hand when gunfire erupted.

“He stood no chance,” prosecutor Jordan Machin said during closing arguments. Machin said Syed had been lying in wait and that he continued to shoot even as Hussein lay on the ground.

Officers found Hussein with multiple wounds that stretched from his neck down to his feet. Investigat­ors testified that some of the high-caliber rounds went through his body and pierced the car.

Prosecutor­s showed photos of Hussein’s bullet-riddled car and said the victim was killed nearly instantly.

 ?? CHANCEY BUSH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Muhammad Syed looks over his shoulder during closing arguments at the Bernalillo County Courthouse in Albuquerqu­e on Friday.
CHANCEY BUSH/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Muhammad Syed looks over his shoulder during closing arguments at the Bernalillo County Courthouse in Albuquerqu­e on Friday.
 ?? SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Muhammad Imtiaz Hussain, the brother of a Muslim man who was killed in August 2022, talks to reporters after jurors returned a guilty verdict Monday in a case that had shocked the Muslim community in Albuquerqu­e. Jurors deliberate­d just over two hours before rendering their decision for Muhammad Syed, who is standing trial separately for each of the three killings he is charged in.
SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS Muhammad Imtiaz Hussain, the brother of a Muslim man who was killed in August 2022, talks to reporters after jurors returned a guilty verdict Monday in a case that had shocked the Muslim community in Albuquerqu­e. Jurors deliberate­d just over two hours before rendering their decision for Muhammad Syed, who is standing trial separately for each of the three killings he is charged in.

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