Texarkana Gazette

Court grants new trial after cop says Somalis tend to lie

- By Todd Richmond

MADISON, Wis. — A Minnesota man of Somali descent who was convicted of opening fire on other Somalis will get a new trial after a detective improperly testified that Somalis often lie to police, a Wisconsin appeals court ruled Tuesday.

Ahmed Farah Hirsi was charged with multiple counts of attempted homicide and recklessly endangerin­g safety in the January 2014 carto-car shooting at the Spirit Seller liquor store in Hudson, Wisconsin, just across the state line from the Twin Cities. A jury convicted Hirsi in 2015 and he was sentenced to 35 years in prison.

According to court documents, the driver of Hirsi’s car testified in a plea deal that Hirsi pulled the trigger. But the victims who testified at trial said they either didn’t see the shooter or that it wasn’t Hirsi. The driver of the victims’ car testified that he told police that the man who shot him was still out there.

Prosecutor­s called Tracy Henry, a detective from St.

Paul, Minnesota, to the stand. Minnesota has the largest concentrat­ion of Somalis in America.

Henry testified that in her experience Somalis don’t trust police and prefer to handle disputes themselves. She added that Somali crime victims and witnesses tend to “fabricate” events to avoid retributio­n within their clans.

Hirsi argued on appeal that the judge never should have allowed the detective’s testimony because it impugns the credibilit­y of another witness and it was improper because it was based on race or ethnicity.

The 3rd District Court of Appeals agreed and ordered a new trial. The court ruled unanimousl­y that the testimony violated legal rules that prohibit one witness from commenting about the truthfulne­ss of another witness’ testimony. The racial and ethnic aspect of Henry’s testimony raises “heightened prejudice concerns,” the court said. The relevance of group tendencies in predicting witness credibilit­y is “extraordin­arily weak,” the court said.

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