The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Lansdale man accused of abusing corpse of friend

- By Carl Hessler Jr. chessler@21st-centurymed­ia. com @montcocour­tnews on Twitter

“Fearing that Torres’ death in his residence would cause a violation of his probation, Mollah hid the body inside the trunk of Torres’ Nissan Altima and drove the car to the Twin Pines Apartment parking lot, where it sat undetected until a resident reported the vehicle to the Lansdale police.” — Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin R. Steele alleged in a news release

NORRISTOWN >> A Lansdale man is accused of abusing the corpse of a friend after the friend died at his home, wrapping the body in a large trash bag and placing it in the trunk of the dead man’s vehicle before abandoning it on a parking lot.

Shamsuzzam­an Mollah, 34, of the first block of Elm Drive, was arraigned before District Court Judge Edward Levine of Lansdale on charges of abuse of corpse, unauthoriz­ed use of a motor vehicle and theft by unlawful taking in connection with an alleged April 29, 2018, incident related to the death of 33-year-old Daniel Torres, a

Quakertown, Bucks County, man who operated a Bridgeport barbershop.

“Fearing that Torres’ death in his residence would cause a violation of his probation, Mollah hid the body inside the trunk of Torres’ Nissan Altima and drove the car to the Twin Pines Apartment parking lot, where it sat undetected until a resident reported the vehicle to the Lansdale police,” Montgomery County District Attorney Kevin R. Steele alleged in a news release on Thursday.

Levine set bail at $20,000 cash and Mollah, unable to post bail, was remanded to the county jail in Lower Providence to await his Nov. 8 preliminar­y hearing on the charges.

An investigat­ion began on May 3, 2018, when Torres’ mother reported her son missing to Pennsylvan­ia State Police. Torres’ mother told police Torres was last seen alive on April 29 and that he was at Mollah’s residence, according to the criminal complaint filed by Lansdale Detective Nicholas Oropeza

and county Detective James Reape.

On May 9, Lansdale police responded to the parking lot of the Twin Pines Apartment complex in the 700 block of North Valley Forge Road after a resident there reported that a white Nissan Altima vehicle hadn’t been moved since being parked there about 6:50 p.m. April 29 by a person wearing a hooded sweatshirt. The resident reported the occupant exited the vehicle with the hood up over his head and synched closed and then walked toward Eighth Street, according to court papers.

“Investigat­ion revealed the strong odor of decomposit­ion emitting from the trunk of the Nissan,” Oropeza and Reape wrote in the criminal complaint, adding Torres’ body was found in the trunk of the vehicle that was owned by Torres. “Torres’ body was contained inside a large black trash bag.”

An autopsy determined that “although the body was in decomposit­ion, there were no signs of trauma.”

Toxicology tests uncovered the presence of opioids and ethanol in Torres’ bloodstrea­m, leading a forensic pathologis­t to opine that Torres may have died from opioid and ethanol intoxicati­on, according to the criminal complaint. The cause and manner of death were ruled undetermin­ed.

Detectives subsequent­ly interviewe­d Mollah, who initially told authoritie­s Torres slept at his residence on the evening of April 28 into the morning hours of April 29 after the pair had been out with another friend at the Creekside Cabaret in Colmar, according to the arrest affidavit.

Detectives uncovered video surveillan­ce from cameras in the area of the Twin Pine Apartments and Mollah’s residence and also analyzed cellphone records that assisted them in the investigat­ion, according to court documents.

A search of Mollah’s residence by investigat­ors uncovered a box of “contractor clean-up bags.”

“The bag is identical in shape, color and design as the bag that was found to contain the body of Daniel Torres,” Oropeza and Reape alleged in the criminal complaint.

Mollah, detectives learned, was under the supervisio­n of county adult probation officials at the time of the alleged incident.

Based upon the evidence recovered, detectives alleged that Mollah was present on April 29 when Torres died inside the Elm Drive residence from ethanol and opioid intoxicati­on, according to the arrest affidavit.

“Following his death, Mollah secreted Torres’ body inside the trunk of his Nissan Altima, fearing his connection to Torres’ death may cause a violation of his Montgomery County probation,” Oropeza and Reape alleged.

Mollah then drove Torres’ vehicle to the Twin Pines Apartment parking lot and abandoned it there, detectives alleged.

If convicted of all the charges at trial, Mollah faces a possible maximum sentence of 4½-to9-years in prison.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Shamsuzzam­an Mollah
SUBMITTED PHOTO Shamsuzzam­an Mollah

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States