Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
International

Canadian Diplomat's Teen Son Set To Seek Bail In Florida Double-Murder Case

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 May, 2015 12:38 PM
    A Canadian teenager caught up in a double killing in Florida will ask a judge on Wednesday to grant him bail pending a trial that could lead to his life-long imprisonment.
     
    Marc Wabafiyebazu has pleaded not guilty to felony first-degree murder and other charges in a drug-related shootout in March that left his 17-year-old brother Jean Wabafiyebazu dead.
     
    Court documents filed in support of the bail application argue that Marc Wabafiyebazu, son of a senior Canadian diplomat, was simply in the wrong place at the wrong time.
     
    "This highly publicized case involved a 15-year-old boy who did nothing more than sit in a car while his brother made a series of bad decisions which cost him his life," lawyer Michael Corey writes.
     
    "Marc is a child and deserves to be treated as such."
     
    Given the seriousness of the charges for which he is to be tried as an adult, bail would normally be off-limits, but the teen will nevertheless press for interim release at Wednesday's so-called "Arthur" hearing.
     
    Such a hearing resembles a mini-trial in which both sides will present substantial amounts of information, said Ed Griffith, with the Miami-Dade State Attorney's Office.
     
    To win bail, the defence will have to convince the judge that the prosecutor does not have enough evidence to prove Wabafiyebazu's guilt, and that he poses neither a danger to the community nor a flight risk.
     
    The shootout occurred just weeks after the brothers moved from their father's home in Ottawa to live with their mother, Roxanne Dube, appointed Canadian consul general in Miami in November.
     
    According to police, the elder brother drove them in their mother's BMW, which had diplomatic plates, to an apartment to buy about 800 grams of marijuana. They allegedly planned to rip off the dealer but something went wrong and gunfire erupted.
     
    Police say Jean Wabafiyebazu and Joshua Wright, also 17, shot each other dead and that Marc Wabafiyebazu shot and wounded Anthony Rodriguez, 19.
     
    However, Corey says surveillance video shows the accused brother stayed in the passenger seat of the car while his sibling went inside, and only followed after hearing the shots.
     
    As such, Corey argues, there are no grounds to find Wabafiyebazu guilty because the felony conviction under Florida law would require his active involvement in his brother's alleged botched armed robbery of the drug dealer.
     
    Corey also argues in his filings that the "passive" younger sibling fell under the negative influence of his older brother — one of the few people he knew in the city — but never took part in his alleged criminal acts.
     
    Police documents obtained by The Canadian Press show Wabafiyebazu told investigators the brothers had pulled similar stunts in Canada, and that he was brandishing a handgun when arrested outside the residence. They also say he threatened to shoot an officer in the head after his arrest.
     
    Corey, however, said police failed to advise the teen of his rights, and called his purported statements "highly suspect" and inadmissible as evidence.
     
    Circuit Judge Richard Hersch has set a tentative July 20 trial date.
     
    Rodriguez and another man, Johann Ruiz-Perez, 21, have also pleaded not guilty to felony murder charges in the case.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Saudi Woman Searches For Her Indian Mother In UAE

    Saudi Woman Searches For Her Indian Mother In UAE
    A Saudi woman who was separated from her Indian mother after her parents divorced is trying frantically to locate her mother and the search has brought her to the United Arab Emirates (UAE), media reports said Wednesday.

    Saudi Woman Searches For Her Indian Mother In UAE

    Funds Raised To Send Indian's Body Back From New Zealand

    Funds Raised To Send Indian's Body Back From New Zealand
    The body of an Indian student who died here last week after being pulled out from the sea, will, after all, be sent back to India with public donations worth N$23,000 (nearly $17,500) having been raised, the Dominion Post reported on Wednesday.

    Funds Raised To Send Indian's Body Back From New Zealand

    Indian-Origin Store Clerk's Murder In US Being Probed

    Indian-Origin Store Clerk's Murder In US Being Probed
    Police are working on locating two suspects in the killing of an Indian-origin store clerk in the US state of Connecticut.

    Indian-Origin Store Clerk's Murder In US Being Probed

    U.S. Military To Ask Canada For New Missile Sensors In The Arctic

    U.S. Military To Ask Canada For New Missile Sensors In The Arctic
    WASHINGTON — The U.S. military is preparing to ask that new sensors be installed in the Canadian Arctic that would be able to track different types of incoming missiles.

    U.S. Military To Ask Canada For New Missile Sensors In The Arctic

    Indian Student's Body Stuck In New Zealand For Want Of Funds

    Indian Student's Body Stuck In New Zealand For Want Of Funds
    The body of an Indian student who died here last week after being pulled out from the sea, has got stuck in New Zealand with his family unable to raise the money needed to transport the body home.

    Indian Student's Body Stuck In New Zealand For Want Of Funds

    Once An Afterthought In Trial Planning, Guinea May Provide Ebola Vaccine Answers

    Once An Afterthought In Trial Planning, Guinea May Provide Ebola Vaccine Answers
    TORONTO — When research teams planning clinical trials of Ebola vaccines were divvying up West Africa last fall, no one wanted Guinea.

    Once An Afterthought In Trial Planning, Guinea May Provide Ebola Vaccine Answers