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Illinois man convicted in killing of Palestinian American boy dies in custody

Illinois man convicted in killing of Palestinian American boy dies in custody

Straits Times6 days ago
Joseph M. Czuba (left) stabbed six-year-old Wadee Alfayoumi (right) and his mother Hanan Shaheen in their home, killing Wadee and severely wounding Ms Shaheen.
CHICAGO - An Illinois landlord convicted of fatally stabbing a six-year-old Palestinian American boy died in custody, authorities said on July 26. He was 73.
The landlord, Joseph M. Czuba, died two months into his
53-year prison sentence, according to the Will County Sheriff's Office. He was convicted on murder and hate crime charges in the attack, which authorities said was motivated by anti-Muslim hate. It was not clear exactly when, where or how Czuba died.
The killing took place in October 2023,
days after Hamas attacked Israel. According to authorities, Czuba stabbed six-year-old Wadee Alfayoumi and his mother Hanan Shaheen in their home, killing Wadee and severely wounding Ms Shaheen, who escaped to a bathroom and called 911. The judge who sentenced Czuba on May 2 called the attack 'brutal and heinous'.
In Ms Shaheen's testimony before the jury that convicted Czuba, she said she had rented a pair of bedrooms from him in Plainfield Township, Illinois, a Chicago suburb, for two years with no major issues. But after the Oct 7 attacks, Czuba – who lived in the same building – began making hateful remarks about Muslims and asked Ms Shaheen and her son to move out of the property, Ms Shaheen said.
As he listened to coverage of the war unfolding in the Middle East, prosecutors said, Czuba became increasingly erratic and paranoid. That fear drove him to force his way into his tenants' rooms, they said, and attack Ms Shaheen, then 32, stabbing her more than a dozen times before she managed to escape.
Investigators said that Czuba then directed his rage towards Wadee, a kindergartner at the time who loved soccer and Legos. ms Shaheen told a 911 dispatcher that she could hear her son screaming from the bathroom, until the screams fell silent, according a 911 call played during the trial. Wadee was later pronounced dead at the hospital. He had been stabbed more than two dozen times.
The case received global attention and stoked fear and outrage among the large Palestinian and Muslim communities in Chicago's suburbs. Some leaders in those communities linked the killing to what they described as dehumanizing rhetoric towards Palestinians in the wake of the Oct 7 attacks.
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In February, more than a year after Wadee's killing, Czuba sat impassively as a jury found him guilty on murder and hate crime charges. He again was silent at his sentencing hearing in May.
'This depraved killer has died, but the hate is still alive and well,' Mr Ahmed Rehab, the executive director of the Council On American Islamic Relations in Chicago, said in a statement on July 26. 'It's the hate that must die,' he added. NYTIMES
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Billion-dollar money laundering case: 4 law firms linked to seized properties named, 2 more identified and reprimanded
Billion-dollar money laundering case: 4 law firms linked to seized properties named, 2 more identified and reprimanded

CNA

time3 hours ago

  • CNA

Billion-dollar money laundering case: 4 law firms linked to seized properties named, 2 more identified and reprimanded

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'Lawyers whom the director of legal services has referred to the Law Society will be subject to the disciplinary proceedings process and framework in the Legal Profession Act,' said MinLaw. Under this framework, each lawyer's case will undergo further fact-finding by the relevant committee or tribunal to assess if there have been breaches, and if so, the lawyer's individual culpability and any appropriate disciplinary action and penalties against him or her. This disciplinary process is separate from the director of legal services' inquiries and enforcement actions against the law practices. 'We urge the public to refrain from speculating or sharing unverified information while the process is ongoing,' said MinLaw. The billion-dollar money-laundering case involved millions of dollars earned over the years from an illicit gambling ring with Southeast Asian bases, and that was aimed at punters in China. Investigations into the transnational case date back to 2021 and culminated in islandwide police raids in August 2023. Singapore police seized luxury cars, watches, jewellery, designer goods, cryptocurrency and cash. More than 150 properties were also seized, including homes in Singapore's most upmarket neighbourhoods. The fees that Anthony Law, Fortis Law, Legal Solutions, Malkin & Maxwell, William Poh & Louis Lim and Templars Law collected in total from acting for their clients for these property transactions ranged from S$15,000 to around S$170,000, said MinLaw. "In imposing the financial penalties, alongside other regulatory measures that include following up with these law practices on their remedial measures to strengthen compliance with anti-money laundering obligations, the DLS aims to ensure that law practices in Singapore observe their anti-money laundering obligations and keep Singapore a clean and money-laundering-free business- and financial-hub," it added.

Japanese woman injured in subway station attack in China
Japanese woman injured in subway station attack in China

Straits Times

time8 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Japanese woman injured in subway station attack in China

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Gaza civil defence says 11 killed by Israeli fire
Gaza civil defence says 11 killed by Israeli fire

Straits Times

time8 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Gaza civil defence says 11 killed by Israeli fire

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