Latest news with #Wouters


Hamilton Spectator
09-05-2025
- Hamilton Spectator
‘I am a hitman': Jury sees accused's Google Translate history in murder trial
'I am a hitman.' That is one of the phrases in Alessandro Giammichele's English-to-Spanish Google Translate search history while he was in the Dominican Republic in early 2019, a jury heard Thursday at the John Sopinka Courthouse. Staff Sgt. Rich Wouters of the Hamilton police told the jury that Giammichele's phone history also included translation data saying, 'How I deal with things usually ends up with people dead.' In addition, Wouters testified Giammichele's phone included translation history that said he 'did a lot of bad things' and 'took care of a big problem' in Canada — and that he was in the Dominican Republic 'hiding out and planning my revenge.' 'I enjoy hurting people,' another translation search read. 'I'm very good at it.' Marko Bakir, 31, was shot five times in the driveway of his west Mountain home around 8:15 p.m. on Nov. 22, 2018. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Giammichele is charged with first-degree murder in Bakir's killing. He has pleaded not guilty. Assistant Crown attorney Elise Quinn previously told the jury of eight men and four women that while Giammichele didn't physically pull the trigger, he played a 'fundamental role' in the killing. Quinn said the alleged 'hitman' who shot Bakir five times was Abdelaziz Ibrahim, who is now dead. In 2018, Bakir, who had recently been awarded a $350,000 settlement following a motorcycle crash, lent Giammichele $100,000 to invest, Quinn previously told the jury. The loan came with a contract and repayment schedule — but Giammichele didn't pay it back. Wouters, the primary investigator on the case for 19 months, testified he arrested Giammichele for murder and seized his phone at Pearson International Airport when he returned to Canada from the Dominican Republic on May 10, 2019. Wouters said police recovered data from the phone that showed Giammichele's Google account signed into the phone on Nov. 22 at 10:19 p.m. — a little over two hours after Bakir's murder. The court saw text messages from the seized phone in late November 2018 which said the phone was Giammichele's new number. The jury was also shown surveillance video from Pearson International Airport on Dec. 4, 2018 — less than two weeks after Bakir was murdered — which Wouters said showed Giammichele going through customs before leaving for the Caribbean nation. Wouters testified the Google search history recovered from the phone shows numerous searches for 'Hamilton Mountain shooting' and related topics. In addition, text messages and search history data show Giammichele was researching flights to the Dominican Republic in the days following the murder. He said Giammichele's phone also included translation searches saying he bought and sold 'kilograms' of cocaine and that he had a 'mafia and hitman life' and was a 'very powerful businessman.' In other testimony, Wouters told the jury that police executed search warrants on March 28, 2019, at addresses on Hendershot Road in Hamilton and Thames Street South in Ingersoll related to Vlad Sulug. A phone number associated with Sulug was identified as a contact 'Zio' in Giammichele's phone, he added. While police were executing the search warrants, Wouters said call data from Giammichele's phone shows numerous calls to Sulug — including five in a 15-minute span. A red Ford F-150 pickup truck was also seized by police from Sulug. When searched, Wouters said police found a receipt from Nov. 30, 2018, with Giammichele's name and address on it in the driver's door. Quinn previously told the court the accused drove a red Ford F-150 pickup truck at the time — and the truck was captured on surveillance footage from two different cameras in Bakir's neighbourhood. When asked by Quinn, Wouters said there was 'no reason to believe' a second person was involved in Bakir's killing early in the investigation. After viewing surveillance footage of a man running in Bakir's neighbourhood minutes after the shooting, Wouters said the individual does not 'appear to match' Giammichele's description. He added he never heard Ibrahim's name during his time in the investigation. The trial continues Friday.


The Guardian
25-04-2025
- Entertainment
- The Guardian
Hiroshige's peerless prints, McCartney's unseen snaps and Vancouver's blue skies – the week in art
Hiroshige: Artist of the Open RoadIt's not hard to see why Hiroshige was Van Gogh's favourite Japanese printmaker – his colours have a radiant intensity almost without equal in art. British Museum, London, from 1 May until 7 September Do Ho Suh: Walk the House Installations that play with images of home by the noted Korean artist based in London. Tate Modern, London from 1 May until 19 October The World of King James VI and I The 17th-century ruler of both Scotland and England presided over an edgy cultural golden age. Scottish National Portrait Gallery, Edinburgh from 26 April until 14 September Robert Thomas James Mills: Extratemporal An exploration of the nature of time and space by this Glasgow artist. CCA, Glasgow from 3 May until 24 May Lisa Milroy: The Colour Blue Paintings of blue skies and memories of a Vancouver childhood from an artist best known for her still lifes. Kate MacGarry, London from 3 May until 31 May Here you can see Brian Epstein, Mal Evans and Neil Aspinall setting off, with four mop-topped popsters, for New York in February 1964; one of the hitherto unseen glimpses into Beatlemania's birth shared by Paul McCartney, opening at the Gagosian gallery in Beverly Hills, California, today. Read the full story here The days of controversial and shocking Turner prize shortlists are over Scientists weren't sure a paint in the 'new' colour they've discovered has the right mix Mao Ishikawa's photographs honour people regarded as 'less than human' elsewhere Yinka Shonibare has filled a 2,200 sq m building in Madagascar with his works Royal exhibition will show 70 artworks of Charles touring the world over 40 years Richard Wright's new show is a mind-bending and mesmerising visual adventure Survivors of abuse have curated work by once revered sexual abuser Eric Gill JMW Turner, born 250 years ago this spring, remains Britain's greatest artist Ali Cherri's primeval sculptures use ancient artefacts to make new work Graven Hill, the UK's biggest self-build experiment, has lost some creative chaos Nymphs Surprised By Satyrs by Franchoys Wouters, about 1650-60 This painting belongs to a genre that flourished for hundreds of years, so it presumably pleased someone. First take your woodlands – tenderly, atmospherically painted by Wouters in shades of green and brown – then depict nude women resting in a leafy bower, in this case on luxurious bedding. It was a combination pioneered by the Venetian artists Giorgione and Titian in the early 1500s and taken up by later artists including Poussin and Rubens – in whose studio the painter of this canvas had worked. Such peepshow pastorals were among the first canvases to be bought by private collectors for personal enjoyment. Yet in this example, Wouters (again, following Titian) mocks the male viewer by adding lustful satyrs who peep at the snoozing women: look all you like, he laughs, but don't think you're better than these goatish voyeurs. He adds another twist. The two nymphs face each other and their feet touch as they lie in close tranquility: the satyrs have chanced on same-sex forest lovers. As ever in art, there's more going on than first meets the eye. National Gallery, London If you don't already receive our regular roundup of art and design news via email, please sign up here. If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email newsletters@