People of Michigan v. Ali Mohamed Elatrache

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 19, 2016
Docket324918
StatusUnpublished

This text of People of Michigan v. Ali Mohamed Elatrache (People of Michigan v. Ali Mohamed Elatrache) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People of Michigan v. Ali Mohamed Elatrache, (Mich. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN, UNPUBLISHED April 19, 2016 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 324918 Wayne Circuit Court ALI MOHAMED ELATRACHE, LC No. 14-000096-01-FC

Defendant-Appellant.

Before: BECKERING , P.J., and OWENS and K. F. KELLY, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

The prosecution alleged that defendant harassed his girlfriend, whom we will refer to as “S,” and ultimately killed her father, Mohammed Aljbaili (the victim). Defendant was originally charged with first-degree premeditated murder, MCL 750.316(1)(a), first-degree felony murder, MCL 750.316(1)(b), first-degree home invasion, MCL 750.110a(2)(b), and aggravated stalking, MCL 750.411i(2)(c). Defendant pleaded guilty to the stalking charge just prior to trial. A jury found defendant guilty of second-degree murder, MCL 750.317, as a lesser offense of premeditated murder, guilty of felony murder, and not guilty of home invasion. The court sentenced defendant to three to five years’ imprisonment for his stalking conviction and life in prison without the possibility of parole for the felony murder conviction. The trial court vacated defendant’s second-degree murder conviction. Finding no errors warranting reversal, we affirm.

I. BASIC FACTS

S and the 72-year-old victim lived together in an apartment. The victim had heart problems, having had bypass and quadruple bypass surgery. He was a retired international lawyer and spent a lot of his time reading articles. Syrian born, the victim was a human rights activist and wrote articles and sometimes appeared on television, advocating that the Syrian people be free.

S testified that she met defendant when he came to the Verizon store where she worked in late February 2013. Defendant seemed normal, nice and friendly and they started dating that month. Defendant told her that his wife and child were killed in a war. He also talked about his ex-girlfriend, Marwa, all the time. He told S that Marwa had cheated on him and “screwed him over.”

Within two or three weeks of their relationship, defendant began to change. He would get very jealous of little things. Defendant would question S about her past and ask her about her coworkers. He would randomly show up at her work. Defendant would circle the parking lot all of the time and his

-1- behavior caused problems for S. at work. There were at least three separate instances when defendant took S’s cell phone and only returned it after she begged. Within a month of their relationship, S knew she needed a “break” and defendant’s behavior caused her concern, but defendant would make her feel sorry for him, reminding her that he had lost his wife and child and that his old girlfriend treated him badly. She was also afraid of him because he had pulled her hair and twisted her arm. S stayed with defendant because she was scared but she also thought she could “handle” him.

Defendant once came to S’s work and asked for her keys because he had run out of gas and needed to run some errands. S was suspicious and did not want to give defendant her keys, but he was starting to cause a scene so she handed them over. The keys included her apartment key. Defendant returned her keys after an hour. After this, there were a number of events at S’s apartment that caused her concern.

On March 27, 2013, S came home and found that her laptop was missing, along with a couple of phones. S called defendant to let him know what happened, but she did not call police. Defendant told S that he received a phone call from someone who said “I have the girl’s phones. I have her stuff.” S felt that defendant was somehow involved but he acted as though he was trying to help. S continued to date defendant even though she was scared and confused. She ultimately received her laptop and three cell phones back.

On April 3, 2013, S’s father awoke to discover that his laptop was missing. This time S called the police. S also told police about the prior break in and named her ex-boyfriend, Ali Makki, as a possible suspect. Defendant was the one that suggested it was Makki. S no longer suspected defendant because she thought he was trying to help. The apartment management changed the apartment locks.

After the second break-in, S came home one day to see defendant in the apartment with her father. Defendant was telling her father that he believed “something else was going on” and that “there were people after my dad.” Defendant indicated that he would protect them.

Another incident occurred on April 19, 2013 when S woke up to find the front door to their apartment on fire. She doused the fire with water. Once again, S and her father told the police that there were people after her father. They did not suspect defendant because he was working on getting her father’s laptop returned and she believed that there were people after her father because of his politics. At one point, defendant actually went to Lebanon in April 2013 and told her it was to fight the people who were after her father. Defendant returned with her father’s laptop.

S was not certain of exactly when, but at some point she began to hear a voice when she was speaking to defendant on the phone. During their conversation, a voice would come in and say, “‘I’m going to kill you. I’m going to kill your dad. I’m going to burn you. I’m going to burn your house.’” S was afraid that maybe someone was tapping her phone. She began to record the conversations to see whether someone was trying to get her father. S told defendant about the voice. Defendant said he could hear clicking, but that he did not hear the voice. Again, defendant promised to protect S and her father. S never heard the voice when she was on the phone with anyone else other than defendant. Defendant told S to not let her father go on the internet. He also advised her not to contact police again because the individuals who were after her father would find out. She never reported the phone calls to police. S admitted that her fear of defendant had “morphed” into dependency.

-2- S’s car was also vandalized in April 2013 when someone put chemicals in the gas tank. Defendant told her that he would handle it. Upon returning from the mechanic, S and her father discovered that their apartment had been broken into. This time there was obvious forced entry because the door was damaged. Her father’s briefcase was stolen and there were some items missing. S called the police. Once again, S told police she suspected someone was after her father. Management later fixed or replaced the door.

At that time, S became suspicious of defendant because he was the only person who knew she and her father were going to be at the mechanic’s. She decided to contact defendant’s brother, Mazen Elatrache (Mazen), because she did not know what else to do. Defendant’s family came to her apartment and asked her not to go to the police. They also brought someone who was allegedly from the FBI. S testified that “They said they will take care of it. They begged me not to go to the police.” The family promised to send defendant to Lebanon.

After all of the break-ins, S discovered that a Chase debit card was missing. It was a replacement card that she had received in the mail but had not activated. She only learned it was missing when she called the bank to see why she had not received a replacement card. S discovered that “the whole account was wiped clean” of approximately $2,000. Some of the charges were from Frankfurt, Germany, Beirut, Lebanon, and London, England. The charges were from late April/mid May 2013. S knew defendant had been in Lebanon and accused him, but he initially denied it. He later said he found the card on his doorstep and apologized.

Defendant called her from an airplane and admitted to everything. S recorded the conversation.

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People of Michigan v. Ali Mohamed Elatrache, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-of-michigan-v-ali-mohamed-elatrache-michctapp-2016.