Details of alleged killer’s purchase of pickup truck used in attack on Muslim family laid out for jurors
Note: This story┬аcontains distressing details.
Two forensic analysts testified at the trial of Nathaniel Veltman about the electronic devices they found in the accused’s apartment in London, Ont., as well as documents related to the purchase of a Dodge Ram pickup truck that was used to kill members of the Afzaal┬аfamily in┬аJune 2021.
Veltman, 22, is charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one count of attempted murder, as well as terrorism counts. Prosecutors allege he intentionally drove into the Muslim┬аfamily of five on June 6┬а that year, in an act motivated by far-right ideology.┬а
“I found a bill of sale for a Dodge pickup truck,” London police Sgt Jason Eddy told the murder-trial in Ontario Superior Court in Windsor.
Eddy was testifying about a search he participated in of the accused’s downtown bachelor apartment on June 12, six days after the attack.┬а
The attack┬аkilled┬аYumnah Afzaal, 15, her parents┬аMadiha Salman, 44, and Salman Afzaal, 46, and family matriarch Talat Afzaal, 74.┬аA nine-year-old boy survived. They had been out for an evening walk.
The bill of sale was found in an open drawer of a dresser in the┬аapartment. It is dated May 11, 2021, with a delivery date of May 19, 2021, according to the document shown to the jury.┬а
The papers include warranty documents, a vehicle history report from CARFAX, financing documents from TD Bank┬аand two smaller receipts.┬а
The documents show┬аthe truck cost just over $27,000, but with a 12 per cent interest loan, the accused would end up paying more than $36,000 over six years. He also purchased a one-year extended warranty, a fact his defence lawyer highlighted for the jury.
“He got a vehicle and he got an extended warranty for the vehicle,” defence lawyer Christopher Hicks pointed out during his cross-examination of the officer.┬а
Laptop, other electronics seized
Earlier in the day, Eddy, who has overseen the London police forensic identification unit for the last five years, testified he and Det. Const. Michael Comeau took an Acer Aspire┬аlaptop, a Samsung Galaxy S8 cellphone, two USB thumb drives┬аand an external hard drive from the accused’s apartment.┬а
The officers testified they tried to unlock the laptop with the password provided to them┬атАФ STUPID123123┬атАФ but were unsuccessful. They created digital copies of the electronics to preserve the original evidence.┬а
“Forensic examiners in our┬аunit are responsible for assisting all investigations with electronics, including┬аcomputers, cellphones┬аand storage devices. We help with search warrants, seizing evidence, making a copy and┬аgiving results,” Eddy said.┬а
He also made another copy for an external investigator who analyzed the electronics, Sgt. Liu Guan┬аof the Windsor Police Service.┬а
The trial, which is at the end of its third week of testimony,┬аis now on a break until Tuesday, when the Crown is expected to call its next witness.
The trial is expected to last eight weeks.
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