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Jury finds Calgary man guilty of killing his father and dumping the body

WATCH: A jury trial for Zaineddin Al Aalak is underway at the grandstand at the Calgary Stampede grounds. As Jenna Freeman reports, the defence intends to argue that Al Aalak is not criminally responsible for the second-degree murder of his father, Mohamed Al Aalak – Nov 2, 2020

On Wednesday, a jury found Zaineddin Al Aalak guilty of second-degree murder and causing indignity to a body after killing his father in 2017.

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Police arrested Al Aalak — who was 21 at the time — shortly after the remains of his father, 53-year old Mohamed Jasim Al Aalak, were found at a construction site on the north side of Okotoks, on July 14, 2017.

RCMP are investigating following the discovery of human remains at a construction site in Okotoks, Alta., on July 17, 2017. Global News

Al Aalak’s trial began on Nov. 2 at the grandstand on the Calgary Stampede grounds where trials are being held during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Defence lawyer Alain Hepner told the jury in opening remarks he would be focusing on the mental state of Al Aalak and said psychiatric evidence would weigh in.

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Crown prosecutor Carla MacPhail outlined her case for the jury and said that the Crown’s theory is that Al Aalak did not suffer from a mental illness that rendered him incapable of understanding what he had done to his father.

For its first witness, the Crown called the accused’s mother, Eman Sahib, to testify.

Sahib testified that she and her husband were living separately because child services had said he could no longer live with her, after allegations were made that he hit two of their daughters.

Sahib said she had travelled to Iraq with her daughters while her two sons stayed in Calgary with their father.

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She testified that while in Iraq, she had asked Zaineddin where his father was after communication between the two stopped.

Sahib said she was “very afraid” and testified that at one point, Zaineddin said, “He had a ticket and he must have left somewhere,” when asked where Mohamed was.

When cross-examined, Sahib testified that her son had experienced psychological problems since he was 16 and was hospitalized for several days when he was 18.

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Sahib said that sometimes her son would talk to himself and that one time he told her “he was God and he was going to live forever.”

— With files from Global News’ Jenna Freeman.

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