Relief after man acquitted of plotting shooting murder
A man has thanked God multiple times as a jury acquitted him of helping murder a man in a spray of bullets, days after his alleged co-conspirator was found guilty.
Yusuf Nazlioglu, 40, died a day after being shot at least eight times by a man with a pistol in the underground car park of his apartment at Rhodes, in Sydney's inner west, on June 27, 2022.
Mohammed Baltagi, 26, Mohammed Hosni Khaled, 27, and Abdulrahman Atteya, 31, were charged with forming a joint criminal agreement to kill Mr Nazlioglu.
Prosecutors alleged Mr Baltagi and Khaled helped plan Mr Nazlioglu's murder.
The trio faced a combined weeks-long trial in the NSW Supreme Court after pleading not guilty to the charges.
While Khaled was found guilty on Monday after a week of deliberations, jurors on Thursday found Mr Baltagi not guilty of murder.
The acquitted man was heard repeatedly saying "thank God" in Arabic as the jury departed the courtroom to continue deliberating on the final verdict of Atteya.
Prosecutors alleged the shooting was carried out either by Atteya or another man - Rabieh Baltagi, who fled Australia in July 2022.
During the trial, Mr Nazlioglu's widow Jade Jeske, formerly Jade Heffer, described seeing her husband shot in the car park.
She said she saw someone covering his head running with a pistol towards her husband as he stood next to their car.
Ms Jeske ducked under the dash to hide as she heard eight successive gunshots and then a further two, the jury heard.
As the shooter fled to a waiting VW Golf, she filmed what was happening on her phone before turning to her husband.
The jury heard her husband's killing may have been motivated by the theft of two rented luxury vehicles from a business in Lansdale, in western Sydney.
The court was told the three accused murderers had connections at the rental business.

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Boston Globe
2 days ago
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Brad Lander tried to escort immigrants facing arrest. He's not alone.
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Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Relief after man acquitted of plotting shooting murder
A man has thanked God multiple times as a jury acquitted him of helping murder a man in a spray of bullets, days after his alleged co-conspirator was found guilty. Yusuf Nazlioglu, 40, died a day after being shot at least eight times by a man with a pistol in the underground car park of his apartment at Rhodes, in Sydney's inner west, on June 27, 2022. Mohammed Baltagi, 26, Mohammed Hosni Khaled, 27, and Abdulrahman Atteya, 31, were charged with forming a joint criminal agreement to kill Mr Nazlioglu. Prosecutors alleged Mr Baltagi and Khaled helped plan Mr Nazlioglu's murder. The trio faced a combined weeks-long trial in the NSW Supreme Court after pleading not guilty to the charges. While Khaled was found guilty on Monday after a week of deliberations, jurors on Thursday found Mr Baltagi not guilty of murder. The acquitted man was heard repeatedly saying "thank God" in Arabic as the jury departed the courtroom to continue deliberating on the final verdict of Atteya. Prosecutors alleged the shooting was carried out either by Atteya or another man - Rabieh Baltagi, who fled Australia in July 2022. During the trial, Mr Nazlioglu's widow Jade Jeske, formerly Jade Heffer, described seeing her husband shot in the car park. She said she saw someone covering his head running with a pistol towards her husband as he stood next to their car. Ms Jeske ducked under the dash to hide as she heard eight successive gunshots and then a further two, the jury heard. As the shooter fled to a waiting VW Golf, she filmed what was happening on her phone before turning to her husband. The jury heard her husband's killing may have been motivated by the theft of two rented luxury vehicles from a business in Lansdale, in western Sydney. The court was told the three accused murderers had connections at the rental business.


San Francisco Chronicle
3 days ago
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According to the testimonies she gathered, priests have struggled to relocate and minister, because passports are impossible to obtain, and foreign parishes require documents that they can't request. But Orozco fared differently. He shares his testimony during the services he leads in Texas, where he tries to rebuild his life. 'I arrived in the United States just like God told me,' the pastor said. 'So I always tell people: 'If God could perform such a miracle for me, he could do it for you too.'' Laymen were targets too Onboard the plane taking Orozco to Guatemala was Francisco Arteaga, a Catholic layman imprisoned in June 2024 for voicing his concerns over Ortega's restrictions on religious freedom. 'After 2018, when the protests erupted, I started denouncing the abuses occurring at the churches,' Arteaga said. 'For example, police sieges on the parks in front of the parishes.' Initially, he relied on Facebook posts, but later he joined a network of Nicaraguans who documented violations of religious freedom throughout the country. 'We did not limit ourselves to a single religious aspect,' said Arteaga, whose personal devices were hacked and monitored by the government. 'We documented the prohibitions imposed on processions, the fees charged at church entrances and restrictions required inside the sanctuaries.' Arteaga witnessed how police officers detained parishioners praying for causes that were regarded as criticism against Ortega. According to CSW, the government monitors religious activities, putting pressure on leaders to practice self-censorship. 'Preaching about unity or justice or praying for the general situation in the country can be considered criticism of the government and treated as a crime,' said CSW's latest report. Building a new life Prison guards also denied a Bible to Arteaga, but an inmate lent him his. It was hard for him to go through the Scripture, given that his glasses were taken away after his arrest, but he managed to read it back-to-back twice. 'I don't even know how God granted me the vision to read it,' said Arteaga, who couldn't access his diabetes medicine during his imprisonment. 'That gave me strength.' He eventually reunited with his wife and children in Guatemala, where he spent months looking for a new home to resettle. He recently arrived in Bilbao, Spain, and though he misses his country, his time in prison shaped his understanding of life. 'I've taken on the task, as I promised God in prison, of writing a book about faith,' Arteaga said. 'The title will be: 'Faith is not only believing.''