CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) — A long-running parking dispute between neighbors motivated a man to kill a woman, her husband and her sister at a quiet condominium complex near the University of North Carolina campus, police said Wednesday.
Beyond the parking arguments, police didn’t comment further on the motivation or details of the crime, but a Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization asked authorities to address speculation — much of it on social media — about possible religious bias.
Craig Stephen Hicks, 46, was charged with three counts of first-degree murder in Tuesday’s shooting of Deah Shaddy Barakat, 23, of Chapel Hill; Yusor Mohammad, 21, of Chapel Hill; and Razan Mohammad Abu-Salha, 19, of Raleigh.
Barakat and Mohammad were married, and Abu-Salha was Mohammad’s sister.
Hicks appeared briefly in court Wednesday. He spoke only to answer that he understood the charges and to confirm an indigency affidavit. District Judge Marcia Morey said he would be appointed a public defender and held without bond. She scheduled a March 4 probable cause hearing.
Police said Hicks was cooperating and that their preliminary investigation showed that the parking dispute was the motive.
But on social media, many raised concerns that anti-Muslim bias might be involved.
“Based on the brutal nature of this crime … the religious attire of two of the victims, and the rising anti-Muslim rhetoric in American society, we urge state and federal law enforcement authorities to quickly address speculation of a possible bias motive in this case,” Nihad Awad, of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said in a statement.
In an email, Chapel Hill police Chief Chris Blue said, “We understand the concerns about the possibility that this was hate-motivated, and we will exhaust every lead to determine if that is the case.”
Durham district attorney Roger Echols said he couldn’t discuss a motive. Asked whether Hicks could be charged with a hate crime, he said the facts of the case were still under investigation.
A spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney’s office in North Carolina that encompasses Chapel Hill didn’t immediately return messages seeking comment about whether federal prosecutors were involved or looking into a possible hate crime.
Abdullah Antepli, director of Muslim affairs at nearby Duke University, issued a statement calling for people not to jump to conclusions over the motive for the killings.
At UNC, Barakat was a second-year dental student, and Yusor was scheduled to begin dental studies in the fall.
Both had graduated from North Carolina State University, school spokesman Mick Kulikowski said. Barakat graduated with a business administration degree in the spring of 2013. Mohammad graduated in December with a biological sciences degree.
Abu-Salha was a sophomore design major who had started classes last fall, Kulikowski said.
The neighborhood where they were found — about three miles east of campus — consists mostly of apartments and condominiums rented by students. Residents said they’d never before seen police or had crime problems there.
“It’s a very quiet community,” resident Bethany Boring told WRAL-TV. “It’s a lot of graduate and professional students. You know, professional families.”
Police tape hung near the apartment where the victims were found, but otherwise there was no indication of a crime scene. Outside the victims’ apartment, a woman’s bicycle with a helmet was parked by the stairs.
Shadi Wehbe, a UNC graduate who has lived in the complex since 1999, said that two weeks ago, a woman came to his door about 10 p.m. to ask him to move his car. Some of the parking spots are assigned, and others are open. Wehbe said parking had never been a problem and no one had asked him to move his car before, but he realized he was in the wrong spot and moved his car one place over.
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Associated Press writers Jonathan Drew in Durham and Eric Tucker in Washington contributed to this report.
Police: Parking dispute sparks 3 North Carolina killings
By MICHAEL BIESECKER
February 11, 2015
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