Sword and Scale - Episode 263
Episode Date: May 6, 2024On August 21st, 2017, the lifeless body of Nada Huranieh, a beloved fitness instructor, was discovered on the pavement just outside her expansive residence in Farmington Hills. Rather than hastily att...ributing her demise to a mere accidental fall from a window, law enforcement authorities refrained from jumping to conclusions. Within the confines of the house, Nada's three children stood as the sole witnesses to the incident. Thankfully, the residence boasted an impressive network of 13 security cameras, which ultimately provided the vital lead necessary for the police to uncover the truth.
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So what happened to your mom there?
Looks like she fell off the building.
How did she fall? I didn't go into the room. I just went to the screen. Hello and welcome.
This is Sword and Scale, a show that reveals at the worst
Monsters
Are In case you're wondering what the hell that was about, well, you should be on our social
media because if you're not, you're missing out on all the fun.
Some idiot named James, I don't know what the hell his last name is, but
apparently a renowned expert on podcasting came by to drop off his words
of advice, you know, to make my podcast better, you know. He came over to tell
me that the long pauses in between words that I exhibit sometimes when I'm
formulating a thought, that means that I'm a narcissist. Because apparently he saw some
video online somewhere that told him all the signs to look for in a narcissist and he was hurt by one.
So he's got to go around telling everyone that they're a narcissist now. So James, thanks for
that and thanks for all the
sales of the mug we made with your tweet on it. If you want to find that you just
go to store.swordandskill.com and look for the Narcissist Ceramic Mug. It's
got my picture on it. You'll love it. And I think that I'm right about the fact
that most of you come here for the sass.
For the smartass remarks that I make, right?
Any idiot can read you true crime stories.
Any moron can pretend to have chemistry with some other moron while they talk about someone's last day on Earth.
But you don't come here for that. You come here for the narcissism.
You come here for that, you come here for the narcissism, you come here for the personality.
They're not here for you James, they're not here for the soy-filled husk of a man telling them
what's appropriate to say and not to say online. They're here for my meltdown, James. We play a lot of 911 calls here on the show and naturally nearly every call has something
to do with murder.
Now we all know that not every 911 call is being placed because someone is being killed
or has been killed.
More often than not the call is coming in a dispatcher for things like health emergencies, car accidents, maybe a suspicious person prowling around the
neighborhood, or even sometimes things like brush fires and structural
accidents. Any event that requires the immediate responsive police fire or EMS
warrants a 911 call. Early in the morning of August 21, 2017, a call such as this came into the Farmington
Hills dispatch team, reporting the discovery of a body outside a home on the west side
of the city.
This wasn't just any home, though.
It was a nearly two-acre estate built right alongside the Farmington Hills Golf Club.
These people had money.
And lots of it.
I'm already on the phone.
I am 911.
What is the exact address of the emergency tower?
The road?
Farmington house?
And the phone number? I am. 911, what is the exact address of the emergency?
Howard Road, Farmington House.
And the car number?
1-3-1.
What's the car number you're calling from?
We need an ambulance.
What's going on there?
Um, I don't know.
We were waiting for school phones from my mom,
and I looked at the one next to it,
and it was open.
It's never open.
And she fell.
Your mom fell?
Almost two stories, yeah. She fell two stories? How old is your mom? The caller was 14-year-old Aya Altintawi, who had just discovered her mother lying lying unresponsive on the ground outside the family him on the way, okay?
Hold on.
Okay.
I'm not going to wait for him.
Hold on.
Okay, no, we'll call the toll.
Oh, my God, we're not going to get him.
Oh.
Hold on one second.
Hold on one second.
Here, I'm going to take a step back.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay. Okay. Okay. I can't. I can't. I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't.
I can't. I can't. I can't. I can't. I can't. It appeared to Aya as though her mom had fallen This thing is on the way. Is she at her back? What?
It appeared to Aya as though her mom had fallen from the window
on the second floor, directly above where her body now
lay, motionless.
The window was positioned at a considerable height.
Both the first and second floors of the house
boasted high ceilings.
So this wasn't your
typical residential second story window height.
She fell a significant distance landing on concrete.
To make matters worse, it remained unclear how long she'd been lying there.
And how old is your mom?
Um, I think she's 33.
33?
No, you'll get her.
I mean, I like to see when they call him home.
Is she cast or set or no?
No, still not. I don't know how long he's been out here for.
I know he's doing things like at least 6-15 because that's what I call a parent book for older kids at interest.
Okay. Alright. I want you. You're not sure she's breathing at this point?
No.
Nada Haranie was the 35-year-old mother now lying unconscious on the concrete.
She lived in the home with her three children, among them her daughter Aya, who made the 911 call.
But at this point, Aya's 16-year-old brother, Mohammed, had also come down to investigate
the situation.
Additionally, there was Nada's youngest daughter, who was 9 years old and still sleeping in
the house.
It had been nearly two years since Nada and her ex, Basel Atantawi, had separated.
Basel no longer lived with the rest of the two.
Okay.
It's like two, not including the basement.
Okay, this wasn't accidental fall?
Yeah, I'm pretty sure.
Okay, I want you to get down next to the house.
Okay.
The 911 operator asked Aya if she knew how to give CPR, but for some reason Aya handed the phone off
to her brother, 16-year-old Mohammed.
The operator then instructed him on how to resuscitate his mother, and he started the
chest compressions, counting back to the operator.
She's outside, right?
Yeah, she's on the concrete.
She's outside on the concrete, okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay. Okay. Okay. OK. Yeah.
OK.
OK.
3
4
5
6
8
9
10
11
1 2
3
4
1
2
3
4
Take up the pace.
One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four.
Keep going, you're doing good.
One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four. One, two, three, four. One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four.
Yes, please stay with you.
Keep going until they get up next to you, okay?
Keep doing it.
Fire department, direct the fire department in, alright guys?
Yeah.
I am here. Are you going to get the police, the fire department, direct them in?
Yeah, we're gonna go leave the building.
Okay. So what happened to your mom there?
Looks like she fell off the building.
How did she fall?
I didn't go into the room. I just, there, I was screaming. I couldn't look.
Okay. Do you know how she fell or what she was doing?
Yeah, she was on the top floor. She was washing or cleaning the windows.
She was cleaning the windows?
Yeah.
Okay.
Is she always up this early in the morning?
Yeah.
Yeah?
Yeah.
So we have school today.
You have school today? Yeah.
Okay, where do you go to school?
International Westanian East West.
It's in White.
Okay.
And what's your name?
My name is Mohammed.
I'm one of the students in my class.
Okay, and what's your name, Mohammed?
A-L-C.
A-N-T. A-L-C. You have an L-C. A-N-T.
A-W-R.
Okay.
Okay.
All right.
I'm going to let you go, okay?
Do you have the fire department there with you now?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
All right.
You did a really good job, okay?
Thank you.
Okay.
All right.
Are you okay now, or do you want me to stay with you?
Yeah, we're here.
We're good.
Okay.
All right.
I'll let you go then, okay?
Okay, bye. all right. Are you okay now? Or you want me to stay with you? I'm good, yeah.
Yeah, we're here.
We're good.
Okay, all right.
I'll let you go then, okay?
Okay, bye.
All right, bye-bye.
Where's she at?
One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four.
One, two, three, four.
Watch out, watch out.
I got it.
Okay.
Can you wait there with me? Yes, ma'am. Can you wait there with me now? Yes, ma' four. I got it. Can you please hear me now?
Can you please hear me now?
Go out to the driveway, direct the fire department in, alright guys?
Who else is home, guys?
I'm home.
Okay, go inside, I'll be with you guys in a minute, alright?
Please.
Okay, who else is home, your little sister? Yeah, she's asleep. Is she sleeping or is she awake?
She's asleep.
Okay, let's go to sleep.
You guys, hold on here.
How old are you guys?
14 and 16.
14 and 16?
Who is the lady that's injured out back?
That's your mom?
Yeah.
Okay.
What's your mom's name?
Nada.
And A.D.A.
When's the last time you guys saw your mom?
Last night.
What time?
Oh, maybe the day before.
Okay.D.A. When's the last time you guys saw your mom?
What time?
Maybe 7 or 8 June, 2011.
Okay, and when did you guys find her?
This morning. I called her twice at 6, because she was in the room a week ago, but that's
not fun, she didn't answer. So I called her again at 6.30 because we were supposed to
be at school by 640 and she didn't
answer so I went upstairs and I saw her room was on Belay.
I yelled her name a few times and I went upstairs and I saw that I guess that's her guest room
Belay was on which is where she was with us for makeup and I called her name and she was
in there.
I checked if she was still here and it was.
So and I saw her and there was a pin was still here and it was. And I saw that there was a pinwheel chip in there,
and there was like painting stuff that turned on the
paint like from the half of the morning because she
wakes up early.
So I went to look out the window and I thought about
like losing Kate's maybe and that was possible,
but she was out there and then I found my brother
and went outside.
Okay.
So this was around 6.30 this morning you think?
Yeah.
Okay.
By the time the children discovered their mother's body, it was too late.
Officials took Nada from the scene for an autopsy.
Later on, they located the three children.
They were at Nada's estranged husband, Basalantin Talwi's, home.
They wanted to speak with all three kids again about the timeline and the details of what
had happened. Even more importantly, the Alton Taui mansion boasted 13 different cameras,
and police needed passwords to get access to the main security system so they could check to see
if Nada's plummet to death was caught on video. That way they could, you know,
to death was caught on video.
That way they could, you know, confirm that it truly was an accident.
I called up a company called TELUS Electronics
who installed the system.
And they said that there is,
obviously there's cameras all over the house.
If the lights are going,
that means it's probably connected to the camera system,
which rewrites on top of each other.
So if it's recording then it'll only record for so long. You have a one terabyte hard drive in there
and basically it'll just always record. So depending on what quality you have,
how much it's recording, which cameras are on, or whatever, depends on how quickly it cycles through.
Okay so what we want to do is just take a look at that and just make sure there's nothing
suspicious on it.
You know, obviously this is, people are calling, okay?
You guys are going through a divorce.
So what we want to do is we want to just take that, take a look at it, either have our guys
take a look at it or some computer people five of our guys take a look at it, or some computer people,
so they can pull the information off of it,
and just make sure there's nothing on,
take that suspicious or anything like that.
Yeah, but I mean, if we go over a lot of people,
you know, he's like, she's like, you know.
And this is me, let's make sure there's nothing on,
and then just move on with everything, okay?
No problems with that?
I mean, I don't know.
I don't think I have a problem,
but like I said, the whole thing is talking to me
and the whole situation is bizarre.
Absolutely it is.
We don't deal with this every day either.
It's not something that normally happens
and you can see how,
if you remove yourself out of the situation
and it's not personal,
you can see how it would be,
oh man, something must have happened, right?
You understand that?
This is the FLIR DVR recording system.
Does that sound right?
You know what I'm saying?
Remember?
I need more tickets.
Okay, you never had record,
I don't know how to do it.
You don't know how to do it?
No logon, password or anything?
What are the cams actually?
They're all over the house.
Where?
I don't know.
If you walk around outside you can see
that they're about that, they're black.
You know, there's one right over here
upside your garage.
It's just kind of like main points of entry.
Inside the garage?
Yeah, at the outside or something like that.
When you pull up the drive,
like when you pull in your driveway,
you look up left, you can see a little camera that just kind of points down. Fossil Antantawi, not his estranged husband, seemed not to know much about the security
system.
He didn't know how many cameras there were, or he didn't even seem to remember what they
looked like.
He did, however, seem very reluctant to trust what they looked like. He did however seem very reluctant
to trust the intentions of police. It seemed to him like they were already
going down a path of pointing fingers and he didn't like that. Later on police
showed up at Vassal's house where the children were staying hoping to bring
them back to the station for formal interviews but that didn't go too great. And your other man? Yeah. Two dollars, right? Yeah. We're kind of all at the station where we can maybe have a chance to like, lock it all down and see what we're doing.
Yeah.
It's kind of a standard procedure, that's what we do.
Law enforcement requested that Basel and his three children be interviewed at the police station.
As is standard procedure.
You heard the cop say that quite a few times. For the
girls who were still in school it was suggested that they be picked up by the
school liaison officer and brought straight to the station. Basel was
obviously wary of this idea.
School liaison officers, the school guys were playing clothes or whatever, they can go, they can give her a ride to the station.
Because like I said, I was trying to figure out if you were doing anything.
We'll get something, we may not be there
that long at the station, we just.
I mean, I don't know, should I call someone
that I don't know here?
I don't understand what's going on.
We're just, this is standard procedure
when we're trying to, we have to,
obviously, it's kind of weird what happened. We're just trying to find out exactly what the kids might have said,
she might have said she wasn't feeling well earlier in the night, if there was,
you know, she got into an argument with somebody.
Like I said, I have no problem, but you guys have already talked to them so many times.
And I thought it's better to let them know that I don't have to be there to meet the police station.
They're going to meet, and you know, for the kids I don't want to be shot or scared or something.
Well we don't want to scare the kids either. We don't want to scare anybody.
If you feel more comfortable doing it here we can talk here.
Yeah, definitely.
Sure, I understand. We're going to wait and see what the boss has to say about that.
We just want to make this as easy and comfortable as possible.
We're not trying to intrude and make people feel uncomfortable.
We don't want to make it very interesting.
And I just love situations.
I know.
You have to understand from our standpoint too, it's not every day somebody goes out the window.
Reluctantly, the detectives decided to interview Basel's son, Mohammed.
He was upstairs in his room.
The evidence from the audio suggests that he had been living primarily with his father
even before this tragic accident occurred.
The girls were staying with him temporarily as Basel only had visitation rights with his
daughters.
Before proceeding, though, the detectives requested that the loud music be turned off.
As they waited for Aya and her younger sister to come back home,
the police sat down with Mohammed and asked him some basic questions about the previous night.
Like they said, it's not every day that someone just goes out a window.
Normally they either jump or are pushed.
The Farmington Hills police were pretty certain that one of these two scenarios was the truth.
They just needed to figure out which one. Which one? On August 21, 2017, 14-year-old Aya Altantawi discovered her mother Nada's lifeless body
sprawled across the pavement, right outside of their opulent Farmington Hills mansion.
She called 911 and eventually handed the phone to her 16-year-old brother, Mohammed, who
rushed outside to see what Aya was screaming about.
The two accepted CPR instruction from the 911 operator and waited for the police to
arrive.
The next day police drove over to Basel on Tintalli's house.
The children were to stay with their father
while the case was in progress. The girls were still in school while police knocked
on Basel's door. They would eventually be brought home by the school liaison officer.
While they waited, police questioned Mohammed, hoping to get some information about the family dynamic, people who may have wanted
to hurt his mother, and most importantly, the home's extensive security system.
I'm sorry, what's your name again, sir?
Mohamed.
Mohamed, I'm Richard.
Um, again, we're sorry about your loss.
I'm sure it's tough.
Um, like I said, we're just kind of trying to go through things here to find out what
transpired if anything your mom might have said or the way she was acting or anything
like that that might have led you guys to believe that you know she was upset about
something or anything. So you just kind of walk us through, like did you have school
yesterday? No not yet. You didn't have school yesterday? I didn't have school. Okay what
when you, I guess not, yesterday? The day before was Sunday, so not that either.
OK, so what went on, start like Sunday evening?
What was going on Sunday evening?
I mean, not really anything.
We all stay in our rooms for the most part.
I like to put my computer on my computer.
I mean, we ate lunch.
She's just walking around the house.
I think she came back from my sister
from getting school supplies.
And then I didn't really talk to her much.
She was talking to my sister.
And then like I said, I was paying attention
over my phone eating.
That's about it.
What was she doing the whole time?
She seemed upset.
What kind of mood was she in?
She seemed fine, I'd say.
I mean, she, like I said, she came back with school supplies and went straight to her room.
And then she slept a few hours later.
Your mom did?
So what time does she normally go to bed?
Normally I say around 10, maybe.
Late night 30.
930 to 10?
Do you recall what time she went to bed last night?
Around late 7, maybe.
Early 8, I think.
Do you know why she would go to bed three hours earlier or?
No, actually we didn't really talk much yesterday so. How are things between you know your mom and
your sister's young girls always arguing about something or fighting about something or you're
getting in trouble for anything lately you know is your mom mad at anybody about anything? It's
just a normal like you know. Teenage stuff?
Yeah, parents have been like a couple days ago,
like my sister, her room was pretty dirty.
So, you know, my mom told her to clean her room.
It's about it.
You have a beautiful house here.
Does your mom clean it or do you have a cleaning lady?
Well, we all clean, basically what we do.
So like if I make a mess, I have to clean it up.
All right.
How's your sister's relationship with your mom? It's like, pretty good, the same thing.working, loving, and doting mother.
She woke the kids up for school every day, cooked, cleaned, and did all the normal full-time
parenting duties, while also juggling a career as a fitness instructor.
Now where does your mom work?
Franklin Athletic Club.
Okay, does she work every day or is it by appointment only?
She works every day.
I'm not really familiar with it myself.
She hasn't really told me much about it, but from what I heard from my sister, it's like The people who took Nodda's classes absolutely adored her.
After hearing of her tragic passing, the gym's Facebook
page flooded with comments like this.
Nado was such an inspiring woman. She truly made so many people's lives happier.
She would always greet you with a smile and knew everyone who attended her class
by first name. She was so passionate and I am so, so glad I knew her.
Franklin was a place she was certainly appreciated.
I do not doubt that she was an amazing mother, too.
We spoke with Nada's oldest daughter, Aya, and she filled in the gaps for us on the true
Alton Tau'i family dynamic.
My mom, she grew up in Dubai.
She lived there until about like 12th grade, I want to say, and then moved to Syria where
she originally was from.
My dad was born and raised in Syria.
My dad is 11 years older than my mom was.
So she was 18 when they got engaged or married.
And then pretty soon after they moved to the US, they went to Pennsylvania first so that
my dad could finish up his studies with med school and all of that.
But yeah, they primarily just moved to America for job opportunities as most people typically
do.
Aya's father, Basel, was a physician in Michigan.
Getting his initial med schooling in Syria back in 1993, a little less than 25 years
after the school was founded.
He then finished up his fellowship and residency in America.
Soon after, Basel and Nada began building their family.
They started off living very traditionally, with Basel going out to work and Nada staying
at home to take care of the children.
My mom was an incredible person. Everyone loved her.
She was like the definition of, you know,
when you hear people saying that,
oh, this person like, when they walk into the room,
it's like a light walks in,
whatever that saying is, I don't know.
But she was a definition of that pretty much.
She was a huge people pleaser, a huge extrovert.
So anything she could do to make other people happy,
she would do it. She was always there for everyone. And I think that was kind of her way of forgetting
about her own troubles that were happening at home is by focusing on how she can make
other people's lives better. But she was very, very, very much into the gym. I mean, I, I,
she started going to the gym before I could even remember like I can't tell you when she started going
But um, I got into the gym because of her
Uh, she ended up
Actually teaching at the gym that she would work at which was really great
And I don't know. I mean, you know
When she was still alive, I was going through my like preteen teen years of being
you know a dumb teenager essentially
and just like wanting my own space and thinking that parents are lame and I don't want to
be seen with my parents.
Though the family, as they often do, seem to be pretty normal, happy, successful even
on the outside.
Tensions had been brewing for quite a while.
Aya remembers that she first noticed problems in her parents' marriage becoming evident
all the way back in 2011.
Honestly, we didn't really see too much of it, you know, the fighting and all that.
My parents definitely tried to keep it just between them while, you know, my siblings
and I were still kids but as we got older and as the
fighting became more tumultuous more just happened more often it was it got a little bit harder to
hide. I want to say the time that I started to notice things was actually when we were in
Lebanon me my mother my brother and my sister were there for a little family reunion from my
mom's side.
My dad was staying in America because he had work.
I remember we were walking down a pier and my mom got a call from my dad.
Me and my brother, we hung back with my mom while our family walked ahead of us.
She answered the phone and I remember it took my mom a few minutes to get him
to calm down and figure out what was going on.
But basically what had happened is he had invested a ton of money, if I remember correctly
was a quarter of a million into stocks and he lost it all.
And my mom was telling him, apparently it was a conversation that they had had before
and he had brought it up to her and she told him, don't do it. You don't know what you're doing with money. You
don't know how to invest anything. If you want to do it, that's fine. But hire someone who actually
knows what they're doing. Obviously, I didn't listen to her. So from what I remember, it kind
of started there. Or at least that's when I started to pick up on it. I want to say that money was a
huge stressor in their relationship just because
my dad wasn't smart with finances. So he didn't really know how to manage it correctly. And
especially, you know, given that our family was well off, he just didn't know how to manage
it and, you know, make sure that we weren't spending money for frivolously. I think that
was the first time that I noticed it,
but then with my mom, it kind of started to pick up
when she expressed wanting to get a job
and start working, go back to school, that sort of thing.
When they initially began the separation
and divorce process in March of 2016,
things changed drastically for the Alton Tau'i family.
Since Basel had moved out, Nada trimmed her budget by canceling luxuries like the maid
service and she landed the fitness instructor position so that she could bring in some income
of her own.
After all, she and Basel had been separated for nearly two years with no divorce finalization.
Everything was all up in the air legally,
even if they considered themselves already divorced
in the eyes of Islam, their chosen religion.
So my parents weren't legally divorced,
but in terms of religion,
in our religion they were divorced by then.
That was like the very first step that they took
was getting divorced religiously.
Getting divorced through the American system obviously is a much longer process because you have to figure out kids and you have to figure out
finances and houses and cars and whatever all of that. But in terms of the religion they were already divorced.
Nada very quickly began the process of starting a new life without Basel.
Our way of bonding was going to the gym or shopping. That was it.
And for the last couple months, we purchased a new house and was completely remodeling
it so anytime she would be going over to the house and I was in as well, I'd be like,
oh, I want to come.
So we were doing that a lot, figuring out how I wanted to decorate my room, that sort
of thing.
Now, are you guys staying here?
They're planning on selling the house, do you know?
I think, yeah, they're selling the house, this house.
They are gonna sell this house?
Did your mom have any places she was moving to
or been looking around or anything that you want?
She's not, not really that, she told me about yesterday.
I heard my sister talking about that they got in your house. So she got in your house.
Oh you did?
Yeah that's what my sister said.
Do you know what that is?
No.
Mohammed told police that he heard his sister talking about the new house with their mother
and that's all he knew about the situation.
While it was true that his mother and sister didn't willingly tell him anything about the new house,
it was not true that he found out by listening in on their conversation.
No, he, I'm pretty sure he found out on his own because he was like snooping.
So he would go into her room and go through papers and whatever.
He would take her phone. Essentially, he was trying to act like he was the parent.
He would go through her phone, go through all her
belongings, ask her where she's going, when she's coming back, who she's gonna
see, that sort of thing. So I'm pretty sure he did find out on his own.
Mohammed didn't have much information about the new house, but chances were it
would be smaller and quite a bit less opulent than their current abode. These
kids had it made,
and it'd be painful for any kid
to give up the amenities they were used to.
It's a lot easier going from rags to riches
than riches to rags, that's for sure.
The Alton Tau'i house had everything,
from the custom fireplaces, high ceilings and chandeliers to the
features every teen dreams of. Their own massive bedroom with private bathrooms,
high-end computers, walk-in closets, a movie theater in the basement with a whole separate
kitchen and living area and a home gym and even a sauna. Needless to say, the house was massive enough and had enough features to entertain the kids
for days on end.
They could go several days without seeing each other in person, like over the weekend,
for example.
The night before his mother's death, Mohammed knew his sister Ayah was in her room, only
by her shuffling noises and the light that emerged through
the cracks around her bedroom door.
What are your sisters doing?
Or do you know?
My younger sister, she's going to sleep.
And then my other sister is on her computer.
And then I'm on my computer.
So you guys didn't really see each other the whole evening?
No.
Okay.
You were in your room the whole time?
Yeah.
Well, no, I went to pray to the mosque guy on my bike.
I came back around.
So I left around 830 and I came back around 830. No. Okay, you're in your room the whole time? Yeah. Well, no, I went to pray so the mosque got on my bike.
I came back around, so I left around 8.30 and I came back around 9.15.
At 8.30, Muhammad said he left the house on his bike to visit the mosque and pray.
The Al-Tantawis were devout followers of Islam when they lived back in Syria, and they continued
their practices after settling in Michigan and starting a family.
They instilled the same values in their children raising them up to be good Muslim kids.
Muhammad himself seemed pretty devout for a 16 year old, choosing to ride his bike to
the mosque multiple times a day to pray instead of getting into trouble with drugs, alcohol
and girls. you get back? 915. 915. All right. And you didn't go with your friend yesterday? No.
Do the women not have to go and pray? No. They don't? I mean, it's just, I don't know.
Um, what nationality are you? What nationality are you? I was born here, but like my ethnicity
is Syrian. So the girls don't have to go to pray five times a day? Oh yeah, they should
pray at home usually. Okay, so that's an option you can do. You can sometimes pray at home, okay.
So we definitely, I mean, women could go to the mosque
for sure, it just wasn't, I mean, with men,
it's for the five daily prayers,
it's mandatory to go to the mosque if you can.
For women, it's if you want to, you can go.
If you don't want to, you can do it at home.
It doesn't really matter.
For the most part, yeah, everything that I learned
about my religion did come from primarily my father.
There was a little bit that I learned
from my private schools, but it wasn't stuff
that hadn't already been told to me by my father.
I mean, for me growing up,
my parents were definitely very, very religious.
That's, it was something that they, my father father more so was something that they just pushed upon us.
And it was fine with me.
The thing that I struggled with is that if I didn't understand something about the religion,
I'd want to ask why and I'd want to understand before I just did things blindly.
That's just how I've always been.
And whenever I'd ask my dad questions, he would just
say, well, that's what it says. So you just have to do it. And that wasn't really satisfactory
enough for me. When was the prayer last? I'd say maybe like 20 minutes max, like 10 minutes for the
prayer. And then you have 10 minutes to talk with people, talk with friends. Okay. And then they
close the doors? No, the doors open all day. Okay. Yeah, were you there with your friends yesterday?
Yes, no, I didn't go with them, but I saw a couple people. Yeah, okay
You're saying your mom went to bed before you left. Yeah, and when you get back she was not up
Used to assume she was asleep or whatever
Here's where this interview gets really good
So you don't know if your mom have any problems with anybody or anything like that or? Here's where this interview gets really good. I mean, if somebody came in the house or anything, would you know?
I should, yeah.
Most likely I should probably be able to pay attention.
I don't know, would there be like a door chime or anything like that?
Yeah.
Mohammed made it clear to police that he didn't hear anyone come into the house after he came
in for the night.
Because of their security system, he was sure he would have heard something.
The four of them went to sleep for the night and early the next morning, just after Muhammad
got out of the shower, is when he told police he heard his sister scream from the patio
down below.
Police then had to determine whether any of the kids knew how the security system worked, whether any of
the 13 cameras had a central control panel, and if any of the cameras recorded
footage rather than just displaying it live. I wasn't even like aware of that. We had more cameras in the back of the house.
You weren't aware there was cameras all around the outside of the house?
No. No, I knew there was like something in the garage door or something like that, but I didn't know any specifics about it.
Do you know the code to it?
You didn't have access to it or anything like that?
No. No one has really...
I mean, it's just kinda there. No one used anything since we broke down.
Do you know where it's kept?
The code?
Like the hard drive and everything for the...
You don't know where that's kept?
No. I thought it was in the Wi-Fi room, but apparently not.
This morning, you guys went to the furniture store and stuff like that.
Okay. Well, we did. We took it and it's working. So everything's
on video as to what transpired. So we're trying to find out if you have anything that you
want to say about that or? I don't really know. Why don you not really? I mean... No. Okay well we're wanting to ensure
that this wasn't accidental. See what I'm saying? Okay so trying to figure out is what happened and why it happened.
As watching the video, nobody leaves the house.
Yeah. So there's your mother, you, your sister and your little sister.
That's what we're trying to figure out as to what happened. If it was an accident, if it was an argument, if it was something that was, you know, spontaneous,
something accidental, that's what we need to know.
Because we want to find, we want to get a resolution to this, I know you do too.
The actions happen all the time.
You know, somebody could be helping somebody with something, holding the ladder, something like that,
and something happens, that's why we wouldn't even know what happened.
And that's why we're looking to you because you're the oldest and we've watched the video."
Police went into this interview having already watched the recorded footage from the security
cameras.
They already knew the cameras not only saved the recorded footage, but they caught crucial
parts of the event in question.
Mohammed didn't even know his family had that many cameras surrounding the house, let
alone what they recorded at night.
Mohammed's father, Basel, was nearby for this interview, and when he saw it going a certain
direction, he quickly stepped in on his son's behalf. I don't want them to see anything in the front, except I have an attorney here and there. He's underage, you know that?
We know that.
That's why we asked you if we could speak to him.
No, you said, no, I need an attorney now.
I don't want to go any further.
I have to talk to an attorney because when I came back, it blew up my mind.
My daughter asked me, what's going on, Dad?
Why didn't you let us go back to the house?
So this is actually now, you're investigating a child here without a house.
There was more than what was originally told to us.
So, I mean, you're more than welcome to...
I mean, your son can tell you what he told us.
There was more that occurred that night.
He is shocked. My daughter is shocked.
I am shocked. We are crying day and night.
He never lied. My son never lied.
My kids never lied.
He never lied.
He didn't lie. He just didn't't say everything that happened. Sure. He didn't lie.
He just didn't tell us everything that happened.
So, so I...
So if someone is...
His mom is dead, man.
I understand.
I understand what you're talking about.
So, what you're talking about...
Please sir, I don't want my kids to talk to any of you anymore.
Okay.
Right?
Okay.
I mean, I want to know everything as you want to know. But the way it is like this,
I see there's something putting so much burden on us and we didn't eat since the morning.
And now I come back with my daughter, she tells me, Dad, why did they not let me? Like,
we have to get permission to come back to the house. So she's scared. And I'm scared.
And he's scared and confused. So this is part of our we did we had the timelines
I didn't quite match up with what was said on the scene. You are talking with a child
confused. We're not talking about like a 10 minute interview. Your son is not confused and he's not a child. He's a he's a 16 year old.
He's just not a child. Okay, so when you say child it makes him seems like this. He's your child.
Evidence at the crime scene did not point to an accidental fall. There was not a drop of blood on the concrete or on N turn their attention directly toward Muhammad.
At first, Muhammad tried to insinuate that if his mother was murdered, his 14-year-old
sister, Aya, may have had something to do with it because she was allegedly awake before
Muhammad was.
The police quickly explained why that theory didn't quite check out.
That was the first day of our second week of school and we had to go be at this location
where a bus took us to school by 6.30.
And so I had been waking up by like six at the latest to get up and get ready for school.
And I'm the type of person who sets like 20 alarms each within like two minute intervals of each other.
So I'll hear one of them at some point, like I'll wake up.
But my brother had been waking up at like 6.30, 6.33,
which is when we had to be there.
So we were running late because of him.
But that day I didn't wake up until like 6.15, 6.20,
I wanna say, which was already weird.
And when I woke up my
brother was already awake which was even weirder I mean it now's the time if
we're gonna if we're gonna be honest about it we got to be honest about it
now because once this gets boggled it's rolling it's up to prosecutors and
stuff like that to explain something as an accident or not now is the time we
need to do it yeah we know that somebody was in the room and we're about 99.9% sure it's a male
that was in the room from the picture, from the video. But we have to slow it down and get a
snapshot of it and that's what MSP is doing right now. We got it shipped off to the state lab and
they're going to blow it up and it's going to show who was there. The security camera footage,
that's when I was like, oh yeah, he did it.
The footage, which by the way you can watch if you're a Plus member, clearly shows shadows
cast onto the ground from the window above.
A large looming figure can be seen moving around before a smaller figure seemingly thrust
from the window and falls to the ground below. Given that
Mohammed was the only male in the home that night, it was damning enough evidence to make an arrest.
We begin with breaking news, a murder in a Farmington Hills mansion. That victim, a 35-year-old
woman, and we're told there was plenty of family trouble there. Seven investigators,
Jim Kirchner live on Howard Road where this happened early Monday morning.
And Jim, we understand it took police a while
to figure this one out.
Yeah, this has been going on six Monday morning,
but let me tell you, just as we're coming on the air,
I just got off the phone with Farmington Hills Chief Nebus
who tells me a 16-year-old son of this victim
is now in custody, is now the murder suspect being held at Children's Village here in Oakland car. The victim was killed in the car. The man was killed in
the car. The man was killed
in the car. The man was killed
in the car. The man was killed
in the car. The man was killed
in the car. The man was killed
in the car. The man was killed
in the car. The man was killed
in the car. The man was killed
in the car. The man was killed
in the car. The man was killed in the car. The man was killed The autopsy is done on this victim, but they're not releasing the cause of death.
And that could be because there are other injuries in addition to what would have been
sustained from the fall from a second story window.
I asked the chief if this 16-year-old is cooperating.
Is he answering police questions?
The chief would not answer that.
Mohammed was arrested, arraigned, and swiftly charged with second-degree murder all in the
same week.
For the time being, he was to be held at Children's Village without bond, despite his lawyer's
plea to the judge that Mohammed was a star student with no criminal record.
The prosecutor's office had a different perspective. Mohammed had murdered his own mother
while his young sisters were in the home with him.
He was violent and dangerous
and should be kept off the streets.
Here's the kicker though.
Investigators agreed that Mohammed couldn't have done this
on his own, especially given what
Nada's autopsy results would show. 16-year-old Mohammed Altantawi had been arrested and charged with the second-degree murder
of his mother, 35-year-old Nada Haranie.
And by the time November 2017 rolled around, about three months after Nada's death, the
medical examiner released some damning information about the autopsy results.
It was early on in their investigation that police say they realized that the death of
the 35-year-old Farmington Hills mother of three was no accident. Prosecutors say 16-year-old Mohammed Al-Tanawi murdered his mother,
and today a forensic pathologist from the medical examiner's office
testified that Nada's primary cause of death was asphyxiation from smothering.
You heard it right.
Nada, a 135-pound grown woman, was dead before she went out the window.
In your opinion, doctor, this happened before or after the body falling out of the window?
My observation indicates that it happened before.
I think that the positioning of her body was not what you would expect from someone falling out of the window. Not only had Nada fallen face up onto the pavement, her feet faced the house.
The medical examiner determined that Nada had likely been smothered with a damp towel or cloth
prior to being tossed from the second story. The only reason Muhammad had thrown his mother's body out the window was to stage the scene
and make it appear like an accident.
And why on earth would a devoutly religious 16-year-old suddenly decide to murder his
own mother?
Further evidence and Aya's own first-hand testimony, explain that also. The first domestic violence incident that happened,
that was like one of the major ones,
if not the most major,
we actually didn't end up calling the police
and that wasn't allowed to be talked about
in like any of the court stuff.
We came back from London, my parents were arguing,
my dad had my mom's phone in his hand,
and they were on the phone with my mom's dad, so my grandfather.
And they were sitting on the top of the stairs. She was trying to get the phone back from him.
He wasn't giving it to her, so he ended up pushing her down the stairs.
When she twisted her ankle really badly, I had a panic attack.
My first panic attack ever,
as far as I remember, was that night.
So that was the London incident.
And then about a month later was the first recorded incident
of domestic violence where the police were called
and I was the one that called the police.
The second one was kind of along the same lines.
You know, he had her phone, they were on the phone
with her dad, he wouldn't give it back to her. He ran into their bedroom to hide and my mom was trying to push the same lines. You know, he had her phone, they were on the phone with her dad. He wouldn't give it back to her.
He ran into their bedroom to hide and my mom was trying to push the door open.
She had her hand like between the door and he like saw her hand, but then he like slammed
the door anyways and he closed it on her, her hand.
So her thumb got injured somehow.
The third one was just that when the police came and took him away the first time, the
time that I called, he wasn't supposed to come back, but he did anyways. So then my mom called the police and then my dad
was like running through the house with my brother and they were, my brother was like talking to him
in Arabic and he's like, go hide here. Like they won't find you here. And then I'd be like, oh,
they're hiding over here. And they would be like yelling at me. It was really funny. But yeah,
so then he got taken away that time and wasn't allowed to come back.
After Basel was ordered to leave the home not a filed for divorce
In a separate case Basel battled on his own
He faced charges related to Medicare fraud and two counts of health care fraud which resulted in him having to spend one day in jail
And pay out hundreds of thousands of dollars in restitution.
Yeah, so with that, that was also something big in the family. I remember we were driving in Detroit
one day, I don't remember exactly for what, but it was my entire family, both my siblings and both
my parents. And we were passing by like the Blue Cross Blue Shield building. And my dad goes,
you know, pray that these people leave me alone.
This was all in Arabic,
but that they like get off my back, whatever.
And to me, I didn't really know too much about it
at that point, but my sort of train of thought
with everything in that case was, you know,
obviously this is a very, very big corporation.
They make a ton of money.
You're one person, you know. You run your own clinic.
If you haven't been doing something so blatantly wrong, why would they be coming after you in the
first place? So even though I didn't know details about it, I thought that he was guilty of whatever
they were accusing him of. And so when my dad said to pray that they get off his back, my parents and
my brother were literally praying
out loud. And I didn't say anything. I kept my mouth shut. So my brother turned to me and he's
like, why aren't you saying it? And I was like, I'm saying it in my head. And he's like, no,
you have to say it out loud for it to count. And I was like, no, I can say it subconsciously and
it'll be fine. He was like, no, we have to say it out loud. So I know you're actually saying it.
According to cell phone evidence, Nada was involved in a text conversation where she
stated that she had information on Bossel that could land him in prison for further
financial crimes.
Could that have added another, even more pressing element to the motive of Nadeau's murder?
His medical license was suspended by the state of Michigan in February. State officials citing was for about six months, maybe a year.
But once the term ended, he always had the option
to go back and apply for it to be reinstated.
It was never like a, it's done,
you can never get it back type of thing.
He just chose to never go and get it reinstated
because he used that as a strategy in the divorce case
to be like, I shouldn't have to pay child custody,
I shouldn't have to pay any bills
because I don't have a job.
In the throes of these very adult problems, Muhammad chose a side.
He was angry at his mother for divorcing his father and blamed both his sister and mother
for trying to ruin his father's life.
He thought that his mother was trying to take all of his father's money. And he thought Aya was trying to ruin his reputation by doing things like, oh, I don't
know, calling the police when Basel became violent.
So when the police came and took my father away both times, my brother immediately just
started to turn on me and my mother even more because they were both saying, you know, what
are you doing to him?
Like this is my brother and my father were saying, what are you doing to my dad?
Like this is ridiculous.
Like he's done everything for you.
They're going to take him to jail, this and that.
And so my brother felt really bad for my dad.
And like he, when the police came and took him, like he was bawling his eyes out.
According to Aya, Mohammed had a strained relationship with his mother
and sisters even before the separation.
But once Nada filed for divorce, things got much worse.
So when my dad wasn't allowed to come back,
he literally did say that,
okay, now that dad's gone,
like I'm the only man in the house,
I'm the one who's in charge now, like what I say goes.
And that translated into everything.
So what we ate, what we dressed, where we did, where we...
He would just try to control everything.
And when my mom...
Growing up, we never were really like disciplined by my mom or like grounded, things like that.
Like we never had our phones taken away.
So when my brother was contacting my dad and like sending him pictures of what my mom was doing like things like that
Just being like his little spy essentially. My dad was allowed to have contact with any of us
Unless it was through like a third party supervised person. He could request that and then they would set it up
He never requested it. He would just sneak my brother out. My brother would sneak out of the house
They would see each other like that
But he never requested to see my sister and I and I never requested to see him, so it was fine.
But yeah, so my mom tried to take his phone away to discipline him and be like, you're
not supposed to be texting your dad.
You can't be sneaking out of the house, things like that.
And at that point, my brother started getting really into working out and building muscle
and taking these protein shakes and powders and whatever it was. So he was a
lot stronger than my mom at that point. So her trying to take his phone from
him and like discipline him would result in a physical altercation. And so at one
point she you know she knew that it wasn't gonna work out and so she just
stopped. She kind of just let him do his own thing. And he just he started to get
like a he was very very very short-tempered.
He was very, very assertive, very violent.
And he was just always like a ticking time bomb.
You never knew what was gonna set him off.
You never knew when he was gonna be set off.
But at any moment he could just blow up at you.
Mohammed was very easily influenced
and manipulated by his father.
The only person he cared to try to earn approval
from. During the early morning hours the day his mother's body was found, Muhammad had numerous
phone calls back and forth with Basel. This all occurred well before Muhammad told police that
he was awake. Even more telling was his mother's contact name in his phone.
Mohammed had her listed under B for bitch.
Yeah, that's the Muslim way right there.
You just call your mom a bitch.
When Mohammed finally went to trial in 2022, his charges by this point had escalated to
first degree murder and he was being charged
as an adult.
His defense attorney's main argument was that Mohammed could not have pulled this off on
his own.
The attorney stated that it was quote inconceivable that Mohammed killed Nada.
The scene was set up so professionally to look like an accident both before and after the killing took place,
it just couldn't have been done by a 16 year old.
Though he may not have had physical help inside the home while he set up the cleaning supplies and the ladder,
events which were also backed up by the security
camera footage.
He may have had instruction from his own father.
Why was he on the phone with his dad in those early morning hours, including times right
before and right after Nato was thrown out the window?
Here's another damning piece of circumstantial evidence.
Both Basel and NADA were scheduled to give depositions for their divorce just two days
after NADA was murdered.
You might be wondering why on earth was Basel not charged with anything related to this
crime.
But it's not enough to convict him.
I mean, it's all circumstantial, I think.
So they, I mean, they're, they wanted to get my dad more than anything.
I think, I mean, I wanted that too.
I was like, if you can get my dad and let my brother go free, and that's
the only way, like do it.
My dad is the actual culprit of everything.
He's the one who manipulated my brother.
And that's not to say that I don't blame my brother because I do.
I mean, regardless of how much he was manipulated or brainwashed or whatever term you want to use,
he was still, at the end of the day, he was 16 years old.
Even if he was 8 years old, like you know that killing someone, much less your own mother, is very, very wrong.
Like, you know what is right and what's wrong. So yeah, he's definitely at fault, but he's also
not the person that's been behind everything. You know, like, yeah, he took away my mother's life,
and that's huge. Definitely he needs to pay for that. But at the same time, like, my dad put my
mother through years and years and years of hell, and he got my brother to kill her. If he had the
ability to kill my mother, I absolutely 100% without a doubt
believe that he would have done it.
But because he couldn't do it, he had my brother do it.
So yeah, throughout the entire case,
they have been trying to find anything to use
to get to my dad, but they're...
My dad is stupid, but he's smart in picking a scapegoat
and making sure that he doesn't fall for his own actions.
So he was able to get away with it.
And while his son was in prison for crimes he may have orchestrated himself,
Basel went about the community, begging and pleading for sympathy and
you guessed it, money.
The whole not being good with finances thing didn't stop with my mom.
It continued on with him. So when So when all the money was split up,
he, while my brother was sitting in jail, okay,
refusing to say a single bad word about my father,
my father went on during like winter break in like December,
went to Las Vegas and gambled away
a quarter of a million dollars in one night.
I mean, when everything was still happening,
this was when I was like 16, 17,
still having to do mandatory visitations with him.
And people in our community still had like a good
perspective of him and sympathize with him.
He went around collecting money from the community,
saying that it was to help pay for legal fees for my brother.
And people were giving him money.
Guess what he goes and does with the money buys a brand new sports car.
So then at that point people were like, what the hell is wrong with you?
Like, we're going to stop giving you money.
It's like, he's, he's not a smart person.
The same community that was silent during Nada's domestic violence experience
initially stood up to both defend Mohammed and Basel.
Funny how that happens in some communities.
It took an act so blatantly ungrateful and greedy
to finally turn his own community against him.
All the while, Basel made the same claims over and over.
His son Mohammed was innocent. My son, Mohammed, was innocent.
My son never lied. My kids never lied.
Apparently to Basel, his son would never lie. But I guess we should disregard what his daughters
had to say. Right? Is that how that works? After all, it kind of contradicts the whole
idea that Mohammed is innocent.
You know, I haven't been able to be like,
this happened to me and my family, but I wasn't allowed to know anything about what was being said.
I was allowed to know anything about the trial until it was over.
And so just everyone giving me their opinions on it. And like I said,
that's fine, but you can't sit here and tell me that what I went through is
incorrect. Like I, I lived through it. You didn't. You know, and so I wouldn't
just re-emphasizing, I wouldn't, I wouldn't be doing this if there was no reason to be
doing this. You know, I don't, I don't wake up one day and decide, Hey, let me go ruin
my brother and my father's life. Like, no, they did that to themselves. It's the consequences
of their own actions. Maybe they didn't expect to be caught
or they didn't expect to have repercussions,
but like, wake up, you're an adult.
This is what happens when you do things like this.
You get in trouble for it.
So I don't know.
I mean, I've made my peace with everything.
I've put it all behind me.
I've moved on.
This is to me just another step in my healing journey
is actually being able
to give my voice and tell people everything that I went through and my mother has gone
through as opposed to just having everyone be like, oh, this is what you went through
and this isn't what you went through.
Basel himself is someone who seems to be preoccupied with getting money, either legally or illegally
and spending it frivolously.
He used Islam as a way to control people around him and keep them under his thumb. He was very
quote unquote old school or extreme in the belief system he taught his family.
My dad in the trial and like everything, every aspect of his life was very, very religious,
very, very cultural. If our religion or our culture said something that contradicted American law,
you listen to the religion, you ignore the American law. That's to the extent that he
was out with it. A lot of things that were said online is that we were forced to dress a certain way or we
couldn't work because of the religion and none of that is true.
My dad had an issue with the way that I dressed and it wasn't even breaking religious guidelines
at that point at all.
But that was just more of a cultural thing.
Same with working.
There's nothing in our religion at all that says that woman can't work. But I think for him, he just used that as a tactic to maintain control over us. And so,
and he was just very, very old school in his thinking. I mean, I remember when I brought up
telling him that I was going to go to college one day, and I was still in middle school at this point,
he responded that, no, you know, we'll discuss it when you get to that point. And I said, okay,
like, yeah, for sure. But just so you know, I am going to go to college.
I'm going to become a lawyer.
And he's like, no, your job as a woman is just to stay home and take care of the kids.
And once again, nothing about the religion says that.
If anything, our religion emphasizes women having financial and just independence in
their life in general, not having to be reliant on anyone.
And so whatever you do to get to that point great. My dad was
just no women have to stay home men are in control and that's about it. Anything
that kind of I guess like in the media was portrayed as us becoming more
Americanized anything that kind of made it seem that that was the case he was
very much against and it was kind of ironic to me when I first saw,
the very first time I read a headline that said that
he had issues with us becoming Americanized,
I just kind of laughed to myself.
Cause I was like, if you had issues with us becoming
Americanized, why would you move to America
to start your family?
You know, like just, what are you expecting?
Especially given that he was born,
or both of them were born and raised in Syria,
that's where they grew up. You should know that when you move to America and you
give birth to your kids in America and that's where they're being raised, they're going
to adapt things that they see around them and their culture and the environment. So
obviously it's going to be our upbringing is going to be extremely different. If you
were going to have such an issue with it, you shouldn't have moved to America in the
first place. That's kind of on you. So I'm not religious.
I do practice some aspects of it, but it definitely just doesn't have anything to do with my father.
I think it's just for me relearning the actual religion itself as opposed to what my father
has taught me, which is a very twisted version of it. The same grandiose and manipulative attitudes followed both Basil and Mohammed into the
courtroom in early 2022.
A jury deliberated for just a few hours before finding Mohammed guilty of his crimes.
When sentencing rolled around, Mohammed, 21 years old by this time, decided to fire his legal team and represent
himself.
During his sentencing hearing, both Mohammed and his father caused numerous disturbances.
Mohammed himself wasted hours of time raising objections to words and phrases that were
used in his pre-sentencing investigation report. Some of his objections related to the portrayal of his family's Syrian culture and their faith
in Islam, claiming law enforcement was prejudiced and bigoted.
How many times have we heard this shit before?
He brought up his father's domestic violence history and explained why he thought it was
all unfair and untrue.
And he even tried to challenge a report that referenced a time police were called to the
house because Muhammad was, quote, playing with knives.
He thought that was irrelevant, I guess.
You'd think with nearly five years to think about what he'd done,
Muhammad would have found some crumbs of virtue left inside of him, somewhere rattling around.
Something to bring forth and finally take accountability for what he had done. But I
guess for some people that's asking for far, far too much.
Well this past March a jury needed just three hours to find Alton Tauwe guilty of first
degree premeditated murder. He says he's innocent. Pamela Osborne has been following today's
hearing. This did not go smoothly Pam.
It did not. There were several outbursts in that courtroom today. It took the judge four
more hours to even get to the sentencing part.
Here's a look at some of what played out in court.
Five years ago, I got arrested for, as I said, the worst crime imaginable.
Oh, man. And for her to die at 35 years old, a terrible death.
By any means, MDOC has requested a sentence for 40 to 80 years.
I don't care. I don't know. But honestly, I don't know what you would want to see from it,
because it was just four hours of him rambling. Until we actually got to sentencing part,
it was literally four hours of him rambling. It was ridiculous. I was falling asleep. I was
playing games on my phone. I didn't want to be there. I thought I was showing up. I was playing games on my phone. Like I was, I didn't want to be there.
I was like, I thought I was showing up to say my piece, hear his, his sentencing and then leave.
I didn't expect to be here for the entire day. So, um, yeah, no, it was, it was a mess.
Mohammed maintained his innocence throughout the hearing, exclaiming that someday his conviction would be overturned.
A lot of arrogance there. I guess that's pretty obvious.
When it came time for victim impact statements,
Basel Al-Tantawi took the stand, speaking not about the true victim in this crime, but
about his oh-so-innocent son. And the evidence backed it up.
A jury took no time at all to convict.
And this judge did not have a good impression
of Mohammed or his father, not after that massive waste of time in the courtroom.
As a result, she handed down a sentence of 35 to 60 years in prison.
I really liked her.
I thought she was really fair.
I talked to the prosecutors about why she gave him somewhat of a lighter sentence.
It wasn't a light sentence by any means, but it wasn't the maximum.
And she was being really strategic because everyone knows that my brother is going to
appeal the case.
And I was also asking why she let him ramble on for like five hours.
But yeah, it was all part of strategy, I guess. And
she knew that he was going to appeal. So she didn't want to give him any basis that he
could appeal the case on and have the verdict to be overturned or have a sentence be shortened.
So by letting him ramble, by letting him say anything and everything he wants to say, he
can go back later and be like, Oh, well, the judge wouldn't let me speak or she wasn't
letting me represent myself. And then with the sentencing, nobody can be like, Oh, well, the judge wouldn't let me speak or she wasn't letting me represent myself. And then with the sentencing, nobody can be like, oh, well, you gave him the maximum sentence
and for whatever reason that wasn't fair.
She gave him a fair sentencing, very fair trial, so he has no right to stand on in terms
of the appeal.
If all of his future parole hearings result in denials, Mohammed may end up spending the
entire next 60 years in prison.
Chances are though, some parole officer will let him out.
Poor kid, right?
Give him another chance.
I mean, all he did was murder his own mother.
As for Aya, she moved on to bigger and better things and is still planning to go to law
school.
Because all of this happened when Aya was just 14, she and her sister were put into
foster care.
At some point, Aya aged out of the system.
Her little sister was placed back in the care of their father, where she remains today.
Yeah, I don't get to talk to her at all.
For the first, until I was 17, around that age,
I had to do court mandated supervised visits with my father.
And so he would sometimes bring my little sister.
And yeah, there was like no safety risk,
but you know, you can tell that she wasn't being cared for.
I mean, hygiene with her was nonexistent.
She had gained a lot of weight.
In the summer, she'd be wearing winter rain boots,
things like that she wasn't being taken care of,
but do I think he was being abusive to her?
No.
But so yeah, so he would bring her every now and then,
but he would be brainwashing her as well to hate me.
So when he would get up to go to the bathroom or something,
she would turn to me and be like,
my dad said that you're a liar
and that I have to hate you, so I hate you.
Like things like that.
And I'd sit there and be like, okay.
So yeah, basically I haven't talked to her
since I was like 17.
Last I heard, which was at the sentencing,
he was living with my little sister in his friend's house.
So like, he's not living a good life.
He may not be living a good life right now, but Basel still has just a suspended medical
license.
As far as we know, he could renew it at any time and resume his career as a physician.
Think about that next time you go in for a checkup.
Let's hope that his reputation precedes him, though, in all of his future endeavors.
This entire time I have always heard, well, he's your brother, he's your dad, like they
love you, they would never do this to you, like why are you doing this to them?
Once again, why would I do this to them if it wasn't true?
You know, like they're my family. I wouldn't make up lies to this
extent about anyone, much less my own brother and my father, if it wasn't true. You know,
like I'm not a child. My brother is spending his life in jail. I haven't had contact with
my dad in years. That's not by choice. It's because that is what's best for me considering
what they've put me through.
So it just, I mean, everyone obviously
is entitled to their own opinions,
but no one has the right to sit here and tell me that,
well, you don't know what you're talking about,
or you're making things up,
or your feelings are invalid
because you didn't live with my family.
I grew up when I was raised by them.
Like this is my family.
Unless you have lived with them,
you don't know what actually went on behind closed doors.
You only saw what we wanted you to see and that's about it.
So you have your opinion, yeah, you can voice it,
but it's completely invalid if you're telling me
that I'm wrong about what I went through, you know.
Aya's entire family of five have been ripped to shreds.
Mohammed and his father both seem to have blamed Nada
for the initial dissolution of their family unit.
But how then, I ask, could they possibly
have thought in their stupid little brains
that murdering her would solve the problem?
How fucking idiotic.
Mohammed Altantawi may have been a miner
when he killed his own mother,
but he knew exactly what he was doing.
It's just that getting caught wasn't part of the plan.
And getting caught wasn't part of the plan. Depending on when you hear this, you may or may not already know. Episode 2 of Sword and Scale television drops May 1st.
It's really a fucked up story.
Stay safe. Hey Mike, Mark Lous here from Clarkston, Michigan.
I've been with you since season one but unfortunately only became a member in 2023.
Anyway I wanted to tell you how much I love the show.
It's a must listen and I look forward to new episodes.
I just wanted to tell you, you know, some people have a destiny, have a job that they are good at
but they don't know it at the time.
And your management and production skills on Sorghum Scale
is the job you are destined for.
There is no other podcast that comes close to you.
Listen to a lot of them in their garbage.
You guys are top notch, the best.
And I wanna thank you for that.
I look forward to many more years of enjoyment
and I hope you stay safe
and I just love what you guys do.
Take care of my friends, bye bye. I'm gonna be a star, I'm gonna be a star
I'm gonna be a star, I'm gonna be a star
I'm gonna be a star, I'm gonna be a star
I'm gonna be a star, I'm gonna be a star
I'm gonna be a star, I'm gonna a little bit of a I'm just a little bit of a I'm just a little bit of a
I'm just a little bit of a
I'm just a little bit of a
I'm just a little bit of a
I'm just a little bit of a
I'm just a little bit of a
I'm just a little bit of a
I'm just a little bit of a
I'm just a little bit of a
I'm just a little bit of a
I'm just a little bit of a I'm just a little bit of a Thanks for watching!