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To: JDN who wrote (177953)8/31/2006 1:07:30 PM
From: KLP  Respond to of 793801
 
Re Popal and the hit-and-runs: If I were the police, I'd be looking at the parents, and why they came here, what they are doing here, if they think it is so bad. Had to look all over to find these two stories. There are a few places, but not many to find info. IMO, there is more to this story than we are being told now.



insidebayarea.com

Article Last Updated: 08/31/2006 06:51:32 AM PDT

Profile: The Suspect
Jeremy Herb, STAFF WRITER



The Fremont man accused in Tuesday's hit-and-run rampage had a history of mental problems and ran away to Los Angeles three days earlier to escape his family, a relative said.
Omeed Aziz Popal, 29, was isolated from most people outside his extended family and recently was admitted to multiple hospitals for mental problems, the relative said.

Popal's cousin, Hamid Nekrawesh, said Popal's parents kept him and his brothers and sisters from interacting with their peers, and that caused manyproblems for Popal.

"He never had any friends outside his house," Nekrawesh said. "He has been isolated from society. The poor kid has grown up helping his dad continuously."

When the Popal family booked their trip to Afghanistan recently for his arranged marriage, Popal's mother did all the planning and Popal kept quiet, said Hasmat Ansari, director of Pamir Travel.

"His mom was overprotective," Ansari said. "She did all the talking — everything. When he said something about the booking, the mom said, 'You don't know anything. Let me talk to this guy.'"

Popal went to Afghanistan with his mother and two siblings, Ansari said.

"He was a nice kid," Ansari said of Popal. "He was a normal guy."

After Popal returned from Afghanistan, he started arguing with his family, saying he did not want to live with them any more.

He ran away several times, Nekrawesh said, including last weekend to Los Angeles. The family reported him missing to Fremont police. But having arrived in Los Angeles, Popal called his father, Najib, and said he had no money or place to go, Nekrawesh said. Popal's father drove to Los Angeles with Popal's youngest sister and sent them on the train back to Fremont before driving back Tuesday.

Popal's mother told Nekrawesh Tuesday night that Popal had been hearing voices and dreaming of men dragging him to the graveyard and trying to kill him.

And police on Wednesday said Popal called them in mid-July and confessed to killing someone in San Francisco, Detective Bill Veteran said. But San Francisco cops had no idea what he was talking about.

Nekrawesh didn't know if Popal was on medication.

"His parents are very, very self-conscious," Nekrawesh said. "They try to keep things to themselves. We, as family members, didn't know he was hospitalized."

Nekrawesh said the family mentioned that they had considered taking Popal to a religious person for help.

"I strongly feel the whole family ... (has) been isolated from society."

"The parents think this is an evil society, so they try to overprotect their kids. At lunchtime at the school, someone was there with the kids — they tried to keep them away from other kids."

Nekrawesh said he almost never saw Popal at social events, only at the flea market with his family.

Popal and his siblings always were helping their father with his flea market business, and his parents did not allow him to have friends, or even be with cousins at family gatherings, Nekrawesh said.

"They are not permitted to talk to even their cousins or be alone with them for even five minutes."

Popal moved from Afghanistan, where his father was a teacher, to the United States when he was young. He grew up in Hayward,





and the family moved to Fremont several years ago. The family was concerned about violence in the Hayward school system, but Nekrawesh said he didn't know any specifics.

"Every time I've seen him, he has been very respectful. I've never seen the other side of him."

Popal attended San Jose State from August 1997 until the spring of 2000, majoring in business administration with a concentration in international business. He also attended Cal State East Bay.

"It's just a gradual longtime pressure that built up," Nekrawesh said. "He got overloaded and snapped."

One night, Nekrawesh's 12th-grade son went to the movies. Popal's father found out and called Nekrawesh, upset that he would let his son go to the movies with friends.

"His mom does not like to take advice or recommendations (on parenting)," Nekrawesh said.

Popal's father was religious but in no way extremist, Nekrawesh said. He added that the family's parenting style was "a personal issue, not a cultural issue."

Nekrawesh said it was possible that having a wife and then being separated also may have sent him over the edge.

Popal was in the SUV with his mother, brother and sister Tuesday morning, Nekrawesh said. They dropped his brother off at San Jose State and his sister at her school, but the whole time Popal was arguing with his mother, Nekrawesh said. They were discussing whether Popal might return to see his wife in Afghanistan. Popal's plan was to bring his wife to the United States, although that may have taken six months to a year to process a visa.

Popal married his bride after seeing a picture of her, Nekrawesh said, but he wasn't allowed to be in contact with her before they wed.

"Logic says, 'Yes,' he is old enough (to make his own decisions)," Nekrawesh said. "But you have to remember, he has been isolated from making decisions in life. Anything he does, he's trained to get his parents' opinion."

Nekrawesh said he spoke with Popal's parents, and they were "very sad about the victim's family." He said he saw Popal a couple of months before he left for Afghanistan, and that he seemed happy. They joked about his becoming a "big man" by getting married.

"I think this would have been avoided if he had some sort of connection or freedom of mind to have friends or connections with relatives," Nekrawesh said. "Somebody would have prevented this problem."

Nekrawesh said he hadn't talked with Popal's siblings.

"My concern is for the other children," Nekrawesh said. "These poor kids haven't been able to have a social life."

Staff writer Jeremy Herb can be reached at (510) 353-7013 or jherb@angnewspapers.com. Staff writer Matt O'Brien contributed to this report.


888888888888888888888

Conflicting Stories In Deadly Hit And Run Spree

abclocal.go.com
Suspect Says He Wanted To Kill A Cop
By Vic Lee
Aug. 30 - KGO - ABC7 has new information about the man accused of Tuesday's deadly hit and run rampage, including his intended target when he climbed behind the wheel.

Omeed Aziz Popal is accused of killing a man with his car in Fremont and then heading to San Francisco where more than a dozen others were run down.

Popal was transported from the San Francisco County Jail, where he was under suicide watch, to San Francisco General Hospital's psych ward Wednesday.

His interrogation lasted through the evening and police are trying to determine what is fact and what is fiction.

Popal gave conflicting stories to investigators. He first told them he had killed his parents Monday night. He then changed his story and said he was going to kill them after the street rampage.

And ABC7 has learned Popal told police during the interrogation that when he started driving, he was looking for a cop to kill but he couldn't find one, so that's when he randomly began running over pedestrians.

He also told investigators he had stabbed someone to death five years ago. Fremont police tell ABC7 that Popal walked into their office a month ago and made a startling claim.

Det. Bill Veteran, Fremont police dept: "He came in and wanted to confess to a homicide that he committed up in San Francisco a couple of years ago so we of course got in touch with the San Francisco investigators and absolutely nothing he said matched up with anything they had."

The family has retained attorney Majeed Samora to represent Popal. He says his client is mentally unstable and may be telling wild stories.

Majeed Samora, suspect's attorney: "He was admitted to Kaiser Hospital in the past six months. He stayed there until he was stabilized a little bit."

Samora also says Popal was having other undiagnosed health problems.

Majeed Samora, suspect's attorney: "He passed out in the past about four to five times because of not being able to breathe properly."

Relatives say Popal was married in Afghanistan in an arranged marriage. His wife has applied for a visa. A cousin says issues relating to his marriage may have been bothering him.

Meantime, Popal is being held on 14 counts of attempted murder stemming from his hit and run rampage.

His first victim, a pedestrian who was hit when he was walking in Fremont, has been identified as 54-year-old Steven Wilson. Alameda County prosecutors are in the process of charging him with that homicide.

Popal will be charged with crimes in San Francisco and Alameda counties. The question is how to prosecute the cases. The District Attorney's are trying to figure out which county will go first.

Copyright 2006, ABC7/KGO-TV/DT.

Copyright ©2006 ABC Inc., KGO-TV San Francisco.