'I could see the look of fear in her eyes': Gas-and-dash murder trial hears first-hand account from passenger - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 10, 2024, 10:58 PM | Calgary | 0.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

'I could see the look of fear in her eyes': Gas-and-dash murder trial hears first-hand account from passenger

Moments after Joshua Mitchell fled a gas station with a tank full of stolen fuel, his passenger Braydon Brown says he looked into Maryam Rashidi's terrified eyes as the gas station attendant, clinging to the hood of the truck, realized she was in trouble.

Joshua Mitchell is charged with 2nd-degree murder in connection with Maryam Rashidi's 2015 death

Maryam Rashidi and her husband, Ahmad Nourani Shallo, with their son Koorosh in an undated family photo. (Rashidi family)

Moments after Joshua Mitchell fled a gas station with a tank full of stolen fuel, his passenger BraydonBrown says helooked into Maryam Rashidi'sterrifiedeyes as the gas station attendant, clinging to the hood of the truck, realized she was in trouble.

Brown wasthe final witness called by prosecutors Jonathan Hak and James Thomas at thesecond-degree murder trial in Calgary of Joshua Mitchell, who is accused of running down Rashidiin a fatal gas-and-dash.

Browntold jurors when Mitchell couldn't "shake"Rashidioff the hood, he made a plan.

"He looked at me and said 'I'm just going to go,'" said Brown.

Braydon Brown testified he pumped gas in June 2015 before Joshua Mitchell drove off without paying. (Court exhibit )

The fatal encounterbegan after Brown pumped gas into the stolen Ford F350 truck on June 7, 2015, and thenhopped into the back of the cab while Mitchell drove off without paying.

Within seconds, Brown said he noticed Rashidi chasing the truck through the neighbouring Home Depot parking lot.

By the time Brown and Mitchell pulled into standstill traffic on 16th Ave. N.W., Rashidi had caught up and began banging on the window before climbing on the truck's hood.

"I told Josh to shake her off," said Brown.

Reversing and driving forward didn't do the trick, so Brown says Mitchell made the decision to take off.

'All I seen is her body rolling'

In tears, Mitchell's former friend described the next few fatal seconds.

"I could see the look of fear in her eyes," Brown said of Rashidi, who was clinging to the truck's hood.

"[Her eyes] got big, her face went white, like she didn't know what to do, she was stuck."

Soon, Rashidi couldn't hang on anymore and Brown says he felt thetruck bump over her twice.

"I looked out the back window and all I seen is her body rolling ... it looked like she coughed up blood."

From there, Brown said Mitchell took off andeventually the two ditched the stolen truck near the Brentwood LRT station and walked to a friend's home where they stayed for the next two days.

Joshua Cody Mitchell is on trial for 2nd-degree murder for the hit-and-run death of Maryam Rashidi. (CBC)

After spotting himself on the news when police released a photo from the Centex station, Brown says he felt guilty and wantedto turn himself in.

"I felt heavy on the inside because of all the s**t that happened," he said.

Brown said he messaged his grandmother to pick him up but before she arrivedpolice descendedon the home where he and Mitchell had been hiding out.

Mitchell hid in a closet, accordingto Brown, and he surrendered to police. It was two days after the incident and the same day Rashidi died of her injuries.

Closing arguments Thursday

Brown admittedhe had "a little bit" of trouble remembering some of the facts of the incident because two years had passed, he tolddefence lawyer Kim Ross under cross-examination.

The witness also said Mitchellmight have said "I'm just going to go"once Rashidi was on the hood of the truck, not when she was at the passenger side window, as he'd told the prosecution earlier.

"It's possible, I'm not 100 per centsure," Brown told Ross.

The Crown has rested its case and defence will not call any evidence. Closing arguments are set for Thursday.

After that, jurors receivefinal instructions before being sequestered until a verdict is reached.