Monday, December 24, 2018

Saudi national charged in fatal hit-and-run believed to have fled to Saudi Arabia

When a Saudi national kills a 15-year-old infidel girl from Oregon in a hit-and-run, it appears his Saudi government will help with his getaway.

Abdulrahman Sameer Noorah, the Saudi national in question, was arrested in August 2016 and indicted for first-degree manslaughter, hit-and-run, reckless endangerment and reckless driving after allegedly killing Fallon Smart in Portland.

He was required by the court to wear a monitoring device.

The consulate of Saudi Arabia posted Noorah's $100,000 bond on September 11, 2016, according to court documents, and in early June 2017, he removed his monitoring device and vanished.

Initially, his whereabouts were unknown but then U.S. officials learned from the Saudi government that he returned to the Kingdom,The Oregonian reported Sunday.

U.S. Marshal Eric Wahlstrom told The Oregonian "We're doing everything we can to get him back." But the U.S. doesn't have an extradition treaty with Saudi Arabia, only an oil business arrangement.

Noorah was a student in Portland since 2014 and received a little over $1,800-a-month as a stipend from the Saudi government for living expenses, according to the newspaper. He is from Jeddah and was housed by a host mother.

After the deadly accident, Noorah was jailed on $1 million bail. Under Oregon law, a defendant must post a minimum of 10 percent of the bail to be released. The consulate reportedly shelled out the $100,000 possibly from the oil money the Kingdom gets from us.

Noorah was then placed into the supervision of the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office and returned to the Portland house where he had been living, and was allowed to continue going to classes at Portland Community College while his case proceeded, but was initially placed under house arrest.

On June 10, he was allowed to study on campus after receiving permission from his release supervisor. But later that afternoon, he was picked up in a black GMC Yukon XL and had his monitoring bracelet cut.

It wasn’t until the next evening his naive release supervisor discovered he was gone. Investigators later discovered a bag packed at the home.

After the U.S. launched an international manhunt for Noorah, the Saudi government reached out to the Department of Homeland Security in July and admitted to officials that Noorah returned to Saudi Arabia on June 17.

Federal officials believe Noorah was given a passport with a different identity to help him get out of the U.S., according to The Oregonian.

This is a Kingdom that does what it wants regardless of the nation's laws in which they do it. They even kill people in their overseas embassies.

Saudi Arabia has, on several occasions, paid bail for its nationals who've been charged with crimes – including a man accused of rape in Utah in 2015. He also fled and was subsequently convicted.

They also posted bond for a Missouri resident in 2013 who was accused but later acquitted of murdering a bar owner. That same year the government put up $5 million bail for a Saudi princess charged with human trafficking in California, yet those charges, too, were dropped for reasons that are murky.

Hello fellow conservatives. At this time of year when everyone has a hand out for a hand-out, I don't. I simply want you to follow Brain Flushings and check out the ads on this page. It's free, I'm free and you're free to follow me or not. I hope you do.

Have a wonderful Christmas!




No comments:

Post a Comment

IAF hits Iran's nuclear weapons program bigly

On October 26th, the Israeli Air Force (IAF) flew a retaliatory sortie and "destroyed an active top secret nuclear weapons research fac...