Monday, August 15, 2011
Killer dad defended as "exceptional" father and true victim (Sacramento, California)
This is what we're up against, folks. Due to unrelenting fathers rights propaganada, all we're hearing is the same old drone: that criminals and killer daddies are never at fault, that it's always the fault of "the system" and the mother (who tried to protect the children from the volatile, violent father--and then is STILL BLAMED when her instincts prove correct, and the father kills the kids). So much for individual responsibility, at least when it comes to fathers....
According to the FR defenders like this killer daddy's brother, daddies who murder little kids are "exceptional" fathers and "victims." Not criminals who victimize others. Oh, no. These poor little misunderstood killers are the True "Victims." We're even supposed to be PROUD OF THESE KILLERS, according to this twisted freak. And we're supposed to learn something about "justice" from their bloody crimes. Like making sure more homicidal fathers are provided with more access to helpless children? Sick, sick, sick.
As far as I'm concerned, dad MOURAD "MONI" SAMAAN was just another violent criminal who should have been behind bars, and NOT around children. His track record speaks for itself.
Repeat after me. BAD FATHERS kill children, not good fathers. BAD FATHERS want to strip their children of their mother in "brutal" custody battles, not good fathers. Good fathers cherish their children, and do everything in their power to keep them happy, healthy, and alive. It's absolutely unbelievable that such a commonsense notion is now disputed by the freaks of the world.
http://www.fox40.com/news/headlines/ktxl-news-amber-alert-brother-talks,0,2753029.story
Brother of Amber Alert Suspect Blames the Court System
Chris Biele
FOX40 News
August 14, 2011
SACRAMENTO— The brother of the man who likely murdered his daughter before taking his own life tells FOX40 that his brother, Mourad "Moni" Samaan, was the victim of a broken family court system.
Nabil Samaan, a lawyer and father, claims his brother's ex-wife waged a brutal custody battle that pushed Mourad over the edge. According to court records provided to us by Nabil, Mourad's ex-wife is Marcia Fay, a California Deputy Attorney General.
"In every battle there's an end, and this is the end. You can justify or try to argue that Moni wasn't a good father, and that's just denying the facts. The facts that he was an exceptional father," Nabil Samaan said Sunday.
Nabil says that Mourad and his ex-wife couldn't even agree on a name for their daughter. The Samaan's referred to the little girl as Layla, and the Fay's referred to her as Madeline.
Last week, the FBI issued an Amber Alert for Madeline Layla Samaan-Fay. Agents say her father Mourad was supposed to return her to her mother but did not. On Saturday, the FBI discovered the bodies of the little girl and her father in an SUV parked in El Dorado County near some land the Samaan family owns.
"I think he did the right thing. I'm proud of my brother and now he's in a better place. He's at peace. His daughter's at peace. She'll have one name now, and we can move on. And hopefully the court will learn a little thing about justice," Nabil said.
FOX40 asked if that's how he really felt, and he reiterated his point.
"I think justice was done as Moni saw it, and as I see it, frankly. I think under the circumstances, justice was done."
FOX40 attempted to contact Marcia Fay by going to three locations where we thought she might be, but we could not find her.
According to the FR defenders like this killer daddy's brother, daddies who murder little kids are "exceptional" fathers and "victims." Not criminals who victimize others. Oh, no. These poor little misunderstood killers are the True "Victims." We're even supposed to be PROUD OF THESE KILLERS, according to this twisted freak. And we're supposed to learn something about "justice" from their bloody crimes. Like making sure more homicidal fathers are provided with more access to helpless children? Sick, sick, sick.
As far as I'm concerned, dad MOURAD "MONI" SAMAAN was just another violent criminal who should have been behind bars, and NOT around children. His track record speaks for itself.
Repeat after me. BAD FATHERS kill children, not good fathers. BAD FATHERS want to strip their children of their mother in "brutal" custody battles, not good fathers. Good fathers cherish their children, and do everything in their power to keep them happy, healthy, and alive. It's absolutely unbelievable that such a commonsense notion is now disputed by the freaks of the world.
http://www.fox40.com/news/headlines/ktxl-news-amber-alert-brother-talks,0,2753029.story
Brother of Amber Alert Suspect Blames the Court System
Chris Biele
FOX40 News
August 14, 2011
SACRAMENTO— The brother of the man who likely murdered his daughter before taking his own life tells FOX40 that his brother, Mourad "Moni" Samaan, was the victim of a broken family court system.
Nabil Samaan, a lawyer and father, claims his brother's ex-wife waged a brutal custody battle that pushed Mourad over the edge. According to court records provided to us by Nabil, Mourad's ex-wife is Marcia Fay, a California Deputy Attorney General.
"In every battle there's an end, and this is the end. You can justify or try to argue that Moni wasn't a good father, and that's just denying the facts. The facts that he was an exceptional father," Nabil Samaan said Sunday.
Nabil says that Mourad and his ex-wife couldn't even agree on a name for their daughter. The Samaan's referred to the little girl as Layla, and the Fay's referred to her as Madeline.
Last week, the FBI issued an Amber Alert for Madeline Layla Samaan-Fay. Agents say her father Mourad was supposed to return her to her mother but did not. On Saturday, the FBI discovered the bodies of the little girl and her father in an SUV parked in El Dorado County near some land the Samaan family owns.
"I think he did the right thing. I'm proud of my brother and now he's in a better place. He's at peace. His daughter's at peace. She'll have one name now, and we can move on. And hopefully the court will learn a little thing about justice," Nabil said.
FOX40 asked if that's how he really felt, and he reiterated his point.
"I think justice was done as Moni saw it, and as I see it, frankly. I think under the circumstances, justice was done."
FOX40 attempted to contact Marcia Fay by going to three locations where we thought she might be, but we could not find her.