Murder trial for CashApp founder Bob Lee kicks off in San Francisco

[ad_1] During opening statements today in the highly anticipated murder trial of Nima Momeni, who is accused of stabbing CashApp founder Bob Lee to death last year, attorneys presented two different versions of events: One in which Momeni was a hostile aggressor, the other in which Lee was a drug-addled, sleep-deprived assailant.  “Stabbed through his…

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During opening statements today in the highly anticipated murder trial of Nima Momeni, who is accused of stabbing CashApp founder Bob Lee to death last year, attorneys presented two different versions of events: One in which Momeni was a hostile aggressor, the other in which Lee was a drug-addled, sleep-deprived assailant. 

“Stabbed through his heart — and left to die,” Omid Talai, the lead prosecutor, said slowly and deliberately to the packed San Francisco Superior Courtroom, underscoring his version of events with images projected on two large screens of Lee’s lifeless and stitched-up body.

He also showed the jury of seven men and five women surveillance footage of Lee’s movements in the hours before his death. 

Saam Zangeneh, the lead defense attorney, started with a similarly dramatic opening: “Six. Six hours,” he said. Evidence would show, he said, that Lee slept only six hours in the 91 hours before his death. And during his waking hours, Zangeneh contended, Lee was on a bender of cocaine and other drugs. 

a man in an orange jumpsuit in a court room
Nima Momeni surveys the crowded courtroom before being taken back into custody on April 25, 2023. Photo by Eleni Balakrishnan

Prosecutors have presented a case, which Talai repeated today, that Momeni was upset over a perceived inappropriate interaction between his sister, Khazar Momeni, and Lee. Defense attorneys, meanwhile, have alleged that Lee was the actual aggressor, and that Momeni “stood his ground” and turned Lee’s own knife against him. 

The jury listened attentively to Talai’s nearly hour-long opening statement, then heard another half-hour from Zangeneh before prosecutors began calling witnesses to the stand. Momeni, dressed in a navy blue suit, sat among his five-person legal team and took notes with a pencil in a notebook.

Talai argued today that that DNA evidence could refute the defense’s argument. None of Lee’s DNA was found on the handle of the “Joseph Joseph” brand knife found near the scene of Lee’s death. The knife allegedly matched those in the home of Khazar Momeni. 

Prosecutors have previously alleged that Lee’s DNA was found on the blade of the knife, and that Momeni’s DNA was found on the handle. 

“None of Bob’s DNA was on the handle. Because he didn’t hold the knife, he was stabbed by it,” Talai said. 

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Source: missionlocal.org