AP Photo/Crime Stoppers via Houston Chronicle, File
The case almost went cold for good.
On Jan. 15, 2012, Gelareh Bagherzadeh was sitting in the driver's seat of her silver Nissan Altima when she was shot twice in the head, point blank, from the passenger side of her car. She had been talking to a friend, who heard her scream, then silence, and called 911. Gelareh's cell phone was found at her feet. The car had smashed into the garage of a townhouse, one in a row behind The Galleria, an upscale mall in Houston, and the acrid smell of burnt tire rubber was thick in the air.
Her purse and wallet were there, seemingly intact, so it didn't appear to be a robbery. There were no signs of sexual assault.
It was a mystery, one thathad enough twists and turnsto end up the subject ofDateline and NBC News' latest true crime podcast, Motive for Murder.
"I'm no stranger to mystery, to secrets people are desperately trying to hide, and the things those people are willing to do to get what they want," Motive for Murderhost and longtimeDateline correspondent Josh Mankiewiczexplained as episode one got underway.
**This is documented real life, and Dateline covered the case in 2019,sothis isn't exactly a SPOILERalert, but there are major revelations about the case ahead.
An early theory that turned the story into national news was that perhaps Gelareh's outspoken political views had gotten her killed. Perhaps the Iranian government was involved.
The 30-year-old had moved to Houston from her native Iran for school and was studying molecular genetics at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center when she was killed. But she remained plugged in to the troubles at home andshe took part in protests in Houston supporting theIranian Green Movement, which disputed the legitimacyof then-President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's re-election in 2009 and was demanding regime change.
Her activism certainly worried her parents, Ebrahim Bagherzadeh and Monireh Zangeneh, but they remembered their daughter being unafraid of any potential consequencesthough, according to the Houston Chronicle, she had asked that her name not be used when the paper posted a video from a 2010 protest on its website.
Friends in Gelareh's inner circle were skeptical, however, that the Iranian government would "waste their energy and time" by orchestrating the death of a student activist all the way in Texas. Though "if they had...they would take credit for it" to warn off other dissidents, observed Gelareh's close friend, Kathy Soltis.
Local police said early on that they didn't suspect either apoliticalmotive or that she was targeted because of her ethnicity.
Fingerprints found on the car, the bullets recovered at the scene, a cigarette butt on the ground outside the car doorall were sent to the lab for forensic testing.
Dead ends, the lot.
In the meantime, detectives started probing the possibility that the motive had something to do with one of three overarching motives for so many murders: love, money or pride.
Houston PD homicide investigator DetectiveRichard Bolton, now retired, recalled to Mankiewicz the inevitable part of the probe when they looked into the men in Gelareh's life, including her fairly new boyfriend, Cory Beavers, and the friend who said he heard a scream on the phone seemingly seconds before she was shot,Robeen Bandarwho also was her ex-boyfriend.
Bandar explained (to police and Mankiewicz) thatthey had had an amicable breakup and had mutually decided they would be better off just being friends.
Police asked why heheard a scream but didn't recallhearinga gun shot or screeching tires. Bandar said it was probably shock or denial of what he may indeed have heard.
Onto Gelareh's current boyfriend, Cory, the last known person to see her alive.
He told police that she had surprised him by showing up at his house, but he had a test to study for so they only hung out for awhile. When sheleft, he told her to text him when she got home to let him know she had arrived safely. He never heard from or saw her again.
Cory said he didn't know Gelareh was dead until he drove up to her house the next day and a reporter approached him and asked if he knew anything about "the girl who lived here."
He knocked on the door and Ibrahim answered, and he was the one to tell Cory that Gelareh was dead.
Police also looked intocrimes with similar M.O.s in the area, wondering if she was the victim of a carjacking gone wrong. They looked at a lawsuit her father was embroiled in at the time with a former employer.
More dead ends.
Four months after the murder, police announced that the family was offering a $200,000 reward for information that led to justice for Gelareh, the largest Crime Stoppers reward on offer in the country at the time.
The dozen or so tips that merited follow-up also led nowhere. But then there was another shooting that November.
The victim was Cory Beavers' identical twin brother, Coty. And homicide detectives don't put much stock in coincidences.
Coty Beavers' wife, Nesreen Irsan,had called 911 to report that her boyfriend had been shot. "Why did God do this to me?"she's heard wailing on the call.
She had found her husband's body in their apartment when she returned home from work. She told police she last saw Coty that morning, when he walked her down to her car to see her off, as he usually did. When police responded to her 911 call, it was apparent he had been dead for awhile. It was later determined that his wedding ring had been moved from his ring finger to the middle finger of his left hand.
Coty and Nesreen were newlyweds. According to Cory, Nesreenalso a student at MD Anderson, like Cory and Gelarehwas originally interested in him, but Cory was determined to keep his mind on his studies and introduced Nesreen to Coty. Nesreen was friends withGelareh, meanwhile, and she's the one who introduced her to Cory after he saw the two of them walking together at school. He was smitten immediatelyand after talkingto her more at a party not long after, they started dating.
By the time his newlywed brother was killed, Corystill reeling from the murder of his girlfriendwas fed up with what he felt was time wasted by the police looking at him as a suspect and any other activity that didn't get them any closer to finding Gelareh's killer.
Nesreen, meanwhile, had her own traumatic past. In the summer of 2011 she had run away from her strict Muslim household and her controlling father, whom she described as "violent and abusive," with only the clothes she was wearing. She climbed out of a window and went to a neighbor's house and asked for a rideto Coty and Cory's mom Shirley Beavers' house in Spring, Texas.
Nesreen had been dating Coty and keeping it a secret from her father, Ali Irsan, with the help of her sister Nadiawho would simultaneously cover for Nesreen but also threaten to tell on her.
When Ali Irsan found out about Nesreen and Coty, he barred his 23-year-old daughter from leaving the house.
Mayra Beltran/Houston Chronicle via AP
Police had no recourse to bring Ali's adult daughter back to their house if she didn't want to be there, so Ali showed up at Shirley's house himself (how he found out where they lived,whether the address was online or Nadia told him, or whatever, they didn't know). Ali knocked on their neighbors' doors, offering $100 for information on Coty's whereabouts. In the ensuing days, the Beavers would go outside in the morning to find that the air had been let out of their tires, so they had to start moving their cars. An order of protection Nesreen obtained against her father didn't stop himbut that at least paved the way for police to obtain a warrant to search the Irsan family's home, as well as two other properties Ali owned. They found a dismantled hand gun.
Cory recalled to Mankiewicz a fight he witnessed between Nadia and Nesreen during college, ostensibly over a petty issue,in which Nadia told her sister, "'I can't wait until my dad puts a bullet in your head.'"
"I believed her," Cory said.
Melissa Phillip/Houston Chronicle via AP, File
Going through boxes of documents they'd confiscated, police found paperwork that indicated Ali Irsan was committing multiple acts of fraud, such as falsely claiming disability benefits and opening credit cards in his kids' names.
Sothe Harris County Sheriff's Department brought in theFBI, and ultimately a task force thatcame to includethe Montgomery and Harris County sheriff offices, the FBI, the Houston Police Department, the Social Security Administration Office and Homeland Security got to work.
According to authorities, Irsan, a naturalized citizen, had first come to the U.S. from Jordan in 1978 and proceeded to marry a blind woman whom he physically and sexually abused, and had four children with. While still married, he brought a teenage bride, Shmou, over from Jordan, and they had eight more children, including Nesreen and Nadia.
In 2014, Irsan was chargedin federal court with conspiracy to defraud the United States, theft of public money and benefits fraud, and Shmou and Nadia were arrested, too. In April 2015, he pleaded guiltyto conspiracy to defraud and was sentenced to 45 months in prison; his wife and daughterwere convicted of providing false statements as part of the fraud schemeand were each sentenced to two years in prison.
But back to the double murder investigation.
Yet another thing discovered in the course of the investigation into Irsan was the revelation that he had been pulled over by a Texas State Trooper on the day of Gelareh's murder. His wife and one of his sons were also in the cara silver Toyota Camry.
Which, incidentally, matched the description given by a witness back in 2012 who told police she saw what looked to be a silver Camry speeding away from the site of the shooting. Nothing had ever come of it.
The location and timing of the traffic stop put Irsan's car exactly where it would have been had he driven away from the crime scene after the shooting. Dash-cam footage showed Ali barely able to stand, and he told the trooper hewas diabetic and suffering from low blood sugar, so he had been speeding on his way to find sugar.
There was no evidence that he was a diabetic.
It was almost a fluke that the trooper still had the dash-cam footage after two years. According to Mankiewiecz, the officer just had a funny feeling about the guy...
Furthermore, per authorities and Cory Beavers, it turned out that Gelareh and Alihad crossed pathstheir seeming lack of interaction having been a nagging issue when trying to connect Ali to both her murder and that of his son-in-law.
AfterNesreen fled her family's home in 2011, Ali started calling her classmates under the guise of simply being a concerned dad.
Gelareh wasn't having it, and told him she saw right through what he was trying to do.
Toward the end of the year, he called again. Gelareh called back and first talked to Nadia, who then passed the phone to her father, who asked (according to Cory), "Is this that Iranian bitch?" Gelareh proceeded to tell him off in Farsi. He hung up. A few weeks later she was dead.
In May 2014, Ali Irsan was charged with Gelareh's murder. That charge would be dropped for tactical reasons, because once authorities had connected him to both killings, Irsan was charged in 2015 with capital murder, for what has since been characterized as two so-called "honor killings."
Or make that three. In 1999, Irsan fatally shot his 29-year-old son-in-law Amjad Alidam. He told police Alidam had been abusing his daughter, and he killed him in self-defense. Authorities later said they couldn't build a case to prove otherwise.
In 2018, jurors spent 35 minutes deliberating before convicting him of themurders of Gelareh Bagherzadeh and Coty Beavers.
During the penalty phase of the trial, a former neighborsaidthat Ali Irsan hadbragged to him that he "got away with murder" inthe death of his other son-in-law."He said he invited his son-in-law to his house and shot him," the witness, Randy Wilkinson, testified. "He said he shot him with a 12-gauge shotgun and planted a gun on him."
His sonNasim Irsan, the one who was in the Camry with him, pleaded guilty in both murders as well and was sentenced last August to 40 years in prison. Ali Irsan iscurrently on death row in Texas.
The finale ofMotive for Murderwill be outThursday, June 4, wherever you get your podcasts.
(E! and NBC News are both members of the NBCUniversal family.)
Link:
All About the Twisted Story Behind Motive for Murder - E! NEWS
- Molecular Genetics Testing - StatPearls - NCBI Bookshelf - November 16th, 2024
- Working with Molecular Genetics (Hardison) - Biology LibreTexts - November 16th, 2024
- Molecular Underpinnings of Genetic and Rare Diseases: From ... - Frontiers - November 16th, 2024
- The molecular genetics of schizophrenia: New findings promise new insights. - November 16th, 2024
- 8: Techniques of Molecular Genetics - Biology LibreTexts - September 4th, 2024
- 1.5: Molecular Genetics - Biology LibreTexts - September 4th, 2024
- Molecular genetics made simple - PMC - National Center for ... - September 4th, 2024
- 4 Introduction to Molecular Genetics - University of Minnesota Twin Cities - September 4th, 2024
- Molecular genetics - Definition and Examples - Biology Online - September 4th, 2024
- A Detailed Look at the Science of Molecular Genetics - KnowYourDNA - September 4th, 2024
- Molecular Genetics | NHLBI, NIH - September 4th, 2024
- Molecular biology - Wikipedia - September 4th, 2024
- Genetics, Molecular & Cellular Biology Admissions - September 4th, 2024
- Researchers map 50,000 of DNAs mysterious knots in the human genome - EurekAlert - September 4th, 2024
- Artificial selection of mutations in two nearby genes gave rise to shattering resistance in soybean - Nature.com - September 4th, 2024
- Mainz Biomed Expands Corporate Health Program for ColoAlert with the Addition of Three New Companies in Germany - Marketscreener.com - April 7th, 2023
- Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | Journal - ScienceDirect - December 11th, 2022
- People don't mate randomly but the flawed assumption that they do is an essential part of many studies linking genes to diseases and traits - The... - November 25th, 2022
- Molecular and Cell Biology and Genetics - Master of Science / PhD ... - October 7th, 2022
- NIPD Genetics: Leading Genetic Testing Company - October 7th, 2022
- Skeletal Biology and Regeneration Students Recognized For Research Excellence - UConn Today - University of Connecticut - October 7th, 2022
- Mary Munson elected fellow of the American Society for Cell Biology - UMass Medical School - October 7th, 2022
- Every Body's Talking at Them: an Interview with Jon Lieff - CounterPunch - October 7th, 2022
- TriBeta invites students to explore opportunities to work with faculty at research fair on Oct. 11 - Ohio University - October 7th, 2022
- Genetics: the Vatican Does Not Intend to Be Behind the Times - FSSPX.News - October 7th, 2022
- Yield10 Bioscience Appoints Willie Loh, Ph.D., to the Board of Directors - citybiz - October 7th, 2022
- Molecular pathways of major depressive disorder converge on the synapse | Molecular Psychiatry - Nature.com - October 7th, 2022
- Sigyn Therapeutics Strengthens Board of Directors With the Appointments of Richa Nand, Jim Dorst and Christopher Wetzel - Yahoo Finance - October 7th, 2022
- UTHSC Researcher Co-Leads Study of Genes that Modulate Aging, Lifespan - UTHSC News - UTHSC News - October 7th, 2022
- GATC Health Investor Conference to Feature First Public Demonstration of Its AI Platform's Drug Discovery Capabilities - PR Newswire - October 7th, 2022
- Three Professors Conferred Tenure and Eleven Promoted - Wesleyan Argus - October 7th, 2022
- Who will get the call from Stockholm? It's time for STAT's 2022 Nobel Prize predictions - STAT - October 7th, 2022
- Dalhousie to present exhibition celebrating Gerhard Herzberg and his legacy - Dal News - October 7th, 2022
- Why Some People Should Rethink Their Morning Cup Of Coffee - Health Digest - October 7th, 2022
- Cell and Gene Therapy: Rewriting the Future of Medicine - Technology Networks - October 7th, 2022
- UofL researchers lead the call to increase genetic diversity in immunogenomics - uoflnews.com - July 6th, 2021
- In Brief This Week: Foundation Medicine, Myriad Genetics, Genetron Health, and More - GenomeWeb - July 6th, 2021
- More filling? Tastes great? How flies, and maybe people, choose their food - Yale News - July 6th, 2021
- Genetic mapping of subsets of patients with fragile X syndro | TACG - Dove Medical Press - July 6th, 2021
- What is The Babydust Method? Danielle Lloyd swears method helped her conceive girl - The Mirror - July 6th, 2021
- Datar Cancer Genetics joins hands with US based Iylon Precision Oncology to offer personalized Precision Oncology cancer treatment solutions - PR Web - July 6th, 2021
- Mapping a pathway to competitive production - hortidaily.com - hortidaily.com - July 6th, 2021
- Associations between pancreatic expression quantitative traits and risk of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. - Physician's Weekly - July 6th, 2021
- Global Genomics Market | Rising Incidence of Chronic and Genetic Diseases are Key Factors to Grow Market During 2021-2029 | 23andMe, Agilent... - July 6th, 2021
- The Babydust Method Danielle Lloyd used to conceive a girl after four sons and how it works - RSVP Live - July 6th, 2021
- In the beginning science and faith - The Irish Times - June 24th, 2021
- Ancient Maya Maintained Native Tropical Forest Plants around Their Water Reservoirs | Archaeology - Sci-News.com - June 24th, 2021
- Local foundation awards $1.25 million to MIND Institute to study rare genetic condition - UC Davis Health - June 24th, 2021
- Xlife Sciences AG: Collaboration with the University of Marburg - Yahoo Finance - June 24th, 2021
- Genetics diagnostics in India is on the verge of transformation: Neeraj Gupta, Founder and CEO of Genes2me - The Financial Express - June 24th, 2021
- Precision Medicine: Improving Health With Personalized Solutions - BioSpace - June 24th, 2021
- Half of Portland areas 22 top National Merit winners hail from just 2 schools - OregonLive - June 24th, 2021
- Investing in stem cells, the building blocks of the body - MoneyWeek - June 24th, 2021
- New study finds low levels of a sugar metabolite associates with disability and neurodegeneration in multiple sclerosis - Newswise - May 14th, 2021
- Cernadas-Martn Is a Champion for Marine and Human Diversity | | SBU News - Stony Brook News - May 14th, 2021
- Four Penn Faculty: Election to the National Academy of Sciences - UPENN Almanac - May 14th, 2021
- Is there a difference between a gene-edited organism and a 'GMO'? The question has important implications for regulation - Genetic Literacy Project - May 14th, 2021
- 5 Students Inducted Into American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Honor Society - Wesleyan Connection - May 14th, 2021
- The Science of Aliens, Part 2: What Kind of Genetic Code Would Extraterrestrials Have? - Air & Space Magazine - May 14th, 2021
- UT Austin Faculty Member Receives 2021 Piper Professor Award - Office of the Executive Vice President and Provost - UT News | The University of Texas... - May 14th, 2021
- Distinguished University of Birmingham plant scientist elected to the Royal Society - University of Birmingham - May 14th, 2021
- Double Hoo Research: Undergrads and Grads Team Up to Create Knowledge - University of Virginia - May 14th, 2021
- Global Genetic Testing Market Top Countries Analysis and Manufacturers With Impact of COVID-19 | 2021-2028 Detail Analysis focusing on Application,... - May 14th, 2021
- Morag Park named to the Order of Quebec - McGill Reporter - McGill Reporter - May 14th, 2021
- Third Rock Ventures Launches Flare Therapeutics With $82 Million Series A - BioSpace - May 14th, 2021
- The Royal Society announces election of new Fellows 2021 - Cambridge Network - May 14th, 2021
- Researchers Decode the "Language" of Immune Cells - Technology Networks - May 14th, 2021
- RepliCel Launches the Next Stage of a Research Project with the University of British Columbia to Build World-Class Hair Follicle Cell Data Map -... - May 14th, 2021
- Mice Sperm Sabotage Other Swimmers With Poison | Smart News - Smithsonian Magazine - February 14th, 2021
- Study Identifies Never-Before-Seen Dual Function in Enzyme Critical for Cancer Growth - Newswise - February 14th, 2021
- Devious sperm 'poison' their rivals, forcing them to swim in circles until they die - Livescience.com - February 14th, 2021
- More needs to be done to find and fight COVID-19 variants, says Colorado researcher - FOX 31 Denver - February 14th, 2021
- Selfish sperm genes 'poison' the competition for the win - Big Think - February 14th, 2021
- Some sperm cells swim faster and even poison their competition to climb to the top - ZME Science - February 14th, 2021
- We are scientists: U of T researchers reach out to girls and women around the world - News@UofT - February 14th, 2021
- Mutations in frogs point to autism genes' shared role in neurogenesis - Spectrum - February 14th, 2021
- Global Genetic Testing Market Insights, Size Estimation, Research Insights, COVID-19 Impact and Future Trends By 2028 KSU | The Sentinel Newspaper -... - February 14th, 2021
- Acer Therapeutics Announces Topline Results from its Bioequivalence Trial of ACER-001 Compared to BUPHENYL Under Fed Conditions - GlobeNewswire - February 14th, 2021
- GeneSight Psychotropic Test's Combinatorial Approach Proves Better than Single-Gene Testing at Predicting Patient Outcomes and Medication Blood Levels... - February 14th, 2021
- Gu Ailing Eileen: I've learned to win for myself, not other people - Olympic Channel - February 14th, 2021