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Aasiya Zubair Hassan's tortured, manipulated life
Published:March 30, 2010, 2:59 PM
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Updated: January 11, 2011, 10:36 PM
When Aasiya Zubair Hassan was finally ready to leave her husband, she prepared herself.
She gathered copies of her police reports, photos of her beaten face, images of her ransacked
house, scripts her husband made her memorize.
Then she painstakingly chronicled her years of torment in a 21-page court statement that
painted her husband as not just a batterer, but a cruel, manipulative monster.
She detailed how he deprived her of sleep to "improve her personality," made her sign memos
authorizing him to punish her if she talked with the police and Child Protective Services, and
threatened her with the loss of her children whenever she tried to break free.
Toward the end of her statement appealing for divorce in February 2009, she reflected on
how furious her husband would be when he saw the document: "I am afraid of what he might do."
One week later, she was dead. Her husband, Muzzammil "Mo" Hassan, led police to her stabbed
and decapitated body in the Bridges TV studio they founded in Orchard Park.
None of this has apparently stopped Hassan from continuing — in letters to reporters and in his defense in court — to try to paint himself as the victim and his wife as the
abuser.
"He was the abuser. He was the perpetrator. Now, he's the manipulator," said Afshan
Qureshi, an advocate of domestic violence victims who knew both Aasiya Zubair Hassan, Hassan's
third wife, and Sadia Hassan, his second wife. "Those who are good at emotional abuse are good
manipulators."
From the Erie County jail, Hassan has sent handwritten letters to The Buffalo News and
others portraying himself as an abused and battered spouse. In each case, he signed his
mother's name to the documents.
"If you are a mother like me, would you like to see your son being abused and cannot even
turn to the system for help?" stated one letter.
It is clear that he wrote the letters, not his mother. Hassan, 45, has neat and distinctive
penmanship. The News found the handwriting in all these letters match that of other documents
signed under his own name. The postmarks are from Buffalo; his mother lives in Texas.
Hassan seems to have no reservations about manipulating people by assuming other
identities. In numerous cases, he appeared to have secretly authored documents that re-created
reality and/or portrayed his wife as a dominating, mentally unstable woman.
Among the examples:
Zubair Hassan stated that her husband forced her to give him the password to her
e-mail account and subsequently logged into her account and sent e-mails to his attorney and
his court-appointed psychologist pretending to be her.
One e-mail sent to psychologist Kenneth Condrell opens by stating, "I have been reading the
Dale Carnegie book on "How to Win Friends and Influence People." There is a chapter about
admitting mistakes quickly and apologizing profusely and repeatedly. It struck me as a
thuderbolt [sic] that I had difficulty admitting a mistake to Mo and struggled to apologize."
It goes on to state, "I honestly do not believe he belongs in the Domestic Violence class.
He has so much insights [sic] into human behavior and self-awareness."
While preparing to defend himself in a child neglect case, Hassan scripted the
responses he wanted his wife to give when his defense lawyer questioned her in court. He made
her stay home for two days to memorize her answers, she said.
In response to a question by defense lawyer David Siegel, "Do you think you are a battered
woman?" Zubair Hassan was to respond as stated in the script: "What nonsense. Complete
hogwash. I have always been a strong woman and a high achiever and no one violates my
boundaries ... My husband cannot tell me what I can and cannot do. I am my own person."
Hassan apparently drafted a letter for psychologist Condrell to sign describing his
wife as a dominating and aggressive woman and further stating that "this personality profile
test further indicates that Mrs. Hassan does not have the personality of a typical abused
wife."
The draft letter goes on to state "that there is no safety need that requires keeping Mr.
and Mrs. Hassan apart over the next 6 months."
A copy of the actual letter signed by Condrell and obtained by The News is much shorter. In
it, Condrell states the personality test taken by Zubair Hassan as part of her master's
program in business "shows her to be a dominant, strong willed, aggressive woman."
But he does not suggest that she wasn't abused and does not state that her husband posed no
safety threat. Further, it omits all references from the draft letter describing the husband
as being "a persuasive, poised, influential, convincing, demonstrative and trusting person."
In Hassan's handwritten letter to The News, he states that Condrell testified in court that
"Aasiya was aggressive, controlling and arrogant, while Mo was humble, kind and polite."
Condrell declined to comment on the matter, citing his professional ethics, but Hassan's
statements are not supported by Condrell's letter to the court.
Hassan wrote two letters to The News under his mother's name. The second letter
included annotated copies of e-mails purportedly between Hassan and his wife.
"Inaccurate image'
The letters describe Hassan as part of an "epidemic" of battered men and cite authors and
experts who have addressed the issue. They also describe his wife as an abuser who "needed
proper medical help."
"Many news stories have presented an inaccurate image of my son ... The main reason for his
difficulties is that he is too much of a people pleaser who avoids conflict. For years he kept
appeasing a demanding wife. The more he appeased her, the more demanding she became," one
letter stated.
These actions are attributed to a man described as "manipulative" and "sick" by those who
knew him and/or Zubair Hassan.
"She's gone, and now the only thing he can destroy is her reputation," said Faizan Haq, who
once worked with both husband and wife. "He has nothing else in his control except her name.
In a way, he's still abusing her. He hasn't stopped."
In January, defense lawyer Frank M. Bogulski stated in court that Hassan was a "battered
spouse" and promised "a revolutionary defense" that would get Hassan acquitted, using both
psychiatric elements and legal justification.
Both defense lawyers, Bogulski and Julie Atti Rogers, state they are not committed to a
specific defense and have not seen the divorce affidavit by Zubair Hassan.
"An affidavit is only one person's side," Bogulski cautioned. "Just because it was put in
an affidavit doesn't mean it was true."
District Attorney Frank Sedita laughed when he heard of Hassan's self-portrayal as a victim
last week.
"What do any of these claims have to do with the issue that is before the court and the
issue that will be before the jury?" he said. "Is there sufficient evidence to prove, beyond a
reasonable doubt, that the defendant murdered his wife? That is the only issue to this point."
In Zubair Hassan's divorce appeal to the court, she attached 16 exhibits attesting to her
husband's abusive and controlling nature.
One exhibit, dated March 7, 2008, is a formally written, "confidential" memorandum of
understanding that Hassan made his wife sign.
In it, both spouses "agree" that under threat of punishment, Zubair Hassan will not call,
cooperate with, or threaten to call law enforcement. She also "agrees" not to threaten to
leave him.
Physical abuse
The sworn statement signed by Zubair Hassan a week before she died brings to light many
other details of a terrifying reality.
Contrary to Hassan's assertions to The News that he never used his physical size to
overpower his wife, Zubair Hassan's sworn statement is full of instances where she claims he
used his size and strength to imprison or physically hurt her.
Most of those claims are supported by police reports, photographs and witnesses. Among the
worst incidents described by Zubair Hassan that were previously unknown to The News:
When Zubair Hassan unexpectedly became pregnant in early summer of 2006, her
husband, who is a stocky 6-foot-2, imprisoned her in the bedroom and sat on her until she
admitted she needed psychiatric help.
In two separate incidents later that month, he punched her in the face, and dragged her
down the driveway and sat on her after trying to convince her to have an abortion. She
subsequently miscarried.
The family's four children — two older ones from a previous marriage, and two
very young children born to Zubair Hassan — were also victims.
Child Protective Services investigated several complaints lodged by school personnel
against Hassan for physical abuse of the children and his wife, ransacking the house and
otherwise posing a threat to their safety.
Jennifer Greer, who baby-sat for the Hassan children from 2002 to 2008, said the young
daughter would talk about hearing thunder on nights when there was no storm, and the young son
spent much of his life living in an imaginary world where everyone was a superhero and they
all cared for each other.
"It was heartbreaking to watch him go through that," she said.
In October 2007, Zubair Hassan tried to fly to New York for a few days, but while
Greer was driving her to the airport along Route 219 with the two young children in the back
seat, Hassan ran their car off the road.
Greer cried as she recalled the terrified children in the car.
"Raising them, they were like my own kids," she said. "All of us could have died on that
day."
Hassan repeatedly punched his wife in the face until blood was pouring out her nose
in April 2008. His wife recalled the oldest daughter screaming to her father, "I'm taking her
to the hospital. I don't care what you say. I'm not going to let her die here."
Hassan did not let her seek medical treatment and refused to let her leave the house for a
week because of her bruises, Zubair Hassan stated.
Two previous wives
Zubair Hassan was not the only woman who charged Hassan with abuse. So did his two previous
wives.
Qureshi, president of Saathi of Rochester, a domestic violence program for South Asian
women, said Hassan once pushed his second wife, Sadia, out of a moving car.
After the Muslim community intervened on her behalf, he told her she could have a divorce
and get her green card only if she let him claim he was the abused victim.
"She was very scared," Qureshi said. "She didn't know what to do, where to go."
Zubair Hassan asked for an order of protection as part of her divorce appeal, allowing her
husband to be near her only at the Bridges TV studio, where she was later found dead.
"I am fearful for my children's safety as well as my own," she stated.
Hassan's lawyers said their client shouldn't be convicted by the media before his murder
trial begins in September.
"We don't in any way want to disparage Aasiya or her memory," Bogulski said. "This is a
horrible tragedy. But at the same time, we have to keep in mind that there is a presumption of
innocence in regard to my client, and we ask the public to keep an open mind."
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