Plainfield man charged with killing Wadea Al-Fayoume, 6, wounding mother pleads not guilty

Joseph Czuba, 71, stabbed a Palestinian American mother and her young son, killing the boy, after blaming them for the war in the Middle East because of their Muslim faith, according to state prosecutors.

SHARE Plainfield man charged with killing Wadea Al-Fayoume, 6, wounding mother pleads not guilty
Wadea Al-Fayoume celebrated his sixth birthday. He was stabbed to death earlier this month. His landlord has been charged with the killing, which authorities say was motivated by war in the Middle East.

Wadea Al-Fayoume

Provided

A Plainfield landlord charged with attacking a Palestinian American woman and killing her young son because of their Muslim faith pleaded not guilty to all charges Monday.

Joseph Czuba, 71, stabbed Hanan Shaheen and her 6-year-old son Wadea Al-Fayoume, killing the boy, after blaming them for the war in the Middle East, state prosecutors said.

Appearing before a judge in Will County, Czuba pleaded not guilty to three counts of first-degree murder, one count of attempted murder, two counts of aggravated battery and two counts of committing a hate crime for the attack.

Czuba was formally indicted on all eight counts last Thursday by an Illinois grand jury.

“The murder was accompanied by exceptionally brutal or heinous behavior indicative of wanton cruelty,” the indictment read.

Judge Donald W. DeWilkins ordered Czuba to remain jailed pending trial.

Relatives and friends of Wadea and Shaheen attended the arraignment but did not speak to the media.

Joseph Czuba, 71, stands before Circuit Judge Dave Carlson for his arraignment in the murder of 6-year-old Wadea Al-Fayoume, at the Will County Courthouse in Joliet.

Joseph Czuba, 71, is accused of fatally stabbing 6-year-old Wadea Al-Fayoume and seriously wounding his mother.

Charles Rex Arbogast/AP

The 71-year-old landlord had become increasingly paranoid about the war between Hamas and Israel after listening to conservative talk radio, prosecutors said in a detention hearing earlier this month.

Czuba’s wife told detectives he “believed he was in danger, and [his tenant Shaheen] was going to call Palestinian friends to come and harm them,” Michael Fitzgerald, a Will County assistant state’s attorney, said during the detention hearing.

He was also worried about a “national day of jihad” Oct. 13, and though nothing happened then, he told his wife he believed something would happen the next day without specifying what, Fitzgerald said.

Czuba asked the family to move out of the home, Fitzgerald said.

On the morning of Oct. 14, Czuba allegedly knocked on the family’s unit, which was separate from his own, and began arguing with Shaheen, 32, about the Middle East, Fitzgerald said.

He stabbed Shaheen in the head and body, but she was able to get into a bathroom with a phone.

She was unable to bring her son and called 911, telling dispatchers “the landlord is killing her baby with a knife,” Fitzgerald said.

Police entered the home in the 16200 block of South Lincoln Highway and found the boy lying shirtless on a bed, Fitzgerald said. He had been stabbed 26 times, according to the Will County sheriff’s office.

Thousands attended services and vigils for Wadea, who was remembered by family as an all-American kid who loved to play basketball and soccer.

“I want to tell the world that Wadea was a 6-year-old kid, and he thought he was going to grow up,” Mahmoud Yousef, Wadea’s uncle, said at an evening service. “He thought he had a future. But unfortunately, that was taken away too early.”

CAIR-Chicago Executive Director Ahmed Rehab met Shaheen after her release from the hospital, and she has asked the public to “pray for peace.”

“Despite the painful loss and the trauma she experienced that morning, her spirit is strong and she is finding peace and answers in her faith in God,” the statement from CAIR read. “She said that she accepts that God chose them for this test — and that she finds solace in ‘remembering Wadea as an angel on Earth, and knowing that he is now an angel in heaven.”

Amid the ongoing war in the Middle East, Chicago is experiencing the worst period of anti-Muslim hate leaders have ever seen, according to Rehab.

This period has been worse than post 9/11 because of the number of threats and the targeting of children, Rehab said during a news conference last week.

The U.S. Department of Justice has opened a federal hate investigation into the attack. The FBI office in Chicago said it was working with Will County authorities.

The Latest
The boy suffered a gunshot wound to the ankle in the 4000 block of West Madison Street and was hospitalized in good condition, authorities say.
Caruso has been essential in this team trying to build an identity, and after missing the last two games with a left ankle injury, he returned Thursday. It was short-lived.
Strike-delayed Emmy show is set for Jan. 15, with the Grammys three weeks later
James Soto, 62, and David Ayala, 60, were released Thursday night after a judge vacated their convictions. They were serving life sentences in the 1981 shooting deaths of a Marine and a teen girl in McKinley Park, and were 20 and 18 when they were wrongfully charged.
Morgan Mesi says Breakthru Beverage Illinois denied coverage of a bilateral mastectomy and hormone therapy, according to a complaint filed in federal court Thursday.