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Wrongful death lawsuit in Vancouver: ‘You’ll be able to decide who really killed Effie Entezari’
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Wrongful death lawsuit in Vancouver: ‘You’ll be able to decide who really killed Effie Entezari’


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/ Clark County News

Entezari’s husband convicted of 1989 Vancouver murder, but daughter says another man did it

Published: October 29, 2024, 11:10

Update: October 29, 2024 11:12

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Attorney Renee Rothauge (left) shows a video clip to jurors Monday during the wrongful death lawsuit filed by the family of Effie Entezari, who was murdered in 1989. The man responsible for Entezari's death, although the woman's estranged husband was convicted of the crime and sentenced to 16 years in prison.

Attorney Renee Rothauge (left) shows a video clip to jurors Monday during the wrongful death lawsuit filed by the family of Effie Entezari, who was murdered in 1989. The man responsible for Entezari’s death, although the woman’s estranged husband was convicted of the crime and sentenced to 16 years in prison. (Taylor Balkom/Colombian)
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Lawyers for a Vancouver woman who believes her father was wrongfully convicted in the 1989 shooting that killed her mother began their case Monday. against the man they believed was truly responsible..

The civil wrongful death lawsuit was filed by the family of Eftekhar “Effie” Entezari against Viktor Pell, now 86, and eight unnamed defendants. Entezari was born on May 1, 1989 at 11614 NE 49th St. in Vancouver. He was killed in the parking lot of his apartment complex at .

Effie Entezari’s estranged husband, Mike Entezari, maintained his innocence until he died shortly after being released from a 16-year prison sentence for the murder, the family’s attorney, Renee Rothauge, said in her opening statement.

“This is not about sending Mr. Pell to prison, this is about holding him accountable and finding justice for the Entezari family after all this time,” Rothauge told the Clark County Superior Court jury. “You will be able to decide who really killed Effie Entezari, and you will be the jury that will set the record straight.”

In his written statement read by an interpreter, Pell cited Mike Entezari’s conviction as evidence of his own innocence. He denied any involvement in Effie Entezari’s death.

In his statement, he said that he could not afford a lawyer to assist him in the case and that he did not intend to testify in his own defense for fear that the plaintiff’s lawyers would distort his words.

“The simple truth is that I am innocent of the charges made against me,” Pell said in his statement. “The plaintiff’s legal team will undoubtedly write a detailed and fantastic story.”

Entezaris’ daughter, Pooneh Gray, ran ads online, on social media and on TV earlier this year We urge Clark County Prosecutor Tony Golik to reopen murder case. And he has previously offered a $250,000 reward for information on who else might be responsible.

In his statement, Pell said that the family had previously offered him a reward for any information, but he did not know anything and if he had known, he would have told them.

Golik last month refused to disclose his analysis of the information Gray’s attorneys collected so as not to influence his wrongful death lawsuit. While he said he would follow the outcome of the case, he declined to say whether his office would file criminal charges against Pell if a civil jury finds him responsible for Effie Entezari’s death.

Rothauge said Clark County sheriff’s detectives did not properly consider any other suspects in the woman’s killing other than her husband. Their desire to obtain enough evidence to arrest Mike Entezari meant that they pressured scientists at the Washington State Patrol crime lab to falsely link his gun to the crime.

Lawyers played an animation explaining how the armed attack took place and how the killer escaped. They promised to show this jury new evidence that the jury in the criminal case had ignored decades ago.

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Rothauge said they will get information from a DNA expert who will testify that the DNA left on Effie Entezari’s sweater may belong to Pell and not Mike Entezari. He said a firearms expert would tell them Mike Entezari’s gun could not have fired the fatal shot. They will also hear from the couple’s daughter Gray, who has spent her adult life investigating the crime.

“The evidence will show that Mike Entezari did not kill Effie Entezari, and the evidence will show that it was Viktor Pell who did it,” Rothauge said.

Pell said he could understand Gray’s desire to clear his father’s name because “We all have parents and we want to think what’s best for them.”

But he said they caught the wrong man.