Dr. Labeed Nouri, 40, holds daughter Maria, 4. He was freed from prison in April after lies from the witness stand were exposed.
(Free Press) STERLING HEIGHTS - Dr. Labeed Nouri,
40, served more than three years behind bars, convicted of sexually
assaulting a young woman who worked in his medical office.
He got
out of prison after prosecutors learned in April that the woman and her
boyfriend lied repeatedly on the witness stand.
Nouri, who maintains his
innocence, is now reunited with his wife and four children. He's back
practicing as an orthopedic surgeon.
And he's on a mission: Nouri is trying to get his accuser charged with perjury.
"She
took three years from me," he said. "I can never get them back. My
youngest daughter was a baby when I went away. I never saw her first
step, heard her say her first word. It's my turn for justice."
The
woman, through her attorney, declined an interview. The Free Press is
not naming her because she has not been charged with a crime.
Oakland
County Prosecutor Jessica Cooper, who dropped felony charges against
Nouri and sought his release from prison when she learned of the
perjury, said she is awaiting police reports before deciding whether to
file any charges against the woman.
"We moved heaven and earth to get him out immediately when we learned of this," Cooper said.
Now free, doctor learns letter in sex assault case was forged
When Labeed Nouri was sentenced to prison in April 2010, the judge read a letter signed by his accuser's priest.
"A
young girl has had her youth stolen," the letter read. "I have told her
to forgive Labeed Nouri. She has forgiven him, but she needs closure on
this terrible ordeal. ... It is time to grant her wish of getting her
justice and put Labeed Nouri in jail where he deserves to be."
Oakland
County Judge Mark Goldsmith did just that, sentencing Nouri to 10 to 20
years in prison for sexual assault convictions involving a woman who
was 19 when she worked in his medical office in 2007. By then, Nouri
already had spent 700 days in the Oakland County Jail awaiting trial and
later trying to get his conviction overturned.
Free since April
2011, after prosecutors learned the woman had lied on the stand, Nouri
said he only recently learned about another lie. The letter purported to
be from the Rev. Zuhair Kejbou of St. Joseph Chaldean Catholic Church
in Troy wasn't written by him.
"I have never written any letter," Kejbou told the Free Press. "Anybody can forge a signature."
Kejbou
said he hasn't seen the woman, who is a member of his congregation,
since he learned of the forged letter and has not questioned her or her
family about it.
The woman, whom the Free Press is not naming
because she has not been charged with a crime, declined an interview
request through her attorney.
Nouri and his attorney Mark Kriger
are calling for an investigation into the forged letter. They say that
letter and others written on the accuser's behalf persuaded the judge to
give Nouri a long prison sentence.
"It is a fraud and an
obstruction of justice," Kriger said. "The judge relied on those letters
to decide on my client's sentence, and he sentenced him to prison for
10 years. It's a travesty."
After-hours assault alleged
Nouri, a Chaldean who emigrated from Iraq in 2003, had a thriving
medical practice in Hazel Park and Sterling Heights, often treating
other Chaldeans in the tight-knit community. The married father was vice
president of the church council at St. Toma Syriac Catholic Church in
Farmington Hills.
In late May 2007, one of Nouri's Chaldean
patients asked whether Nouri would hire his 19-year-old daughter. Nouri and his wife, Rouwaida Nouri, who
managed his medical practice, agreed to hire her for two days a week to
help with filing in their Hazel Park office.
On June 22, 2007, her
sixth day of work, the woman alleged Nouri assaulted her in an exam
room after hours, violating her with his fingers and touching her
breasts and buttocks. The woman said the attack occurred between 7:15
and 7:23 p.m. -- saying she noticed the times on clocks in the office
and in her car when she left. At 7:33 p.m., she called her boyfriend in a
parking lot 2 miles from the office, telling him she had been
assaulted.
Records eventually obtained by the defense show Nouri
was in his office from 7:06 to 7:27 p.m.
The woman's parents took
her to police and to a hospital. She refused to allow a rape exam,
saying she was a virgin and such an exam would "un-virginize me,"
records show. A later external exam at a clinic run by Haven, a
nonprofit that offers support to sexual assault victims, showed a tiny
tear measuring less than half a centimeter.
Nouri was charged with
first-degree criminal sexual conduct and two counts of fourth-degree
criminal sexual conduct for the alleged touching.
Virginity plays central role
From the beginning, defense attorneys contended the woman, who lived
in Sterling Heights with her parents, fabricated the story because she
had been sexually active and needed to explain why she was no longer a
virgin.
Virginity is highly valued in the conservative Chaldean
Catholic Church. During Nouri's trial, defense attorneys presented a
gynecologist who said he was frequently asked by Chaldean families to
examine daughters on the eve of their weddings to verify their
virginity. Sometimes, weddings were called off if a woman was found to
not be a virgin.
Nouri's accuser was asked on the witness stand about her virginity.
"on June 22, 2007, you were a virgin, is that
correct?" defense attorney David Griem asked.
"Yes," she answered.
"You went out of your way to tell everyone that you were a virgin. What was your purpose for doing that?" Griem asked.
She responded, "That would be why, when I had the trauma down there -- it was due to what he did."
When
asked why being a virgin was important to Chaldean women, she said, "If
she is not a virgin, once she does get married, the community thinks of
her as being promiscuous. They will not accept her into a man's family.
They expect her to be pure."
Her boyfriend was called as a prosecution witness, and he also insisted they had never had sex.
The
trial lasted five days. Nouri didn't take the stand in his own defense,
and his attorneys later admitted they didn't fully explain he had the
right to do so -- a point brought up in his post-conviction appeals.
Initially,
the jury was hung, with jurors twice asking to review the accuser's
testimony. On July 2, 2008, they found Nouri guilty. Nouri was repeatedly assaulted by fellow prisoners -- his nose broken and his
teeth cracked. He was hospitalized for three days and received stitches
to his face, according to a federal lawsuit filed against Oakland
County.
Admission of lies caught on tape
In late 2010, Kriger -- Nouri's appellate attorney -- was filing
motions to get the conviction overturned. One day, he heard a shocking
rumor.
The accuser's boyfriend had spotted Nouri's wife and four
children in the community and was suddenly overcome with guilt for lying
about his sexual history with the woman.
When Kriger contacted
the man, he learned he and the accuser had been sexually active for
months leading up to the allegation and had since broken up. Kriger
asked the man to secretly record conversations with the woman. The man
met with her in March, and while recording their conversation, he told
her he was worried private investigators were looking into the perjury.
The
accuser, according to Kriger and prosecutors who have heard the
recording, admits she lied on the stand but instructs the man to keep
denying it if he's questioned.
She tells him that if authorities
discover credit card receipts showing she was at local motels, she will
say she lent the card to a friend.
Kriger took the
recording to prosecutors in April.
Nouri with his wife, Rouwaida Nouri, 38, and their children, from left, Hakam, 15, Jacob, 7, Maria, 4, and Sami, 12. Nouri said he agreed to a deal so he could see his children again.
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