February 6, 2004
Murder trial hears
details of shooting
"I took his hand
and said, 'Ziggy, I'm so sorry.'"
GREG
YOUNGER-LEWIS
CAPE DORSET - Early one
Monday, around 2 a.m., Const. Jurgen Seewald picked up the phone and was told
a man had a gun and wouldn't leave his girlfriend's house.
Accused
cop-killer Salamonie Jaw heard his ex-girlfriend Barbara Ettinger give evidence
against him at his trial in Cape Dorset this week. (PHOTO BY GREG-UNGER-LEWIS)
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The RCMP dispatcher on
the other end said the man was promising a fight. The dispatcher added with
a slight laugh to be cautious.
Seewald, who had been a
peacekeeper in the former Yugoslavia and a Mountie for more than 25 years before
being posted in Cape Dorset six months earlier, replied, "Oh, good. I'll
be right over."
Half an hour later, the
47-year-old officer affectionately known as Ziggy was dead - his blood spilled
on the floor of the couple's apartment entrance.
During the first week in
the murder trial of Salomonie Jaw, a territorial court and jury heard graphic
details from 911 recordings, including the voice of Barbara Ettinger, Jaw's
distressed girlfriend who couldn't get him to leave after threatening that "there
would be trouble."
Ettinger, a former Northern
store office manager, took the stand in a makeshift courtroom on Tuesday, almost
three years after she held the dying officer's hand and said she was sorry for
what had happened to him.
In the coming weeks, the
six-man, six-woman all-Inuit jury is expected to decide whether Jaw, a 49-year-old
hunter and former carving packer for the Northern store, is guilty of first-degree
murder. After being arrested on the day of the shooting, Jaw pleaded not guilty
to the charges.
When called to the stand,
Ettinger walked into the community hall where the trial is taking place, past
Jaw, holding her head high. A small brass pendant shaped like an ulu hung below
her chest as she sat in the witness chair, wearing a black and brown sweater
and black jeans.
While Jaw gazed at her
occasionally from where he sat with his lawyers, Ettinger told the court about
how she was expecting a turbulent weekend because Jaw had run out of hashish
and marijuana. She testified that he always became moody when drugs were scarce.
During most of Ettinger's testimony, Jaw watched the court translator, or put
on his eyeglasses and took notes. He wore jeans and kamiks like most days, but
had changed his Inuksuk T-shirt for one with a Lifesavers logo, with slogans
promoting safe sex.
On the night of the shooting,
Jaw had been badgering her about her past relationships and insisted on seeing
copies of recent e-mails. When he found she had been writing about how living
with him was like "living in hell," arguments erupted, and he heard
how she hadn't told him this because he didn't want to move elsewhere.
Later when the two were
lying down, Jaw wanted Ettinger to undress but she wouldn't. She tried to leave
and he pulled her back onto the bed, yanked off her sweater and tried to take
off her shirt. She screamed several times to the neighbours to phone the police.
Jaw then went and got her
the phone and said, "If you want the police, you phone them."
She called, distraught
and told a dispatcher in Iqaluit about Jaw's refusal to leave. When she offered
to leave, Jaw told her there would be "trouble" if she did. As heard
in court on a grainy phone recording of the call, she compared Jaw's combative
ways to "torture."
If police came, Jaw was
primed for a stand-off, Ettinger said. He told her he wasn't going to go willingly.
While waiting for the police,
she saw Jaw, a member of the local Rangers, check his shotgun and rifle in a
closet near the front door to see if they were loaded.
When Const. Seewald knocked
on the door shortly after 2 a.m., the officer brushed aside Ettinger's concerns
about the guns. "It'll be all right," he told her.
Soon after entering the
apartment, Seewald asked Jaw to sit and then forced him into a chair. Once sitting,
Jaw noticed his shirt was torn, prompting Ettinger to go into the bedroom to
get another.
Less than 10 seconds later,
Ettinger returned to the living room to find Seewald pepperspraying Jaw in the
face. They wrestled their way to the front door, and the next Ettinger could
see, the two men were in a tug-of-war over the shotgun. Jaw had the gun handle;
Seewald had the barrel.
A shot was fired, and Jaw
looked over the bleeding officer and said, "I shot him."
Jaw then went directly
to the bedroom, knelt at the corner of the bed, and held the gun to his head.
"He said he was going
to shoot himself," Ettinger told the court.
But he didn't. Instead,
he changed into a new shirt, put on his boots, hat and jacket, and walked past
the dying police officer with his shotgun in his hand.
Once she finished telling
the court Jaw had fled the apartment, promising to kill himself and never come
back again, she became red in the face and reached for a tissue.
Then, she told the jury
about the officer's last words to her.
"I took his hand and
said, 'Ziggy, I'm so sorry," Ettinger recalled.
"He said, 'It's not
your fault.... I could have handled things differently."
Besides proving that Jaw
knew Seewald was an officer, and that he killed him with intent, Judge John
Vertes told the jury the Crown must also prove that Seewald was acting in the
course of his duties when the shooting occurred.
The fatal phone
call
This is a transcript
from a recording played on Feb. 3, after Salamonie Jaw's ex-girlfriend
Barbara Ettinger was called as a witness in Jaw's first-degree murder
trial.
The call took place
on March 5, 2001, at 2:05 a.m., between Miranda Harding, an RCMP dispatcher
in Iqaluit, and Ettinger.
Harding: Nunavut
RCMP.
Ettinger:
My name is Barbara. I need help.
Harding: Okay,
Barbara. What's going on?
Ettinger: My
partner is, will not leave the premises.
Harding: Okay.
What...
Ettinger:
And I have asked him to go repeatedly and he is getting...
Jaw: Why.
Ettinger:
...dressed because the police...
Jaw: Why.
Ettinger: He
is prepared to put up a fight when the police arrive, or so he is telling
me.
Harding: Okay,
what house number are you are at [sic], are you at?
Ettinger:
Northern store house. It's two-six-five.
Jaw: Ask her
why.
Ettinger:
Two-six-five?
Jaw: Ask her
why.
Ettinger:
Pardon me?
Harding: What's
your last name Barbara?
Ettinger:
It's Ettinger. E-T-T-I-N-G-E-R.
Harding: What's
his name?
Ettinger:
Salomonie Jaw.
Harding: Salomonie
Jaw. Okay, has he been drinking?
Ettinger: No.
Harding: Have
you been drinking?
Ettinger:
No.
Harding: Okay.
Uh, what is the phone number there, Barbara?
Ettinger:
Eight-five-one-nine.
Harding: Okay,
and, um, why have you asked him to leave the house?
Ettinger:
Because we continue to fight and he will not stop and it's at a point
of torture.
Harding: Okay.
Any physical fights going on or is it just verbal?
Ettinger:
It's potentially.
Harding: Potentially
it's physical.
Ettinger:
Yeah.
Harding: Potentially
what?
Ettinger:
Physical.
Harding: Okay.
And does he live there with you at two-six-five, Barbara?
Ettinger: Yes,
he does.
Jaw: (Unintelligible)
Harding: And
you've asked...
Ettinger: You
want to talk to her?
Harding: Barbara?
Ettinger:
Yes.
Harding: Okay.
And you've asked him repeatedly to leave?
Ettinger: Yes
I have.
Harding: Okay.
Okay Barbara. I'm going to give the on-call member a call, okay?
Ettinger:
Thank you.
Harding: Do
you guys have any weapons in your house?
Ettinger: Yes.
Harding: Um,
what kind of weapons?
Ettinger: There's
firearms and there's knives.
Harding: What
kind of firearms?
Ettinger:
We don't have bombs. Pardon me?
Harding: What
kind of firearms?
Jaw: Bombs
and bombs and snipers.
Harding: Are
they readily accessible, the firearms, Barbara?
Ettinger: They
can be.
Harding: Okay.
Jaw: Where's
my smokes?
Harding: Okay,
I'm going to get hold of the, the uh, on-call member, okay? And someone
should be...
Ettinger: Okay.
Harding: ...contacting
you very shortly.
Ettinger:
Thank you.
Harding: Okay,
Barbara?
Ettinger:
Yup.
Harding: Okay.
Bye-bye.
Ettinger:
Bye.
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