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Abdul Samad Khorramshahi says about this case: "The nature of this incident is clear to everyone, and it seems a bit repetitive to state again that Shahla was not the murderer, but there were some objections to the trial process, which are not specific to this case and exist in most controversial criminal cases. Recounting these objections is also for the purpose of ensuring that in future such cases, evidence is found in favor of the litigants (accused and plaintiff) and that the trial moves within a legal framework and on the right track. Among the objections was the discussion of "eliminating the prosecution." When the prosecution was removed from the trial system and the investigating judge and the judge who drafted the verdict were the same, naturally the trial report could not be without flaws, because in the prosecution, there is a judge, investigator, and prosecutor, and when an indictment is issued and a crime is declared, the reasons for the defendant's guilt are stated, but the court is at a higher level, reading and hearing the statements of the parties and voting as an impartial judge. The next issue that we mentioned in court at the same time was the issue of evidence, which must be convincing and part of the evidence to prove the case and the penal code. The Islamic penal code considers evidence to prove the case to be based on the knowledge of the judge in confession, witness testimony, oath, etc., but in this case, the evidence was not sufficient and the process proceeded solely on the basis of Shahla's confessions." With the discovery of the body of Laleh Saharkhizan on Wednesday, October 7, 2002, murdered with multiple stab wounds in her home, Khadija Jahed (Shahla) was brought to the fore in this case. This news received many reactions. The next day, newspapers wrote about the discovery of Laleh's body, who had been brutally murdered with 37 stab wounds, and they were searching for the answer to the question: who was the murderer of Laleh Saharkhizan? Since in such crimes, the first suspect is the victim's wife, but Nasser Mohammadkhani was in the German camp with the Persepolis team. On the other hand, considering the way the victim was killed and that there was no robbery from inside the house, the hypothesis that Laleh was the victim of revenge was considered and extensive police arrests of suspects began, but the investigation and interrogation of all these suspects failed to reveal the secrets of the crime until some time later, the officers identified a woman who became the most key suspect in the crime. The intelligence department detectives initially arrested several people, including Nasser Mohammadkhani, as suspects, but after a few days, they came across a new name by tracking Nasser Mohammadkhani's account. Shahla Jahed, a woman who took a check to the bank and withdrew money from his account. With the arrest of Shahla Jahed, the case took on a different color and shape, and in the meantime, many questions and speculations arose in public opinion about whether Shahla Jahed was guilty or not. Later, during the investigation of her case, Shahla said that when she was only 13 years old, she had fallen in love with Nasser Mohammadkhani; "I lived in a large family in the south of Tehran. I loved football and then I fell in love with Nasser and I wanted to meet him in any way possible." When she became younger, she was not only able to visit Nasser, but also entered his life and secretly entered into a temporary marriage with him and moved into a house that Nasser had rented for her. Shahla denied the murder for 11 months until... Shahla had been in police custody since the day she was arrested, and during this time, a lot of evidence had been obtained that showed that she was the only one who knew the secret of the crime. The officers discovered a diary from her that showed that she wrote down her daily activities in it, but on the page that showed the day Laleh was murdered, Shahla had written something and then crossed it out. This was the only writing mistake that was visible in Shahla's diary. • ❌The secret of Shahla Jahed's case was revealed, the complicity... • ❗️ A blogger with the complicity of her daughter and her ex-husband... • ❗️ My killer aunt killed her sister out of jealousy❗️P... #Shahla_Jahed #Criminal_Criminal_Case #True_Story #Unsolved_Murder #Laleh_Saharkhizan #Naser_Mohammadkhani