Expert witness: 51视频-Dearborn researcher examines crime and culture

March 7, 2014

Thirteen years ago and 450 miles east of Dearborn, Brian Yasipour carried out a callous crime that caught the quiet town of Williamsport, Pa., by surprise.

Cam Amin

Yasipour, an Iranian immigrant, killed his four-year-old daughter.

Meanwhile, Camron Amin was on sabbatical at University of Michigan-Dearborn. The history professor had no ties to Williamsport or Yasipour, but 鈥渙ut of the blue鈥 as he called it, Amin received a phone call from the suspected murderer鈥檚 attorney.

An expert in Iranian studies, Amin was asked by the defense team to provide insight into the cultural background that Yasipour could have been exposed to while growing up in Iran. Yasipour鈥檚 attorney hoped to use cultural background to prove his client鈥檚 鈥渄eranged state of mind,鈥 but he also worried prosecutors would use his client鈥檚 ethnicity to prove his 鈥渃old, calculating state of mind,鈥 Amin said.

The stakes were high, as Yasipour faced first-degree murder and the death penalty.

鈥淚f one looked at him through the lens of modern Iranian or Islamic culture, would he seem more or less deranged?鈥 Amin said. 鈥淚t was not just an academic question; his life depended on the answer.鈥

The judge eventually dropped the death penalty and Amin was not required to testify in court.

In 2006, Yasipour was found 鈥済uilty, but insane鈥 of third-degree murder, possession of an instrument of crime and tampering with evidence. A judge sentenced Yasipour to spend at least 21 years behind bars.

And while Amin initially had no ties to the case, this particular Pennsylvania murder trial sparked a lengthy research project that eventually will culminate in a book about Yasipour and how the convicted murderer鈥檚 cultural background factored into his situation.

鈥淚鈥檓 not a journalist,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 just trying to understand certain things about the case.鈥

After sentencing, Amin has sifted through hundreds of pages of court transcripts and media clips to learn more. Amin鈥檚 research also involved a trip to a Pennsylvania prison, where he interviewed Yasipour.

鈥淚鈥檝e never spoken with anybody that I knew to be a murderer before,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檝e never been to a prison before. There鈥檚 a certain feeling you get when you visit a prison. When I left there, I just had to return to my hotel room, close the curtains and sleep.鈥

Amin鈥檚 past research has involved oral histories, but nothing to this extent. His expertise in Iranian studies propelled him into a unique situation that he never expected鈥攕erving as a cultural expert in a murder case.

鈥淧eople often think of university professors and their research as being detached from the 鈥榬eal鈥 world and of mattering to no one other than a small handful of scholars interested in the same narrow topic,鈥 said College of Arts, Sciences, and Letters Dean Martin Hershock. 鈥淧rofessor Cam Amin鈥檚 work demonstrates just how connected scholarship and 鈥榬eal鈥 life often are. This was a case that received national attention and the fact that the attorneys in this case sought out Professor Amin speaks volumes about his reputation and the work that he does.鈥