Drifter charged in stabbing death of champ golfer in Iowa

Celia Barquin Arozamena was found dead at a golf course in Ames, Iowa. Collin Daniel Richards has been arrested and charged with her murder. (Reuters)
Updated 19 September 2018
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Drifter charged in stabbing death of champ golfer in Iowa

  • Celia Barquin Arozamena was found in a pond at Coldwater Golf Links in Ames, about 50 kilometers north of Des Moines
  • A police dog tracked Barquin’s scent to a temporary camp along a creek near the golf course, where a suspect was apprehended

AMES, Iowa: A homeless man attacked and killed a top amateur golfer from Spain who was playing a round near her university campus in central Iowa, leaving her body in a pond on the course, police said Tuesday.
Collin Daniel Richards, 22, has been charged with first-degree murder in the death of Celia Barquin Arozamena, a student at Iowa State University.
Barquin was found Monday morning in a pond at Coldwater Golf Links in Ames, about 30 miles (50 kilometers) north of Des Moines. Police were called to the golf course around 10:20 a.m. to investigate a possible missing female after golfers found a golf bag with no one around it.
Officers found Barquin’s body some distance from the bag, with several stab wounds to her upper torso, head and neck, according to the criminal complaint filed Tuesday against Richards.
A police dog tracked Barquin’s scent to a temporary camp along a creek near the golf course, where Richards had been living in a tent, the complaint said. Officers found Richards with several fresh scratches on his face consistent with fighting, and a deep laceration in his left hand that he tried to conceal, it said.

An acquaintance of Richards told investigators that the suspect had said in recent days that he had “an urge to rape and kill a woman” while they were walking on a trail near the course, the complaint said. A second acquaintance told police that Richards arrived at his home on Monday appearing “disheveled and covered in blood, sand and water.” He bathed and left with his clothes in a backpack.
Investigators later recovered two pairs of shorts with blood stains and a knife that Richards allegedly gave to two other people after the slaying, the complaint said. Those two individuals were driving Richards out of town after the slaying, but he asked them to drop him off near the camp so he could get his tent and that’s when officers arrested him, it said.
Barquin was the 2018 Big 12 champion and Iowa State Female Athlete of the Year. The university said the native of Puente San Miguel, Spain, was finishing her civil engineering degree this semester after exhausting her eligibility at Iowa State in 2017-2018.
She was one of the most accomplished players in Cyclone golf history, the university said. In April, she became the second women’s golfer at Iowa State to earn medalist honors at a conference tournament when claiming the 2018 Big 12 Championship. She did it with a three-shot victory.
Barquin, who was ranked No. 69 nationally by Golfweek, ended her career as a Cyclone with a fourth-straight NCAA Regional appearance and earned All-Big 12 Team honors for the third time — the second player in Iowa State’s history to do so.
She became the third Cyclone women’s golfer to compete in the US Women’s Open Championship, the university said. The team announced Tuesday it was pulling out of the East & West Match Play in Ann Arbor, Michigan, to be with friends and family and to grieve their loss.
Iowa State President Wendy Wintersteen said in a statement on Twitter that she was “deeply saddened to learn of the tragic death” of Barquin, describing her as a “dedicated civil engineering student” and an “acclaimed golfer with a bright future.”
Head women’s golf coach Christie Martens said in a release that Barquin was “loved by all her teammates and friends” and was an “outstanding representative of our school.”
“We will never forget her competitive drive to be the best and her passion for life,” Martens said.


Palestinian family living in Gaza tent denied evacuation to UK despite appeal by academic father

Updated 4 sec ago
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Palestinian family living in Gaza tent denied evacuation to UK despite appeal by academic father

  • Bassem Abudagga, studying for a PhD in York, was told his wife and children’s case not ‘compelling’ enough
  • Family must give biometric data for their visas despite no facilities providing the service in Gaza

LONDON: The UK Home Office has told a Palestinian academic studying in Britain that his wife and children would not be brought to the UK from Gaza as their case is not “sufficiently compelling” for evacuation.

In a letter, the department told Bassem Abudagga his family would need to attend a visa application center in Gaza to provide biometric data before traveling, despite there being no such facility in the enclave.

Abudagga, studying on a scholarship for a doctorate at York St John University, has not seen his family since September 2023, three weeks before the Hamas-led attack on Israel that sparked a regional war. His wife Marim, son Karim, aged 6, and daughter Talya, 10, are living in a tent after their house was destroyed.

On receiving the Home Office letter, Abudagga told The Guardian: “I felt my final hope of being reunited with my wife and children after more than three years had been lost. It was very, very hard.”

He added that his wife “kept saying to me when I called, ‘It seems we will never meet again. Don’t make any more efforts to bring us to the UK because it seems the UK will never get us there. Just keep concentrating on your studies.’”

The letter added that Abudagga’s family’s situation had also been measured against “the interests of national and border security.”

Abudagga said: “When I read that they link bringing my family to the UK with UK security, and suggest the children are better off in Gaza, I simply could not believe in British values and norms anymore. I expected the British government cared about family life, about human rights.”

He had asked the Home Office to give a decision in principle on whether his family’s visa applications would be accepted before requiring his wife to give biometric data. This would have allowed the family to appeal to be evacuated to a third country with a VAC in order to speed up their application. The request was denied.

The Home Office said it was “not satisfied that (the family’s) circumstances are sufficiently compelling for (us) to be able to deviate from our normal policy that requires your clients to attend a VAC prior to consideration of their applications.”

It added that, as Abudagga claimed he eventually wished to return to Gaza, his UK stay was only temporary.

“Consequently it is appropriate for your minor clients to remain with their primary carer, their mother, until circumstances change,” the Home Office said.

The letter said that “circumstances in Gaza are difficult and that due to displacement it may be more difficult to access certain necessities,” but continued that the department was “not satisfied” there was enough evidence to prove the family needed to be evacuated before “it is safe to visit a VAC.”

While trapped in Gaza, Marim has also had to contend with the death of her father two weeks ago.

“My wife is trying to do the daily duties of bringing food, securing the tent from the weather — it is very cold, very windy, very rainy — when her father passed away two weeks ago,” Abudagga said. “The details are very, very hard.”

Another student in the UK was recently permitted to bring her family from Gaza after they were approved to perform biometric checks in Jordan.

“This lady was allowed to get her fingerprints done in Jordan and the Home Office later allowed her family to join. The case is the same as mine,” Abudagga told The Guardian.

Rebecca Long-Bailey, Abudagga’s local MP, wrote to Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, to ask the Home Office to reconsider the case, but the decision was upheld. Abudagga has since begun the process of legally challenging it.

Sarah Crowe, a lawyer at law firm Leigh Day representing the family, told The Guardian: “We will be writing to the Home Office to set out why their decision-making in this case is plainly unlawful. In line with the Home Office’s own policy, Bassem’s family should have their applications predetermined, which is an important step in reuniting the family.”