Man on trial in death of religious wife

BOSTON, MA Her devotion, prosecutors said, didn't sit well with her husband.

On May 21, 2006, a bloodied Jeremias Bins walked into the Framingham police station and said he had just bludgeoned his wife and stepson with a hammer, authorities said.

Bins allegedly said he was angry over the amount of time his wife spent with members of the church. Souza and her 11-year-old son, Caique, had been found an hour earlier by police who responded to her 911 call.

"Can you come to my house, please? I have a problem with my husband," Souza had said, according to court documents filed by prosecutors. Then the line went quiet, and police got only busy signals when they called back. Officers went to the home and found Souza, 37, and her son lying in blood on a bedroom floor.

Jury selection began Wednesday in Bins' murder trial. Opening statements are scheduled for Friday in Middlesex Superior Court in Woburn.

Bins' attorney, Earl Howard, has said Bins' confession was coerced, but a judge denied his request to suppress his clients' statements to police. Howard declined to discuss the case Wednesday as the trial got under way.

Prosecutors said Bins, 33, confessed to the killings after taking a cab to the police station with the couple's 5-month-old son, Phillipe. He handed the baby to officers and said, "I'm sorry," according to police.

Bins also allegedly told police he was angry because his wife was trying to persuade him to be baptized as a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

About two hours before the killings, Bins called members of the Framingham ward of the church and told them he did not want "you missionaries" at his home any more, according to a police report.

Some members of the congregation told police they knew that Bins did not support his wife's involvement but said they were stunned by the killings. The couple had met through the church when Bins, a native of Brazil, started taking English classes there. Souza, also from Brazil, helped teach the classes. Bins occasionally attended church services with his wife, the baby and Caique, her son by a previous marriage, but he did not become a member.

"I had heard he didn't understand why she would look to do things for the church at times, but no one knew it was to the degree of what happened," said Terry Holmes, the former bishop of the Framingham congregation.

"He seemed like a decent, decent fellow," said Holmes, who married the couple in 2005.

Souza, a housekeeper who had been a member of the church for about five years, was well-liked by members of the Framingham ward and by the members of a smaller, Portuguese-speaking branch she joined in the months before her death.

Bins told police that Caique never really accepted his marriage to his mother, and that he and the boy would fight. The couple also had financial problems, according to church members.

Bins could not speak much English and had trouble getting regular carpentry jobs, Holmes said.

"I remember him asking me one time if I knew of any work that needed to be done or if any members of the church had any work for him," Holmes said.

Bins allegedly told police he and his wife had been fighting when she picked up the phone to call police. He said he went to the closet where he kept his carpentry tools, picked up a hammer and hit his wife on the head while she was on the phone. When Caique walked into the room, he struck the boy with the hammer, he allegedly told police.

Police found a bloody framing hammer in the bedroom where the bodies were found. Bins had blood on both sides of his hands, shorts and legs when he went to the police station, prosecutors said in court documents.

Maurice Hiers, president of the Boston division of the church, said he had been unaware that Bins resented his wife's involvement in the church.

"There are still feelings about that, sad feelings, feelings of what didn't we see, what could we have done, how could we have helped her?" he said.

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