Guest guest Posted July 14, 2006 Report Share Posted July 14, 2006 http://www.thereporter.com/news/ci_4046147 Article Launched: 07/13/2006 07:56:24 AM PDT Suspect denies talk of killing his wife By Hamlin/Senior /Staff Writer Taking the witness stand in his own defense Wednesday, murder defendant Simon Faeed Ranteesi vehemently denied that he had ever planned or talked about killing his estranged wife, who was bludgeoned to death outside Ranteesi's Vacaville home more than three years ago. A former Vacaville welder, Ranteesi, 45, was arrested on suspicion of murder in August 2002 after his estranged wife, Milia, was found beaten to death in the driveway of Ranteesi's Topaz Circle home. She reportedly suffered multiple head and facial injuries, apparently caused by repeated blows from an eight-pound welder's jack. In an unusual courtroom maneuver Wednesday morning, Deputy Public Defender Dillon opened her defense case by calling Ranteesi as her first witness. Clad in a crisply pressed white shirt and subdued necktie, Ranteesi slowly described how his marriage fell apart after Milia, a correctional officer at the Yolo County Jail, began an affair with a former jail inmate whom he believed to be a former Iraqi soldier and personal bodyguard to Saddam Hussein. Questioned by Dillon, Ranteesi said he learned of his wife's supposed infidelity after a neighbor told him he had seen Milia and the man in a restaurant in 2001. " She met an inmate ... she developed a relationship with him and said she loved him and wanted a divorce, " Ranteesi testified, his voice choked with emotion. Milia, he said, initially denied the relationship, but later told him about the man. " She told me he was Saddam Hussein's bodyguard and that he worked for the FBI, " Ranteesi said. " I was scared ... He was an Iraqi soldier. He was a Muslim terrorist. He was terrorizing my family. " Further questioned by Dillon, Ranteesi said he talked to several people about his marital problems but never said anything about killing his wife. Ranteesi said he eventually sought help from his church pastor as well as from a Vacaville physician, who prescribed the antidepressant Paxil. " He told me 'This medicine will make you happy,' " Ranteesi recalled. On Aug. 6, 2002 - the day of his estranged wife's death - Ranteesi said he became involved in an argument with his daughter, Rachal, over a trip on which she planned to visit her cousin and maternal aunt in Burlingame. Ranteesi testified that he told the teen she couldn't go because she was needed at home to look after her younger brothers while Ranteesi went to a dental appointment and her elder brother took driving lessons. At one point, while his daughter and he alternately packed and unpacked her bags, Ranteesi said he talked to Milia by cell phone and that she agreed Rachal should stay home. Ranteesi said he took his daily dose of Paxil and then fell asleep briefly. He later was awakened by his eldest son, Tony, who said that Milia was there. He recalled going outside and seeing Rachal loading her luggage into Milia's car. An argument ensued and, at one point, Ranteesi took his estranged wife's cell phone. " My wife told Rachal to call the police ... I grabbed the cell phone and broke it on the side of my truck. " Moments later, Ranteesi said, " My wife came at me and she fell down on the ground. Tony said 'Look at what you did.' I didn't know what I did. " Cross-examined by Chief Deputy District Attorney on, Ranteesi again denied ever having threatened to kill his estranged wife, despite testimony from previous witnesses who said he had done so. " I never mentioned killing my wife to anybody. That's a lie. I had no intention to kill my wife, " Ranteesi testified. Further questioned by on, Ranteesi denied having struck his wife or throwing their infant son at her during a domestic dispute in 2001. " That was a lie. She told me she wanted to put me in jail and she lied to the police, " Ranteesi said. Questioned by on about the day Milia died, Ranteesi said he didn't know how she wound up on the ground. 'I don't remember. I lost it. I became totally insane. I don't remember hitting her, " he testified. " I looked and I didn't realize what I did.' The defense portion of the trial will resume at 9 a.m. Monday in the Vallejo courtroom of Superior Court Judge Allan P. . At that time, Dillon is expected to call several medical and psychiatric experts to testify about her client. Following rebuttal and closing arguments, the nine-man, three-woman jury could begin deliberations in the case as early as Wednesday. Ranteesi has pleaded not guilty to all charges. Hamlin can be reached at courts@.... FAIR USE NOTICE: This may contain copyrighted material. 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