There weren't many people around the Vancouver airport in the early morning of October 14, 2007 -- the day Polish immigrant Robert Dziekanski died while being arrested by the RCMP. But one woman saw the whole thing, and she says she can't believe the way the Mounties acted.
Sima Ashrafinia was at YVR to pick up her husband the night Dziekanski died. She was videotaped by Paul Pritchard trying to communicate with the upset traveller.
"I believe he was just an upset guy, angry and lost," she said. "I was close enough, he could have hit me, but he didn't."
Ashrafinia, an immigrant herself, tried to speak to Dziekanski in several languages, but found her hand gestures seemed to calm him down. She said that when the RCMP arrived Dziekanski looked relieved, but this quickly changed.
"I came from a violent country, so I am no stranger to it. I never expected such fast reaction from people who serve law and order," she said.
"He had a stapler; I heard the sound of electricity then two more times. Then I thought they were using guns. I didn't know what a Taser was."
"Whether it was a defensive move or not, that we can't get an answer to. The key thing is what is the perception of [the RCMP officers'] training," said defense lawyer Ravi Hira.
It was estimated the hearing would last five or six weeks, but that was before the lengthy cross examinations and now the need for video analysis.
With a report from CTV British Columbia's Peter Grainger.