Man accused of killing wife in Spokane in 2019 captured in Europe

Nov. 8—A man suspected of killing his wife in 2019 and fleeing the country has been captured in Europe, the Spokane County Sheriff's Office announced on Monday.

Wahid Kashify was arrested on Oct. 29 in Europe where he is currently being held, the sheriff's office said.

It could be a year or more before Kashify arrives in the United States, depending on whether or not he fights the extradition process, Detective Marc Melville said Monday during a press conference.

Kashify will stand trial for a first-degree murder charge when he does arrive, the sheriff's office said.

Arezu Kashify, who was 24 at the time of her death, was last seen alive on May 26, 2019, at a friend's house, according to the sheriff's office initial report. Her friend later reported her missing on May 30. Her remains were discovered in a false bottom of a chest freezer in the apartment she shared with her husband and their two children on June 4. Wahid Kashify is said to have dropped their two children, ages 5 and 1, off with a friend on May 26 after midnight.

Deputies located his vehicle on June 1 at the Spokane Airport, where he purchased a one-way ticket out of the country. Deputies located a letter inside of his vehicle that gave instructions to unlock his phone and watch a video confession.

"He admitted to the homicide, he gave a full confession as to why he did it, and it's very telling," Melville said of the video, which has not been released to the public. "I think he felt he was going to get away with it and live free, just not in the United States."

Homeland Security determined that Kashify left from the Spokane Airport for Dubai, and ultimately arrived in Kabul, Afghanistan, on May 30.

Kashify was scheduled to become a U.S. citizen the day after his wife's body was discovered, Melville said.

Afghanistan is a non-extradition country, which posed one of the biggest challenges to the sheriff's office, Melville said. Kashify also had extended family living in the country, he said, as well as connections from his time serving as a translator for the U.S. military.

Detective Melville said that the international investigation into Kashify's whereabouts began the same day that deputies discovered his wife's body. An FBI agent working in Afghanistan immediately got to work on the case after learning that Kashify may have fled back to his home country, he said.

"During that process, we were able to determine he had multiple different aliases, he had got a new passport and a new name and using all that information we were able to get a 'red notice', which is a worldwide extradition warrant," Melville said.

Kashify is said to have traveled between Iran and Afghanistan, and then to Turkey and finally to Europe, where he was arrested.

Kashify, who was an avid volleyball player, had plans to attend a volleyball tournament in Europe on Oct. 29. That's when authorities located him leaving a men's locker room and arrested him, the sheriff's office said. The sheriff's office did not say which country Kashify was being held in because his extradition is still pending a hearing there.

Kashify's two children are said to be "safe and happy" together at a permanent residence in Washington state, Melville said.

"For 16 years you've heard me say this. If you commit a crime in Spokane County, we're gonna do everything we can to bring you to justice," Sheriff Ozzie Knezovich said at Monday's press conference. "This is just another example of the work that is done to do so. It is an example of the dedication of the detectives of this agency and the partnerships that we have across the board."

The investigation was completed over the past three-and-a-half years in cooperation with the FBI, Department of Defense, Department of Justice and other federal agencies, as well as Interpol, the sheriff's office said.