More than a year after Maharishi University of Management student 
Levi Butler was stabbed to death with a paring knife in the 
university's dining hall, the man charged with killing him is about 
to stand trial.

  
      Shuvender Sem, 25, will go on trial beginning at 9:30 a.m. 
Tuesday at the Jefferson County Courthouse. Because Sem waived his 
right to a jury trial, the case will be heard by Judge E. Richard 
Meadows.


      Sem, who was a student at M.U.M. when the killing occurred, 
faces one count of first-degree murder and one count of assault for 
allegedly stabbing another student with a ball-point pen earlier the 
same day.


      He has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity.


      According to court documents, the trial is expected to last 
two days.      On the evening of March 1, 2004, Fairfield police 
officers responded to a report of a stabbing at Annapurna Dining 
Hall on the M.U.M. campus. When they arrived, they found Butler, an 
18-year-old freshman from California, bleeding from stab wounds to 
the chest.


      Butler was taken by ambulance to Jefferson County Hospital, 
where he died from his injuries. Sem, a transfer student from 
Pennsylvania who had been on campus for about six weeks, was 
arrested and charged with murder.


      After the attack on Butler, police learned of another incident 
that had occurred earlier the same day. During a class that 
afternoon, Sem allegedly stabbed fellow student John Killian in the 
face with a ball-point pen. According to police reports filed at the 
time, the wound required seven stitches to close.


      Joel Wysong, the university's dean of men, took Sem into his 
custody after the attack on Killian and began making arrangements to 
send him home. Sem later left Wysong's apartment. In an interview 
with The Ledger, Wysong said he went to the dining hall, where he 
found Sem and took a seat about 30 feet away to keep an eye on him. 
After about 10 minutes, Wysong saw a commotion. One student was 
restraining Sem while others tried to help Butler and dialed 911 on 
their cell phones. Wysong led Sem away from the scene.


      Sem appeared calm when police arrived and was taken into 
custody without incident. He was booked into Jefferson County Jail 
and bond was set at $1 million.


      Sem was originally represented by a court-appointed attorney, 
Les Lamping of Washington, Iowa, but his family later hired Alfredo 
Parrish, a well-known lawyer from Des Moines.


      The trial has been delayed by questions about Sem's mental 
state. In June 2004, his attorneys said they heard him ask a jail 
employee for a notepad because he was hearing voices and wanted to 
write down what they were saying. The attorneys also said Sem was 
confused, apparently believing he was in a hospital in his hometown 
of Lancaster, Pa.


      For the complete story, read the June 3 Fairfield Ledger. 
http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?
newsid=14638192&BRD=1139&PAG=461&dept_id=142642&rfi=6








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