Law society condemns Latvian mother’s murder

The regulatory body that represents Ireland’s legal profession has condemned the apparent murder-for-hire of a Latvian mother of two as well as the death threats against her solicitor.

In a statement issued Nov. 21, the Law Society of Ireland noted that the threats against the unnamed solicitor were made before Saulīte was gunned down the night of Nov. 19 at her home north of Dublin. The solicitor had contacted the society several weeks before the murder.

“He made the Society aware that he was under armed Garda [the Irish police] protection because of death threats, which he had received resulting from the legal work he had undertaken on behalf of Baiba Saulīte,” the statements reads.

Saulīte was shot three times, in full view of two or three witnesses, by a man who then left the scene in an autombobile driven by another man. Her two children, ages 3 and 5, were asleep in the home. Saulīte, 28, was separated from her husband, a Lebanese named Hassan Hassan. He is serving a prison sentence for involvement in a stolen automobile scheme.

The murder investigation is ongoing, according to Irish media and the police. An international crime network may figure in the case, according to the Irish Independent, and may also be linked to an arson attack on the solicitor’s house.

“(A) threat to a solicitor, simply for doing his job expertly and fearlessly on behalf of his client, is a direct attack on the administration of justice and on the rule of law generally,” Ken Murphy, director general of the Law Society, said in the statement. “The thoughts and support of his profession are with him, and with the family of Baiba Saulīte, at this terrible time.”

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

Latvian mother victim of ‘professional hit’ in Dublin

Police in suburban Dublin are searching for two men believed to be involved in an apparent murder-for-hire of a Latvian mother of two, according to Irish media.

Baiba Saulīte, 28, was shot three times around 9:45 p.m. Nov. 19 as she was smoking cigarettes with two or three friends on the doorstep of her north County Dublin home, the Irish Independent and the Irish Times reported Nov. 21. Saulīte’s two sons, ages 3 and 5, were asleep inside.

Saulīte died at the scene, said the press office of the Garda—the Irish police.

Police described the shooting as a “professional hit,” Irish media reported, and are considering that her murder may have been tied to personal difficulties she has been facing. Her husband, a Lebanese named Hassan Hassan, is serving a four-year sentence in an Irish prison for his connections to a scheme involving stolen automobiles. And her two sons were abducted in December 2004 and taken to be with relatives in Lebanon and Syria before being returned to Saulīte in Ireland.

Saulīte’s profile on the Latvian social network draugiem.lv suggested recent days had been happy ones, including time spent with her children visiting holiday exhibits. Some of the photographs show a smiling Saulīte at the door to her home.

Her killing made front page news in several Irish newspapers. On Radio Telefis Éireann, Saulīte’s death prompted wider discussion of crime in Ireland.

According to the Irish police, a lone gunman approached Saulīte while she was visiting with friends at her home in north Dublin. He shot her three times and then got in an automobile driven by an accomplice.

A burned-out black BMW automobile was later found in Kinsealy in County Dublin. Police are investigating whether this is the same vehicle used in the murder.

Police were making house-to-house inquiries in the Swords neighborhood of northern Dublin, Radio Telefis Éireann reported Nov. 21. The broadcaster also reported that Saulīte’s solicitor was under police protection.

Saulīte’s family from Latvia was scheduled to arrive in Ireland on Nov. 21. As soon as her body is released by the coroner’s office, the Embassy of Latvia and an Irish funeral fund will help make arrangements to return Saulīte’s remains to Latvia, Ivars Lasis, first secretary in the embassy, told Latvians Online via e-mail.

Anyone with information on the case is asked to telephone the Swords Garda Station at (+353) 1-6664700. The police especially are looking for assistance from the Latvian community, according to Radio Telefis Éireann.

Irish Times

The Irish Times in its Nov. 21 issue gives front-page coverage to the murder of Baiba Saulīte, running a photo of her body being removed from her north Dublin home. Other Irish newspapers also gave prominent coverage to the case.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.

PBLA posthumously honors Arturs Cipulis with award

The latest World Federation of Free Latvians award, an annual honor bestowed on an individual or individuals for their work in the Latvian community, has been posthumously awarded to Arturs Cipulis.

Cipulis, who died Oct. 10 after an operation, was a Latvian political and social activist in Germany, the federation (known in Latvian as Pasaules brīvo latviešu apvienība, or PBLA) said in announcing the award. The winner of this year’s honor as well as the names of those who won awards or recognition from federation’s Culture Fund were announced during Independence Day celebrations in various Latvian communities worldwide

“The laureate’s life was devoted to Latvian unity,” the federation said. “The people closest to him—his wife, son and daughter—sometimes took second place. His wife Rasma, who also was selfless in fulfilling her Latvian responsibilities, was her husband’s best helper.”

The Cipulis family fled from Latvia to Germany during World War II. Arturs Cipulis began working in the community already in 1945, helping to found a Latvian elementary school in the Displaced Persons camp in Braunschweig, as well as a choir, folk dance group and theatre troupe.

Because of his health, the family was unable to emigrate from Germany and in 1952 settled in Pinneberg, near Hamburg. Cipulis became involved with and eventually was elected to the Central Committee of the Latvian Central Council (Latviešu Centrālā padome).

In 1964, Cipulis led efforts to organize the first Latvian Song Festival in Western Europe and also was involved in organizing the second festival.

Germany’s central Latvian organization, renamed Latviešu Kopība Vācijā (Latvian Community in Germany) came under Cipulis’ leadership in 1972, a position he held until the mid-1990s and, after a few years’ away, resumed and continued in 2003.

For 30 years, Cipulis led the Hamburg Latvian Society, but for 40 years was director of the Hamburg Latvian choir. He served as the German Latvian community’s representative to the PBLA and to the Western European Latvian Association (Rietumeiropas Latviešu apvienība). In addtion, Cipulis helped publish Brīvā Latvija, the Western European weekly Latvian newspaper.

Cipulis also administered the Latvian high school in Münster, Minsteres latviešu ģimnāzija, continuing his association with the school even after its closure.

After Latvia regained its independence, Cipulis worked with the State Archive of Latvia to develop exhibits about Latvian society in exile.

He also organized the return to Latvia of the remains of Professor Jāzeps Vītols and writer Jāņis Jaunsudrabiņš.

In 1997, Cipulis was award the Order of the Three Stars, Latvia’s highest civilian honor, while in 1998 he was awarded Germany’s Bundesverdienstkreutz.

Arturs Cipulis

Arturs Cipulis has been honored posthumously by the World Federation of Free Latvians.

Andris Straumanis is a special correspondent for and a co-founder of Latvians Online. From 2000–2012 he was editor of the website.