![]() Maia was on hand yesterday at radio station WSRO 650AM to thank the Brazilian community for its caring and support. They helped Maia with party decorations at a club in Framingham, he said. Maia spent most of last Saturday with Carla and Caique. "I never thought he was going to do what he did."Ĭarla was fluent in English and when she spoke to others Bins feared she was talking about him, he said. "He didn't even want her to see me," he said. ![]() Rather, Bins wanted Carla to stay home with the baby, stop working and seeing other people. Maia downplayed news stories suggesting Bins was unhappy with Carla's faith as a member of the Church of Jesus Christ Latter Saints. A person who threatens like that should be taken seriously." He told her he was going to kill her and Caique. "Women should be prepared to report abuses. "She said she had faith he was going to change," said Maia. Maia said Bins had threatened Carla and Caique, but she wasn't too worried about it. Bins had been a devoted husband but his personality changed after Felipe was born. Yesterday, Carla's brother, Elvio Maia of Milford, recalled how his sister endured what he described as an abusive relationship, marked by Bins' possessiveness and jealously. Felipe, the couple's 5-month-old son, was unharmed. Police told him the horrific news on Sunday.Īuthorities say Bins, 30, enraged by Carla's devotion to the Mormon church, took a hammer and bludgeoned her and Caique to death. Souza, who lives in Marlborough, kept seeing Caique. Our relationship suffered a lot, and we decided the best thing was to split apart." "We worked a lot, we were stressed and we didn't have time for family. "In Brazil, we were very happy, but once we arrived here, we started having problems," he said. They divorced in 2002 and Carla married Bins two years ago. He came by himself to the United States and in 1997 brought his wife and Caique here. Souza had married Carla in Brazil in 1990. The Saturday before Mother's Day, they played video games and went to see "Mission Impossible." Souza said he saw Caique for the last time a week before he died. I'll have to learn how to live with that pain." I have a pain in my heart that will remain with me forever. "The thing that bothered me the most is the thought that Caique had this brutal death, and I couldn't do anything to save him. ![]() "He'll be judged in the court of men and by God," he said. FRAMINGHAM - The heartbroken father of Caique Souza yesterday tenderly recalled the last moments he spent with his murdered son, even as he struggled to understand his alleged killer.Īntonio Souza Jr., a busboy at a Boston restaurant, said he is tormented by the death of his 11-year-old son, but holds no rancor for Jeremias Bins, the man charged with killing Caique and his mother Carla Souza on Saturday night.
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