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Jennifer Hudson says she always disliked man accused of killing her family

CHICAGO, April 23 (Reuters) – Grammy and Oscar winning singer and actress Jennifer Hudson testified on Monday that she had

known the man charged with killing three members of her family since they were in middle school together but never liked

him.

Jennifer Hudson

Hudson was the first witness called at the murder trial

of William Balfour, who is charged with shooting dead her mother Darnell Donerson, 57, her brother Jason Hudson, 29, and her

nephew Julian King, 7.

Balfour, married to Hudson’s sister Julia Hudson, did not treat Julia or her son, Julian,

well, Hudson testified. “I would tell her (Julia) over and over again not to marry William,” she said.

Hudson

testified about the harrowing day of Oct. 24, 2008, when she learned that her mother and brother were dead and her nephew was

missing. She flew home to Chicago and identified her mother and brother’s bodies at the morgue. On Oct. 27, she was back at

the morgue to identify her nephew’s body.

Before Hudson moved out in the summer of 2006, the family had lived

together in the same house in Chicago where the bodies of her mother and brother were found. Julian King’s body was found in

a white SUV that Jennifer Hudson had bought for her brother Jason.

Prosecutors say Balfour stole the vehicle, killed

Julian in the back seat, and then abandoned it. The murder weapon, a handgun which had been stolen from Jason Hudson, was

found in a vacant lot near the SUV, according to prosecutors.

In opening arguments at the trial, Cook County Assistant

State’s Attorney Veryl Gambino described Balfour as a jealous and vindictive man who repeatedly threatened to kill Julia

Hudson and her family.

“These weren’t just words. They weren’t just threats. They were deadly warnings of what was

to come,” Gambino said.

If convicted, Balfour could face life in prison.

Jennifer Hudson burst onto the music

scene in 2004 when she performed on the television singing contest American Idol. She subsequently won a Grammy for her debut

album, and an Academy Award for her role in the movie Dreamgirls.

Cook County assistant public defender Amy Thompson

said during her opening statement that Balfour’s DNA was not found on the murder weapon, or inside the SUV where Julian

King’s body was found. She said the Chicago Police knew the media would “explode” about the case because of the link to

Jennifer Hudson, and in their haste got the wrong man.

Thompson told the jury that Jason Hudson was a drug dealer and

had been shot twice previously, causing him to lose part of his left leg.

The police “did nothing to determine if it

might have been Jason Hudson’s violent business that led to him getting shot twice before, that led to these murders,”

Thompson said. She also noted that the Hudson family lived in Englewood — “probably the most dangerous neighborhood in

Chicago.”

Asked during cross-examination if she knew what her brother did for a living, Jennifer Hudson said, “I

don’t really know.”

Julia Hudson married Balfour in December 2006 — without telling Jennifer or Jason Hudson or

their mother. The couple went to live at the Hudson family house.

Julia Hudson testified on Monday that her husband

became jealous when she got gifts from other people, and was jealous even of her son, telling Julian not to kiss her. His

nickname for Julian, a second grader getting straight A’s in school, was “the little monster,” she said.

She

separated from William Balfour in February 2008, Julia Hudson said, and three months later he begged her to come back. When

she said she could not, Balfour said he would kill her family, she testified.

“If you leave me, you’ll be the last to

die,” Julia Hudson said Balfour told her. “I’m going to kill your family first.”

The day before the murders had been

Julia’s birthday, and prosecutors said Balfour had been enraged at seeing at the house balloons bought by another man for

Julia.

The trial has brought a swarm of national media to the historic Cook County criminal courthouse.