A glimpse inside the minds of sex slavery predators

The annals of criminal history are writ large with ordinary streets that hide dark secrets, but even so the peculiar horror believed to have been perpetrated by Ariel Castro on Seymour Avenue in the rust-belt city of Cleveland stands out.

He stands accused of kidnapping three girls, keeping them captive for years in his suburban home and using them as sex slaves. The staggering joy at the rescue last week of Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight was tempered by the revelations of what they had endured in a busy, working-class Ohio neighborhood. No one suspected a thing.

Castro, 52, was a school bus driver, grilled ribs with his neighbors and was a friendly soul who played in a band.

“He was a very good bass player, and I’d say a happy person,” said Miguel Quinones, who managed the band Grupo Fuego with whom Castro played. “There was never anything that would let you imagine anything like this.”

Yet his alleged crimes are far from unique, either in America or elsewhere. There was the case of religious fanatic Brian David Mitchell who kidnapped young Mormon girl Elizabeth Smart and kept her as a “wife” for nine months.

Or Phillip Garrido who kidnapped Jaycee Dugard in 1991 when she was 11 and kept her for almost 20 years. Or Michael Devlin who abducted the young boy Shawn Hornbeck in 2002 in Missouri and kept him prisoner for five years. Further afield, Josef Fritzl kept his daughter, Elisabeth, a prisoner and sex slave in a dungeon in his Austrian home for 24 years — all while her mother lived upstairs apparently oblivious. And Wolfgang Priklopil, also from Austria, kept Natascha Kampusch in a cellar for eight years.

Those are the headline cases. But others are far from the collective memory of society, despite the appalling nature of the crimes. Few will have heard of Kenneth Parnell, who kidnapped Steven Stayne in California in 1972, when he was seven, convincing him that his family did not want him, and keeping him for seven years.

Or Cameron Hooker, who kidnapped 20-year-old Colleen Stan in California in 1977, kept her locked in a box, horrifically abused her and even forced her to sign a slave contract. She endured her captivity for seven years.

Amid all that horror is one troubling theory: That we only know of the fate of these young girls and boys because men like Castro made mistakes. Their victims escaped to tell their stories. As with other criminals and other crimes, the police catch the ones who slip up.

The more accomplished kidnappers are still out there, still keeping their victims alive behind some suburban facade. The idea that everyone who commits this sort of crime gets found out is not likely to be true. The opposite is probably the case: most incidents go undetected.

“I don’t think there is any question there are other victims in similar situations. We are only catching the dumb ones,” said professor Sherry Hamby of the University of the South in Tennessee, and editor of the journal Psychology of Violence.

What drives them, most experts believe, is simple enough: power. To kidnap and control someone for an extended period is to exert influence over another person that few can imagine, but that these men — and they are almost always men — crave. Castro seems to fit that bill. The house where the women were kept was fitted with ropes, chains and padlocks and secure rooms. His physical domination of his captives was extreme, though as the years ticked by, they were sometimes allowed outside.

That is not always the case. Fritzl kept his daughter out of sight for many years, in effect raising her — and the children he sired with her — almost completely underground. “Controlling other people is a way of giving these perpetrators a sense of mastery over their environment,” said Hamby. “It is also for them a sense of protection. They cannot be victimized themselves if they have complete control.”

But, to the surprise of many, the physical ties often used in such cases of confinement are often matched in strength by the psychological ones. These men are frequently masters of brainwashing, abusing their victims psychologically so that they submit to their confinement. Castro, according to reports, would pretend to leave the house and see if his prisoners would try to leave, leaping out to catch them and beating them if they did. It taught them the dangers of escape.

Others deployed different mind tricks. Smart was told by her captor that he would kill her family if she fled. Parnell told the seven-year-old Stayner that he had been granted custody of him and his real family did not want him: something the boy eventually believed.

Dugard was told by her captor of 17 years that by letting him abuse her, she would be protecting other girls from his attentions. In the even more extreme case of Stan, her captors told her that a sinister group called The Company would kill her and her family if she did not obey them. She was so obedient that she even visited her family during her time in their control.

At the heart of some of these cases is the abuse suffered by the criminals themselves. In many cases, they were sexually or physically abused as children, something that some believe can unlock the key for their actions. “They lost a sense of control as a child and they try to reclaim that sense of control with other people,” said Jordan.

There are clues that Castro might fit this. He apparently wrote a suicide note in 2004, that was reported by Cleveland TV station 19 Action News after it was found in his house. In it Castro apparently claimed he suffered sexual abuse at the hands of a family member and lamented: “I am a sexual predator. I need help.” He also seems to recognise the immorality of what he is accused of doing. “I don’t know why I kept looking for another. I already had two in my possession,” he wrote.

That sense of warped morality is frequently present. In keeping his daughter captive, Fritzl once explained that he felt he was protecting her from the world and her wild teenage years, even sometimes bringing her flowers. “I had to do something; I had to create a place where I could keep Elisabeth, by force if necessary, away from the outside world,” he reportedly told his lawyer. That raises the question: Are these men insane? Many think not. They often come from abusive backgrounds, they have warped senses of sexuality but many experts believe they are not mad.

“Castro is clearly in control of his faculties,” said Dr. Casey Jordan, a criminologist and behavioral scientist at Western Connecticut State University

Not all are. Smart’s captor, Mitchell, believed that he was a prophet destined to battle the antichrist. But he was the exception.

Most experts believe that these men do not suddenly become monsters. They become that way over a longer period, dealing with their demons and eventually letting them take over. It is often this appearance of normality in the rest of their lives that allows so many to get away with it for so long. “It can be a series of bad decisions. You can make just one decision that is small but takes you a little away from the rest of humanity. Pretty soon you can end up a long way from the rest of us, and suddenly it becomes easy to do something extreme,” said Hamby.

And therein lies the rub. There is, for these criminals, a moment when a Rubicon is crossed. When, by force or trickery, they find themselves taking away an innocent person and forcing them into slavery and abuse. “It is like a floodgate. Once they have acted on it, there is no going back. They have plunged off the cliff,” said Jordan.

Arias prosecutor makes case for death penalty with dramatic statements from family of victim

Steven Alexander stood before the jury, looked up at a family picture and grimaced and cried as he ticked off the list of problems that have befallen him in the five years since his brother was murdered: ulcers, depression, a separation from his wife, nightmares.

The dreams consist of someone coming at him with a knife then going after his wife and daughter. Other times, he has nightmares about his brother, “curled up in a shower, thrown in there, left to rot for days, all alone.” He feels like a child, unable to sleep alone in the dark.

“I don’t want these nightmares anymore. I don’t want to see my brother’s murderer anymore,” he said.

The gut-wrenching comments came as jurors began considering whether Jodi Arias should get a life sentence or be executed for the 2008 stabbing death of Travis Alexander. Jurors became visibly shaken as Steven Alexander and his sister spoke on deeply emotional levels in arguing for the death penalty. Arias sobbed throughout the hearing, with tears streaming down her face and landing on her black shirt.

Alexander’s two siblings were the only witnesses for the prosecution. Trial will resume Monday with statements from an ex-boyfriend of Arias and the defendant herself, among others.

The same jury listening to the statements convicted Arias of first-degree murder last week after about 15 hours of deliberations.

In opening statements Thursday, prosecutor Juan Martinez said there are no factors that should cause the jury to even consider a sentence other than death. The judge had instructed jurors that they could take into account certain things that might help them make a decision, such as Arias’ lack of a prior criminal record and assertions that she was a good friend, had an abusive childhood and is a talented artist.

Martinez said none of that matters in regard to the brutal killing.

“The only appropriate sentence … is death.”

Defence attorney Kirk Nurmi explained to jurors that their decision ultimately would be the final one, telling them that they each had to make their own “moral assessment on what verdict is correct.”

“Your verdict, ladies and gentleman, will determine whether or not Jodi Arias spends the rest of her life in prison or if she is sentenced to be executed,” Nurmi said.

He then told the panel they would later hear directly from Arias.

“When you understand who Ms. Arias is, you will understand that life is the appropriate sentence,” Nurmi said.

Alexander’s sister Samantha later described for the panel how their grandmother, who raised the victim, saw her health fail after the killing and died around the time of jury selection.

“Travis was our strength, our beacon of hope, our motivation,” she said through tears. “Our lives will never be the same. … We would give anything to have him back.”

Steven Alexander recalled seeing his brother for the last time over the Christmas holiday in 2007.

“Now when I want to talk to or see my brother, I have to go to a … 6-foot-deep hole in the ground,” he said.

The trial was inexplicably delayed Thursday afternoon after the judge and attorneys met privately. It is set to resume Monday morning when other witnesses will include Arias’ friends and an ex-boyfriend who lived with her for several years in California.

Earlier this week, Arias’ attorneys asked to be allowed to step down from the case, but a judge denied the request.

Details about the motion were sealed, but legal experts said Arias complicated efforts for her defence when she gave an interview to Fox affiliate KSAZ minutes after her conviction, saying she preferred death over life in prison.

The interview prompted the judge to issue an order that the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office allow no more interviews with Arias. Less than a week later, Sheriff Joe Arpaio on Thursday gave reporters a tour of Arias’ cinderblock jail cell. The messy cell had a mattress on a lower bunk and the upper bunk cluttered with files and papers.

During a closed-door meeting with the judge Tuesday, Nurmi and Jennifer Willmott sought permission to withdraw from the case, according to court minutes released Thursday. Legal experts say the decision was not a surprising one because the attorneys have a conflict of interest with their own efforts to try and save her life while Arias has said she’d rather die.

“It would be something I would do in my major felony cases if I found that a client was actually working against me and not working with her defence,” Phoenix criminal defence lawyer Julio Laboy said.

Arias cannot choose the death penalty. It’s up to the jury to determine a sentence. Her attorneys’ motion to withdraw will have no impact on the penalty phase of the trial given jurors are not privy to the filing, and not even media have the details due to a court order sealing all such proceedings.

Arias, 32, acknowledged killing Alexander at his suburban Phoenix home after a day of sex on June 4, 2008. She initially denied any involvement and later blamed the attack on masked intruders. Two years after her arrest, Arias said she killed Alexander in self-defence.

The victim suffered nearly 30 knife wounds, had his throat slit from ear to ear and was shot in the forehead. Prosecutors say the attack was fueled by jealous rage after Alexander wanted to end his affair with Arias and prepared to take a trip to Mexico with another woman.

Two LAPD motor cops on trial, accused of lying about a DUI

The criminal trial of two Los Angeles police motorcycle cops alleged of lying under pledge about leading a DUI traffic stop initiated this week.
Craig Allen, who was dismissed, and Phillip Walters, who is on postponement from the force, were accused last year with lying and faking a police report.

Long Beach Criminal Defense Attorney

The criminal trial of two Los Angeles police motorcycle cops alleged of lying under pledge about leading a DUI traffic stop initiated this week.
Craig Allen, who was dismissed, and Phillip Walters, who is on postponement from the force, were accused last year with lying and faking a police report.
The event happened in Highland Park just after midnight three years ago. LAPD traffic cops were on watch for lessened driving. A DUI task force was in full force that night.
Officer Cecilio Flores watched a driver to roll through one stop sign and then another before pulling her over. He said she had bloodshot eyes and smelled of alcohol. Flores radioed over officers Walter and Allen to assist him with the stop and then take over, a “hand-off” as described in court or a “gimme.”
The DUI stop continued its fairly routine course. The driver was given a field…

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Things to Consider Before Working with a Long Beach DUI Legal representative

Hiring a Long beach DUI attorney involves more than just calling the first person you come across in the telephone directory. Though the procedure is uncomplicated, there are particular things that you will need to consider to make sure that you get the best DUI lawyer.

Long Beach Criminal Defense Attorney

Hiring a Long beach DUI attorney involves more than just calling the first person you come across in the telephone directory. Though the procedure is uncomplicated, there are particular things that you will need to consider to make sure that you get the best DUI lawyer. A few of the factors that you should consider consist of:.

Certification
Expense
Experience
Easily with the attorney

Certifications

It is necessary to understand the cases that the Long beach DUI attorney is certified to deal with. For instance, you can not go to a criminal legal representative to help you compose a will. Most of the legal representatives focus their practice on one or a couple of locations that are closely related. Like it holds true with the medical field, attorneys who reside in small towns might deal with a larger array of legal matters as compared to those in larger cities. When…

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Orange County won’t bill missing hikers for $160,000 search

Search efforts in Trabuco Canyon during the rescue operation for hikers Nicolas Cendoya, 19, and Kyndall Jack, 18

Orange County will not seek repayment of the $160,000 spent rescuing two Costa Mesa hikers who went missing Easter weekend in Trabuco Canyon, officials said Wednesday.

Supervisor Shawn Nelson said the county does not have the legal authority to seek reimbursement.

“We don’t have a basis to go after them today — we didn’t a month ago,” he said.

Rescue workers from Orange, Los Angeles and Riverside counties spent five days searching for Nicolas Cendoya, 19, and Kyndall Jack, 18. The pair went missing March 31 in Trabuco Canyon.

Some supervisors and residents suggested that the pair be billed after authorities arrested Cendoya, saying they found methamphetamine while searching his car, which was parked near the trail. He faces one felony count of possession of a controlled substance.

Supervisor Todd Spitzer said he filed a request for restitution and Marcy’s Law rights in the criminal case against Cendoya, but will reassess whether to pursue those options at Cendoya’s arraignment May 22.

Although some states have laws that allow authorities to charge those rescued if they are found to have acted recklessly, California does not, Nelson said.

The state at one point had a law on the books to that effect for a period of five years, but that law has since expired, officials said.

“You can call 911, they will come rescue you, and for the most part there isn’t a civil or criminal penalty you will pay,” Nelson said.

Spitzer said he plans to propose legislation that would allow officials to recover rescue costs.

Nelson said crafting such a law may prove tricky.

“You don’t want people that are stranded waiting until the last minute to call when they could be in extreme distress because the word is, ‘Hey, don’t call (911) until the last resort because you’re getting a bill,’ ” Nelson said.

Nelson said the debate over whether Cendoya and Jack would foot the bill for their rescue was a non-issue.

“It isn’t news that the law for the last 250 years remains the same,” Nelson said.

California Father and Son Rhino Horn Smugglers Imprisoned

LOS ANGELES, California, May 15, 2013 (ENS) – A father and son team from Orange County, described by prosecutors as being “at the apex of the rhino horn smuggling pyramid within the United States,” each will spend more than three years in prison on federal smuggling and money laundering convictions.

Vinh Chuong “Jimmy” Kha, 49, of Garden Grove, was sentenced to 42 months in federal prison for overseeing a U.S.-based operation that prosecutors argued played a direct role in a huge increase in rhinoceros poaching in Africa over the past several years.

Felix Kha, 27, the son of Jimmy Kha, also of Garden Grove, was sentenced to 46 months in federal prison for working with alongside his father in the scheme that generated millions of dollars that provided them with profits, as well as money to purchase more contraband rhino horns and pay bribes to customs officials in at least one other nation.

“The Khas’ smuggling operation fueled international demand and played a significant role in driving the price of rhino horn to nearly $25,000 per pound,” said U.S. Attorney Andre Birotte Jr. “It was that rising value of rhino horn that encouraged ruthless poachers to scour the South African wilderness in search of profits. The Khas played a role in pushing species like the African black rhino to the brink of extinction, which is why we aggressively prosecuted this case and sought lengthy prison terms.”

The rhino horns acquired by the Khas during the course of their conspiracy had a market value of up to $2.5 million, prosecutors say.

In their plea agreements, both defendants admitted that they purchased the horns in order to export them overseas to be sold and made into libation cups or used for traditional medicine. They admitted making at least one illegal payment to Vietnamese customs officials to ensure clearance of horn shipments to that country, and evading income taxes owed in 2009 and 2010.

The Khas and Win Lee were sentenced this afternoon by U.S. District Judge Christina Snyder, who said the Khas engaged in “conduct not acceptable by anyone in the world.”

Calling the matter a “serious crime against the environment and wildlife,” Judge Snyder said, “There are portions of Africa where the rhino is gone, and Lord knows if they will ever come back.”

In addition to the prison terms, the Khas were each ordered to pay a $10,000 fine. Judge Snyder also ordered them to pay a cumulative total of more than $185,000 in tax fraud penalties to the Internal Revenue Service.

Both Khas, along with the father’s company, were also ordered to pay a total of $800,000 in restitution to the Multinational Species Conservation Fund, a fund managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to support international efforts to protect and conserve rhinos and other critically endangered species around the world.

A third defendant in the case, Win Lee Corporation, which is owned by Jimmy Kha, was sentenced today to five years of probation and ordered to pay a $100,000 fine after it pleaded guilty to charges of smuggling and wildlife trafficking.

The Khas each pleaded guilty last September to five felony counts – conspiracy, smuggling, wildlife trafficking in violation of the Lacey Act, money laundering and tax evasion.

The Khas were among 14 people charged with federal crimes as a result of “Operation Crash,” an ongoing investigation led by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

“On average, a rhino is slaughtered in Africa every 11 hours to feed the black market for their horns,” said Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe. “Criminals in this country who are cashing in on this illegal trade should know that the United States will hold them accountable for their crimes and do everything possible to protect wild populations of rhinos.”

Rhinoceros are a prehistoric species and one of the largest herbivores on earth. All rhinoceros species are protected under U.S. and international law, and the black rhinoceros is listed as an endangered species.

Despite national and international protection efforts dating back 40 years, the demand for rhino horn and black market prices have skyrocketed recently due to the value that some cultures have placed on the horns for ornamental carvings, good luck charms or purported medicinal purposes.

For decades, rhino poaching was an isolated event in countries like South Africa, where the number of wild rhinos illegally killed there averaged 15 animals a year – until 2008 when the Khas began trafficking rhino horns.

Rhino horns seized by Vietnamese authorities (Photo by Tom Millikan

At the peak of the Khas’ wildlife trafficking conspiracy in 2011, 448 wild rhinos were slaughtered that year for their horns in South Africa alone. Between 2007 and the end of 2011, the poaching of wild South African rhinos increased 3,400 percent.

In sentencing papers filed in U.S. District court, prosecutors argued that “although they themselves did not shoot the rhinos, defendants Jimmy and Felix Kha share direct culpability for the recent spike in the price of rhino horn, the increase in Vietnamese and Chinese demand for rhino, and thus the consequent wholesale slaughter of rhinos in the wild in Africa in recent years.”

From January 2010 through February 2012 the Khas conspired with others throughout the United States to purchase white and black rhinoceros horn with the knowledge that these animals were protected by federal law as endangered and threatened species.

“The Khas engaged in egregious criminal conduct by taking the horns of a species on the brink of extinction and making millions of dollars in the illegal trade in rhino horns,” said Ignacia S. Moreno, Assistant Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division. “The Khas’ sentence sends a strong message that those who violate the law by illegally trading in rhino horns will be held accountable to the fullest extent of the law.”

Operation Crash is an investigation being conducted by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which has received extensive assistance from the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, IRS – Criminal Investigation, and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations.

The case against the Khas was prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California and the Department of Justice’s Environmental Crimes Section.

Boy accused in killing of his sister hears charges

A 12-year-old boy accused of fatally stabbing his 8-year-old sister in their Central California home appeared Wednesday at closed juvenile court proceedings to hear the charges against him.

After the hearing, the boy’s attorney, Mark Reichel, said the family of the two children wants to be left alone.

“As they travel down this incredibly difficult path, they are obviously extremely concerned about their son, who they also dearly love,” he said.

The boy was charged with second-degree murder and a special allegation for use of a dangerous weapon for the death of Leila Fowler. No plea was entered.

Reichel and his law partner Steve Plesser said after the hearing that they had not yet seen the state’s evidence implicating the boy in the killing that terrified Calaveras County.

The attorneys declined to speak about the details of the case during brief statements after the hearing.

Ken Rosenfeld, a Sacramento legal analyst and attorney, said that under California criminal statutes, if the boy is convicted he cannot be held past his 25th birthday.

Most young people convicted of similar crimes are paroled by age 19 or 20, said Rosenfeld, who is not associated with the case.

“The juvenile court system is designed for rehabilitation,” Rosenfeld said. “If his sentence follows precedent and he does well in the system and doesn’t get himself in trouble, he’ll be out when he’s 19 or 20.”

The boy was arrested Saturday after a two-week manhunt for a mystery intruder the boy had said he saw in the home before he found his sister bleeding.

On Tuesday, Reichel told The Associated Press the youngster might have lied about seeing a long-haired man fleeing the scene, but that doesn’t make the boy the killer.

He said his client might have made up a “macho” story about scaring away the intruder because he was scared.

The AP is withholding the boy’s name because he is a juvenile, and Wednesday’s hearing in juvenile court was not open to the public,

Meanwhile, a recording of a 911 call indicates a woman who identified herself as the mother of Leila Fowler believed the girl was fine when she called authorities from another location.

In the recording released Tuesday, a woman can be heard calling 911 after getting a call about a mystery intruder from the girl’s 12-year-old brother.

The caller said the children, including Leila Fowler, were OK.

“My children are at home alone and a man just ran out of our house. My older son was in the bathroom and my daughter started screaming. He came out and a man was in the house,” the panicked caller says in the call made April 27. “They said they’re OK.”

She added, “My daughter is freaking out right now.”

In fact, Leila Fowler was dying of stab wounds.

For two weeks, Calaveras County sheriff’s investigators searched door to door for witnesses and evidence.

The children’s father, Barney Fowler, was at a Little League game, and the siblings were home alone. The boy called his father and his fiancee to report that Leila had been attacked, and the fiancee called 911 and referred to the children as her own. The couple then sped home.

Frightened residents locked their doors and loaded weapons, fearing that a random attack had taken place in their midst.

“How does a 12-year-old commit the perfect crime?” said Reichel, whose firm was part of a team that two years ago successfully defended members of the Hmong community, including former Gen. Vang Pao, against charges they plotted to overthrow the government of Laos.

Reichel declined to comment on the emotional state of the boy or his family.

“They’re going through a very difficult time,” he said.

Barney Fowler spoke briefly with AP on Monday and said, “Until they have the proper evidence to show it’s my son, we’re standing behind him. If they have the evidence, well that’s another story. We’re an honest family.”

His 19-year-old son, Justin Fowler, described the family as “being in a fog.”

Lawyer-client secrecy trumps child-abuse reporting duty

A therapist or other medical professional who learns evidence of possible child abuse is required to report it to authorities or face criminal prosecution under California law. But suppose the therapist gets that information while working as an expert consultant for a criminal defense lawyer, whose client communications are supposed to be confidential?

The answer is that the therapist’s lips are sealed, according to a state appeals court. In a ruling that set a new precedent for trial judges in the state, the Second District Court of Appeal said the lawyer-client privilege of confidentiality, which protects a defendant’s right to a fair trial, outweighs any duty to report suspicions of child abuse.

The case involved a 10-year-old boy named Elijah, who was accused by Los Angeles County prosecutors in December 2011 of setting an arson fire. Elijah’s public defender questioned whether the fourth-grader understood the legal proceedings and asked a juvenile court judge to appoint a psychologist, Catherine Scarf, to evaluate him. Scarf was on the court’s approved panel of experts, but prosecutors objected to her selection because she said in advance that if she learned during her assessment that Elijah had been abused or neglected, she would notify only his lawyer and would not report to police or child protection authorities. She said she would take the same steps if she found out that the youth had threatened to seriously harm someone, a circumstance in which a therapist is normally required by law to notify the potential victim.

There’s been no indication that Elijah actually was abused or made any threats. But his case has been put on hold while the courts decide whether Scarf’s promise of confidentiality barred her from serving on his defense team. The juvenile court judge said it did, but the appeals court disagreed.

Elijah has a right to have an expert assisting his lawyer, and that includes a “right to speak in confidence to that expert,” Presiding Justice Dennis Perluss said in a 3-0 ruling May 8. “Reporting information obtained from the client while assisting defense counsel plainly violates the lawyer-client privilege … and potentially jeopardizes a criminal defendant’s right to a fair trial.”

Even if a defendant used a confidential discussion to threaten injury or death to another person, the court said, a therapist may be acting reasonably by reporting only to the defense lawyer, who would then have to decide whether the threat was imminent and serious enough to require contacting police.

At least that’s how the balance has been struck under the law, which the Legislature could always decide to change, Perluss said.

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Arias back in court as jury ponders death option

Jodi Arias heads back to court Wednesday as jurors consider whether the death penalty should be an option for sentencing the former waitress after convicting her of first-degree murder last week.

Arias spent the weekend on suicide watch before being transferred back to the all-female Estrella Jail on Monday where she will remain held until her sentencing.

The so-called “aggravation” phase of the trial is set for Wednesday, during which jurors will deliberate one more time to weigh the death penalty option.

Prosecutor Juan Martinez must convince the panel that the murder was committed in an especially cruel, heinous and depraved manner. This phase will be a mini-trial of sorts, as both sides call witnesses to present testimony to jurors — the defense in an effort to spare Arias’ life, the prosecution to at least have a shot at a death sentence.

Martinez will likely call the county medical examiner who performed the autopsy on the victim to explain to jurors how Travis Alexander did not die calmly and fought for his life as evidenced by the numerous defensive wounds on his hands and feet. The lead detective on the case also will likely testify about the crime scene in an effort to show jurors just how much blood was spread around Alexander’s bathroom and bedroom as he struggled to fend off the attack.

It wasn’t clear who the defense would call to testify in an effort to get the death penalty off the table.

If jurors find the killing fits the definition of cruel and heinous, the panel will recommend either life in prison or death during the next and final penalty phase of the trial.

If the panel finds no aggravating factors exist, jurors will be dismissed and the judge will determine whether Arias should spend the rest of her life in prison or be sentenced to 25 years with the possibility of release.

“I think this jury is going to listen to everything, but they’re going to come back very quickly and find that indeed the state has shown beyond a reasonable doubt the crime was committed in an especially cruel, heinous and depraved manner,” Phoenix criminal defense lawyer Julio Laboy said. “This was a cruel death and one in which he (Alexander) knew he was dying.”

Arias stabbed and slashed Alexander nearly 30 times, shot him in the forehead and slit his throat from ear to ear, leaving the motivational speaker and businessman nearly decapitated before she dragged his mutilated body into his shower where friends found him about five days later.

The 32-year-old Arias admitted killing her onetime boyfriend Alexander on June 4, 2008, at his suburban Phoenix home. She initially denied any involvement then later blamed masked intruders. Two years after her arrest, she said it was self-defense when the victim attacked her after a day of sex.

Prosecutors said she planned the killing in a jealous rage as Alexander wanted to end their affair and was planning to take a trip to Mexico with another woman.

Testimony began in early January. The jury reached its verdict last Wednesday after about 15 hours of deliberations over four days.

All 12 jurors — eight men and four women — unanimously agreed the killing was premeditated.

Minutes after her conviction last week, Arias granted an interview to Fox affiliate KSAZ while in a holding cell at the courthouse, only adding to the circus-like environment surrounding the trial, which has become a cable TV sensation with its graphic tales of sex, lies and violence.

“Longevity runs in my family, and I don’t want to spend the rest of my natural life in one place,” a tearful Arias said in the interview. “I believe death is the ultimate freedom, and I’d rather have my freedom as soon as I can get it.”

Despite Arias’ comments that she would rather die than be in prison for life, she cannot choose the death penalty. It is up to the jury to recommend a sentence.

Officials with the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office said Tuesday the agency would not grant anymore media interviews with Arias after receiving a court order prohibiting authorities from facilitating the requests. The order came shortly after a closed door meeting with the judge and attorneys in the case.

If jurors on Wednesday find Arias’ crime deserves consideration of the death penalty, the trial will move into yet another — and final — phase, during which prosecutors will call witnesses, including members of Alexander’s family, aimed at convincing the panel she should face the ultimate punishment. Arias’ attorneys, meanwhile, will also call witnesses, likely members of her family, in an attempt to gain sympathy from jurors to spare her life.

“This case is not over. There’s a lot left and without question, victory still awaits the defense if they can save her life and keep her off death row,” Laboy said. “It was such a difficult set of facts and circumstances for her defense to overcome, from her multiple lies to the crime scene to the physical evidence … If despite all of those things, they can save her life, they’ve still won.”

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Arizona asks for reconsideration in Glendale casino case

Opponents of a proposed Las Vegas-style casino near Phoenix said Monday that a federal judge overlooked important evidence when ruling that the Tohono O’odham Nation’s construction plan doesn’t violate state gambling laws.

The legal team representing Arizona, the Gila River Indian Community and the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community said in a motion for partial reconsideration filed Monday that tribal leaders had once made public statements saying that state law did prohibit new casinos in the Phoenix metropolitan area.

“We think those disputed facts require a trial,” said Mary O’Grady, an attorney representing the Salt River tribe.

U.S. District Court Judge David Campbell said in a ruling last week that the Tohono O’odham Nation’s plan to build a casino on the edge of Glendale was legal because the state’s gambling compact approved by voters in 2002 did not contain language prohibiting new casino construction. Opponents insist the casino ban was implicit and part of the reason why voters approved the compact.

“No reasonable reading of the compact could lead a person to conclude that it prohibited new casinos in the Phoenix area,” Campbell ruled. He also called for further evidence from both sides on the intent of the voter-approved compact by May 22.

The plaintiffs filed the suit in 2011 to stop the casino, saying it violates zoning and state laws and would disrupt residential neighborhoods near downtown Phoenix.

The Tohono O’odham Nation unveiled its plans for the massive resort and casino less than 50 miles from its existing reservation in 2009. The property was purchased after the 30,000-member tribe received a $30 million federal settlement to replace nearly 10,000 acres of ancestral reservation land damaged by a dam. The federal government declared the land a reservation in 2010 despite opposition from state and local officials who argued tribes shouldn’t be allowed to turn any piece of property into a reservation.

Local officials claim the casino will require them to beef up fire, police and other civic requirements in an area not equipped to accommodate a resort better suited for the Las Vegas Strip. A high school is located a few blocks from where the casino is to be built. It would also sit about a mile from a retail and entertainment district where Phoenix’s professional football and hockey teams play their home games.

The suburban property is in an unincorporated island of Maricopa County and bordered on three sides by the city of Glendale, which is adjacent to Phoenix. About 30,000 people live within 2 miles.

Federal lawmakers have backed the effort to block the casino that could transform suburban Phoenix to no avail.

The tribe already operates three casinos in Arizona. The opposing tribes also have casinos.