Author: Trench Reynolds

  • Insanity defense for Zarate

    Insanity defense for Zarate

    Zarate to pursue insanity defense:

    I’m surprised it took this long. Anyway, Anthony Fusco, the attorney for accused killer Jonathan Zarate, will be pursuing an insanity defense for his client.

    Jonathan Zarate’s lawyer, Anthony Fusco, told Judge Salem Vincent Ahto in Morristown that he plans an insanity defense and is in the process of hiring a forensic psychiatrist to examine the high school dropout. Fusco, a privately-paid lawyer, also plans to make a petition to the state Office of the Public Defender to help finance the cost of the evaluation.

    Your tax dollars at work.

    Correct me if I’m wrong, but doesn’t the insanity defense basically boil down to knowing the difference between right and wrong? If that’s the case, Zarate’s actions of dismembering Jennifer Parks’ body after killing her, hiding it in a trunk for 24 hours and then trying to dump the trunk in the Passaic River leads me to believe that he what he did was wrong.

  • More ineffective legislation

    More ineffective legislation

    MySpace and Kentucky Sex Offenders:

    Put Kentucky down as another state that is deluded into thinking that sex offenders are going to comply with registering their online identities.

    Tuesday afternoon at the capital rotunda, the state met with a MySpace official to put an end to this ongoing problem with the help of a new measure called Senate Bill 65.

    The new law, requires sex offenders to register their e-mail addresses on-line.

    However if a sex offenders gives authorities a fraudulent e-mail address they will be sent back to jail.

    The new law will also help sites like MySpace cross-reference Kentucky’s sex offender registry with their own data base.

    I hate to sound like a broken record or a skipping CD for that matter, but this law is all bark and no bite. This will not stop sex offenders from using fraudulent e-mails. The threat of jail rarely stops sex offenders as it is. And again, this does nothing about the sex offenders who have never been caught.

    Instead of making laws about MySpace, how about making laws that keep sex offenders in jail longer?

    Thanks to Jessica for the link.

  • NY MySpacer arrested on rape charges

    NY MySpacer arrested on rape charges

    Police: Teen raped by man met on MySpace:

    Everything that I tried writing about this article sounded like I was casting aspersions where I did not want them to be cast. Instead, I’ll just give you select quotes from the article.

    Monday morning, a 13-year-old Suffolk County girl climbed out her bathroom window and into the Jeep of a 20-year-old man she met on MySpace. He took her to his Bayport home and raped her, police said.

    It was the end result of a 6-week online romance that the girl’s parents knew nothing about, even though police say her father did “everything in his power” to monitor her activity on the Internet.

    “He was doing what any good parent would do,” Det. Sgt. Thomas Groneman, of Suffolk’s Third Squad said this Tuesday afternoon.

    Despite those efforts, however, the girl managed to gain regular access to a laptop computer that either wasn’t password protected, like the desktop computer in her home, or whose password she had somehow learned.

    For six weeks, she communicated with Zachary Rapoza, the self-titled “Bayport Kid,” according to his Myspace profile. On his Web page, he says he is a 2006 graduate of Bayport-Blue Point High School who played on the track and football teams. A profile picture shows him sitting in a chair with a blue football jersey, baseball cap and sunglasses.

    Suffolk police say Rapoza and the girl made an arrangement during her week of spring break to pick her up Monday morning at 8 a.m. in front of her home. Groneman said a relative saw her sneak out the bathroom window and then contacted her father, who was at his work.

    The father contacted her friends and visited places where he thought she might be. When he was unsuccessful, he called police.

    A short time later, his daughter contacted him.

    At that point, she was with Rapoza on a Long Island Rail Road train heading to Jamaica, Queens. Her father told her to get off of the train at the next possible stop — which happened to be Pinelawn.

    The two were waiting at the train station when police arrived. They were then taken to the Third Precinct for questioning.

    Rapoza was charged with second-degree rape, unlawful imprisonment and endangering the welfare of a minor. He is expected to be arraigned Tuesday.

    Rapoza has multiple MySpace accounts. I believe that this one is Rapoza’s main MySpace.

    Is it me, or does this sound more like statutory rape than it does a full-on sexual assault? Still, when you’re 20 you don’t need to be picking up 13-year-olds that climb out of windows.

    In case you were wondering, the age of consent in the Empire State is 17.

  • Castillo e-mail probably inadmissible as well

    Castillo e-mail probably inadmissible as well

    Castillo e-mail can’t be linked:

    Just a follow-up to yesterday’s post about the computer evidence being suppressed in the Alvaro Castillo proceedings. Since the computers were ruled inadmissible, the e-mail that Castillo sent to Columbine High School Principal Frank DeAngelis cannot be linked to Castillo.

    Again, the videos should be all the prosecution needs.

  • Call had nothing to do with shooter

    Call had nothing to do with shooter

    Suspect in protective custody awaiting court appearance:

    The part of the article I want to talk about is not about Demeatrius Montgomery’s court appearance. It’s this…

    It was a domestic call, between a brother and sister arguing over a bill, that brought Officers Sean Clark and Jeff Shelton to the Timber Ridge Apartments.

    That call had nothing to do with Demetrius Montgomery. But, police say he’s the one who shot officers Clark and Shelton in the head.

    I wonder what the defense will be for this.

  • Demeatrius Montgomery’s criminal past

    Demeatrius Montgomery’s criminal past

    Police-shooting suspect had assault convictions:

    The suspect in the shooting deaths of Charlotte-Mecklenburg police officers Jeffrey Melton and Sean Clark has a violent past criminal record. Demeatrius Antonio Montgomery has had past arrests for assaults against women and other police officers.

    Montgomery was sentenced to 120 days in the Mecklenburg County jail for a 2004 assault on a female. He was accused of striking a woman twice on the left side of her face.

    Montgomery was sentenced in 2004 to 45 days in jail for assault on a government official. The assault occurred after a police officer spotted Montgomery speeding out of an apartment complex and pulled him over.

    In an affidavit, the police officer said Montgomery started yelling out the window as he was pulled over and asked why the officer was harassing him.

    When the police officer asked for his driver’s license, Montgomery began yelling, got out of the car and rushed toward the officer, according to the affidavit. The officer wrote that Montgomery “came face to face” with him and bumped him in the chest.

    The officer told Montgomery to put his hands on the hood of the patrol car.

    He then recalled Montgomery’s words: “You are a small man and I am going to hurt you.”

    “I felt that he would carry out this threat.”

    Backup officers were called to the scene. The officer said Montgomery continued to be combative and had to be physically restrained.

    Montgomery pleaded guilty to the assault charge. The communicating threats and resisting arrest charges were dropped.

    Last year, Montgomery was convicted of having an open container of beer on a public street and resisting arrest. In an affidavit, the arresting officer wrote that he pulled up beside Montgomery after spotting him drinking a bottle of beer while walking. The officer said he told Montgomery that he could not have an open container in public and directed him to pour the rest of the beer out.

    Montgomery, the police officer said, drank the rest of the beer.

    The officer wrote that when he informed Montgomery he was under arrest, the suspect fled and refused to stop.

    The officer caught up to him a block away. Montgomery was charged with having an open container and resisting an officer. Montgomery pleaded guilty to both charges and was sentenced to three days in jail.

    So seeing this information going from assault to killing two police officers is not that much of a stretch.

  • Columbine depositions to remain sealed

    Columbine depositions to remain sealed

    Columbine depositions to stay sealed:

    U.S. District Judge Lewis Babcock has done the unthinkable and ruled that the depositions from the Columbine killers’ parents will remain sealed for 20 years in the National Archives, where they will do no one any good whatsoever.

    Judge Babcock claimed copycat fears as to why he ordered the documents to remain sealed. I hate to tell you this Judge but sending the depositions to the National Archives will not stem the tide of copycats. This website is a testament to that. Those documents might have actually prevented copycats, but we won’t know that until I’m 58.

    The fact that he wouldn’t even let a state Attorney General and a recommended violence expert look at them smacks of a cover-up.

    Brian Rohrbough, the father of slain student Daniel Rohrbough, is justifiably angered and is considering an appeal.

  • Michelle Dohm found guilty

    Michelle Dohm found guilty

    Teacher Found Guilty Of Making Bomb Threats To Students:

    Michelle Dohm is the teacher from Frederick, Maryland who was accused of making bomb threats to some of the students from her school.

    Today, she was found guilty of making those threats. I urge you to go through the archives to see just how bizarre this case really was.

    Sentencing is set for June 26th.

  • Evidence suppressed in Castillo case

    Evidence suppressed in Castillo case

    Hearing Held for Suspected Teen Killer:

    The computers seized from the house of Alvaro Rafael Castillo have been ruled inadmissible as evidence. The defense argued that the computers were not listed as part of the search warrant, and the judge agreed. Prosecutors aren’t too worried though, saying there wasn’t much evidence on the computers. Not only that, but considering he basically confessed on videotape to killing his father before sending the tapes to the media, I wouldn’t be worried either.

    The next hearing is set for April 25th where Castillo will probably learn if he’s facing the death penalty or not.

  • Suspect charged in CMPD deaths

    Suspect charged in CMPD deaths

    I just heard from WCNC that a suspect by the name of Demeatrius Montgomery has been charged in the shooting deaths of Charlotte-Mecklenburg officers Sean Clark and Jeffrey Shelton.

    I’ll post more as soon as details become available.

    UPDATE: News link here.