ponedjeljak, 20.02.2012.

Ax murder takes that lives of his family members.

Friday, March 26, 2010

With Thursday, a Pierce County jury started deliberations for the case of Charles Nettlebeck. Nettlebeck has been charged with two counts with the state’s highest crime for taking the lives of his wife that he was on bad terminology with and his stepdaughter with the ax. The 53-year-old contains the possibility of life within prison if found guilty in the aggravated first degree murder inside deaths of Barbara Jo Nettlebeck, 52, and Bretta Joan Hawkins, 33. Deputy prosecutors Mary Robnett and Sunni Ko stated throughout the trial that Nettlebeck became enraged with his wife, who was divorcing him, when she “got a small amount short with him” part way through a discussion about profits from your garage sale. Robnett claimed all through closing arguments on Thursday, that Nettlebeck thought the idea over before getting an ax from inside the house that he distributed to his former mate in close proximity to Orting, on March 13, 2011, and killing his spouse. Nettlebeck then proceeded outside the house to kill his little princess.

The prosecutor discarded immunity arguments that Nettlebeck, who in his past was diagnosed with mental illness, was in the way of a psychotic episode through the entire murder, and as an outcome, did not proceed with premeditation. To be capable to convict Nettlebeck of aggravated murder, the jury must be able to prove that he acted with premeditation- that they thought it over. Robnett advised the jury that an expert witness in mental illness testified part way through the trial that it was eventually his belief that Nettlebeck acted with premeditation “because he could arm himself with an ax that was 6 feet away” before going after Barbara Jo Nettlebeck, Robnett claimed. The deputy prosecutor protested that they again proved more premeditation any time he went outside to kill Hawkins. Public defender Edward DeCosta explained that this “unrefuted, unconverted evidence” from the expert witnesses and friends of Nettlebeck proved that his client may be the victim of a mental illness—paranoia and possibly schizophrenia—and was most likely part way through a “psychotic break” when he murdered the ladies. DeCosta claims that Nettlebeck’s mental illness is the reason that he was inept of forming premeditated intent to murder his relations. The public defender publicly stated that Nettlebeck was guilty, but that he committed second degree murder, which is a conviction that might let his client be out of prison some day.

Bothell Divorce Attorney

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