Weekend Herald

War Machine concedes lesser counts in Vegas trial

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He almost beat her to death, and she still loved him. She was always wanting emotional love from him and he was always wanting physical. Prosecutor Jacqueline Bluth on War Machine’s relationsh­ip with Christy Mack

The former mixed martial arts fighter named War Machine made a tactical move in his trial in Las Vegas yesterday: His attorney conceded guilt on lesser charges in an attack on his porn star ex- girlfriend and her male friend in August, 2015, but asked jurors to acquit on more serious charges that could put him in prison for the rest of his life.

Jonathan Paul Koppenhave­r’s defence attorney, Jay Leiderman, told the jury during closing arguments that they should find the man who legally changed his name during his mixed martial arts career guilty of eight domestic battery charges for punching and injuring ex- girlfriend Christy Mack.

The Associated Press usually doesn’t identify alleged victims of sexual assault but Mack gave the AP permission to use her name. Her legal name is Christine Mackinday.

“He did it. He doesn’t have a defence. He used fists to punch the face,” Leiderman said.

Koppenhave­r also i s guilty of threatenin­g Mack’s boyfriend at the time, Corey Thomas, to dissuade him from going to police, the attorney said. Conviction­s on those nine counts could get Koppenhave­r decades in state prison.

Leiderman asked them to acquit Koppenhave­r on counts including attempted murder, kidnapping and sexual assault that could get Koppenhave­r life in prison.

Leiderman earlier characteri­sed both Koppenhave­r and Mack as “damaged people” with a mutually co- dependent relationsh­ip built on extravagan­t public personas and robust Twitter followings that masked deep personal image insecuriti­es.

Koppenhave­r also had brain injuries from his 19- fight profession­al MMA career, the defence attorney said, and used non- prescripti­on stimulant and anti- depressant drugs and steroids that, combined, could have caused mood swings and violence that Leiderman termed “roid rage”.

Prosecutor­s Rob Stephens and Jacqueline Bluth argued the 35- yearold Koppenhave­r is guilty of all 34 charges against him.

“He almost beat her to death, and she still loved him,” Bluth said before stepping to the witness stand and sitting where Mackinday spent eight hours last week testifying about facial injuries, broken bones, chipped teeth, cuts and bruises she received during what Bluth called “classic textbook” cycles of domestic violence.

“Tension. Explosion. Hearts and flowers,” the prosecutor said, characteri­sing 15 “rollercoas­ter” months that Mackinday, now 24, described in her relationsh­ip with Koppenhave­r.

“She was always wanting emotional love from him and he was always wanting physical,” Bluth said.

Koppenhave­r didn’t testify in his defence. But it was clear yesterday that he was involved in Leiderman’s unusual legal gambit before the jury.

The defence attorney initially told jurors that Koppenhave­r would concede guilt on three more felonies for beating Thomas and causing substantia­l bodily harm.

After a courtroom break and an animated defence table discussion, Leiderman stepped back before the jury and said he’d made a mistake: Thomas was injured during mutual combat, and Koppenhave­r was defending himself in Mack’s bedroom.

Jurors begin deliberati­ons today.

 ?? Pictures / AP ?? Former MMA fighter War Machine could face life in prison if convicted of all charges relating to his attack on former girlfriend Christy Mack.
Pictures / AP Former MMA fighter War Machine could face life in prison if convicted of all charges relating to his attack on former girlfriend Christy Mack.
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